Public | 9-12 | 591 students |
Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts A Public School is a public high school in the San Francisco Unified School District. It is among the few public high schools in California to receive a distinguished GreatSchools Rating of 9 out of 10.
More than 50 school community members have shared their opinion about Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts A Public School, giving it an average Community Rating of 4 out of 5 stars.
School highlights:
| COMPARE | SCHOOL | GREATSCHOOLS RATING | COMMUNITY RATING |
|---|
Academy of Arts and Sciences School 0.1 miles | |||
San Francisco County Court Woodside Learning Center School 0.1 miles | |||
Archbishop Riordan High School 1.2 miles | |||
1.2 miles |
I am sure that the previous comment is posted by a prankster of some sort. It just doesn't read like an actual comment by a teacher. A teacher would probably spell "Principal" correctly at least. I find Carmelo to be an excellent administrator. Easy to talk to, low drama, intelligent and a straight shooter. I guess this site can't do any fact checking or prevent anonymous posters from posting falsehoods.
Best school in San Francisco! I love going there! All the teachers are great, most are like personal mentors! I have friends at other schools in SF, most hate them, but I love going to school! Also, the classes are really not as easy that people say. The academics are very challenging.
SOTA has great positives and some negatives. The academics are excellent - only if you are in Honors and AP. You can get a great education here if you take that track. If you don't, expect to get into the California State University system or City College. My son did great, but some did not. Parent participation is key. Some teachers are fantastic, but some really do not teach well. Be a pro-active parent. My child was in theater and the teachers were negative and arbitrary in some ways. They seemed to bear grudges in a manner inappropriate and unprofessional. Perhaps they are burned out. There was still much that was terrific, unique, stirring, exceptional. You will be stunned by the sheer talent in these programs. No school is perfect. All in all, I would do it again.
Both my teenagers love attending this school. Although there are not as many choices in terms of clubs or classes that you would find in a larger school - the fact that these young artists can immerse themselves in their field is a fantastic opportunity. The academics are certainly strong - the most exciting humanites faculty you could wish for and the leadership of a great Principal. If your student is serious about the arts - this school is the top choice - we have had growth on the API, our students get accepted into top colleges and do well on the SATs.
My kids are a SOTA graduate and a SOTA junior. I'm so glad they chose and had access to an arts school; their high school life has been far, far richer than I could ever have imagined. Both have top standardized test scores and SATs, so the unbiased data confirms that their education has been fine. They are both quirky kids -- and a school full of artistic kids and artistic teachers can be like herding cats; it's not a desks-in-a-row-rigid-schedule atmosphere -- but we've been very happy with SOTA. My son was totally focused on his music and attends Oberlin College, getting a dual music-liberal arts degree. My daughter is very involved with her music but is also deeply engaged with SOTA's championship Mock Trial team, which was No. 2 in California last year and is going to the state finals for the fourth year in a row this year. SOTA is probably not for a kid who needs total structure at all times, but for a kid who's passionate about his or her art and thrives in a creative atmosphere, check it out!
Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts, A Public School is good for your child who has art talent.
SOTA is a druggy school. It also doesn't have a very good academic program. Not one of the schools I'd want my kids attending.
My adult children are both graduates. They received a consummate music education and the academics were strong, too. The performing opportunities helped them develop confidence, discipline and creativity that carried over to all their work. They are both productive graduate students now (daughter, law school; son, getting his masters in piano in Germany), and part of the credit goes to the strong foundation and love for learning they developed at SOTA.
SOTA is a great school if your child has a particular art they want to pursue and is strongly self motivated academically (or with parent support). The staff and administration are doing a lot with very little. Unfortunately, SOTA's culture is influenced greatly by the lack of resources for public schools and especially with lack of professional development for the teachers. The teachers and directors have a wide variety of experience and skills, from excellent to sorely lacking. Due to class size and lack of resources and support, there seems to be an inability to follow through with promises of communication with the parents and natural consequences for positive student participation or behavior problems. I've personally witnessed directors being unprofessional in their interactions with students, with little or no indication that this would be corrected. I would not recommend this school if your child isn't self-motivated or has learning differences.
the Ruth Asawa San Francisco SOTA does a fabulous job of integrating the arts into a rigorous academic regimen. Intense parent involvement and support where each student is valued and supported. The students are friendly, open and accepting in a vibrant arts community. A very high percentage of SOTA students are accepted to the most prestigious universities and arts schools in the nation.
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