Special Music School

Special Music School
Location
New York City, New York
United States
Information
Type Public and Private Collaboration
Established 1996
Category Performing Arts
Dean Sandra Noreen (K-8 Dean of Music); Kevin Michael Sullivan (High School Dean of Music), Igal Kesselman (Interim Music Director);
Principal Katherine Banucci-Smith;
Grades K-12
Gender Co-ed
Campus Urban
Tuition None
Website kaufmanmusiccenter.org/sms/

The Special Music School (New York City Public School 859), or SMS, is a unique New York public school for musically gifted children. The school is run as a public/private partnership between the New York City Department of Education and Kaufman Music Center, a not-for-profit, multi-arts organization.[1] The Department of Education funds the academic portion of the students' education, while the music program is funded by private donations through Kaufman Music Center.[2]

Intended for children with high musical potential, the Special Music School provides a rich musical and demanding academic education for grades K-12 through an integrated curriculum with a primary focus on music. In the lower and middle school's children have two private lessons per week in piano, cello, violin, flute, French horn, trumpet, trombone, percussion, or clarinet, as well as classes in music theory, chorus, and movement.[3] Three quarters of the students' time is spent on academic subjects.[4] The school has partnerships with the National Dance Institute,[5] the Center for Educational Innovation, New Visions for Public Schools, Studio in a School, Teachers College, Columbia University and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[1]

Special Music School also has a high school at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Educational Complex on New York City’s Upper West Side, with a music curriculum that emphasizes the development of the student as a musician for the 21st century. With the establishment of the high school extension, Special Music School High School is the city’s only K-12 school that teaches music as a core subject. Eighth graders from all five boroughs of New York City will be eligible to apply. They have music theory, music history, and music technology.

Students from all five boroughs of New York City are eligible to apply for admission, which is by audition. Admission is extremely competitive. In recent years there have been as many as 650 kindergarten applicants for 15 spaces. The total enrollment for all grades (K-12) is approximately 315 students.

The school was founded in 1996 and originally called The Special Music School of America. Inspired by the "spetsshkola," special music school system of the former Soviet Union, many original members of the music faculty are Russian-conservatory trained musicians.[3]

In the fall of 2006 the Special Music School established the after-school Young Artist Program for grades 9–12.[1] It offers music students intensive after-school study courses. Each week students have classes covering literature and composition, music theory, and ear-training. Students also perform in chamber music and solo recitals.[4]

In 2005, former Special Music School Director Jenny Undercofler founded Face the Music, initially an 8-member after school music ensemble,[6] and now NYC's only "alt classical" teen ensemble composed of 75 students from music students in the tri-state area aged 10 to 18. In 2011 ASCAP awarded its Aaron Copland Award to both Face the Music and Jenny Undercofler.[7]

Coordinates: 40°46′30.59″N 73°58′58.98″W / 40.7751639°N 73.9830500°W / 40.7751639; -73.9830500

Notes

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