It is early afternoon at Orange County School of the Arts, and academic classes are in full swing. Teams of math students puzzle over equations as they compute the distance of a race. In a literature and composition class, an eighth-grade writer channels Grace O鈥橫alley, a Renaissance pirate queen.
Come 2:15 p.m., the campus flips a switch. Gazing into mirrors, young actors apply cringe-inducing scars with special-effects makeup. In a Michelin-worthy commercial kitchen, budding chefs learn about molecular gastronomy while concocting raspberry foam. Juniors and seniors practicing Mexican 蹿辞濒办濒贸谤颈肠辞 techniques tap across the vibrating floor of a dance studio.
At a time when many urban public schools struggle to keep students engaged in academics and to fund arts programs, this public charter school in downtown Santa Ana, Calif., has devised a winning formula. The school serves not only its students but also the greater community with summer and after-school art programs, many of them free.
Known as OCSA (pronounced OH-sha), the school is also seeking to spread its successful combination of arts, academics and collaboration to satellites. In 2017, it opened the California School of the Arts鈥揝an Gabriel Valley in Duarte, 40 miles north, in partnership with the Duarte Unified School District. CSArts鈥揝GV is also a public charter school.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not growing for the sake of growing,鈥 says Ralph Opacic EdD 鈥94, OCSA鈥檚 founder and executive director. 鈥淭he motivation behind opening additional schools is that we truly believe the OCSA experience is life-changing.鈥
It has certainly upended precedent: As recent teachers鈥-strike headlines attest, the relationship between traditional public schools and public charter schools can be fraught. But OCSA has managed to walk the line without making enemies. When it collaborated with Santa Ana in 2000, the local district was facing severe crowding. The addition of a charter school helped to ease the enrollment burden. With students coming from so many communities, no one school or district has faced undue hardship.
It helps that teachers at both OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV are members of the California Teachers Association, a statewide union.
The successful partnership demonstrates the possibilities when charter schools and traditional public school districts join forces for the betterment of all, says Abbe Levine 鈥05, dean of arts at the Duarte campus, formerly Northview Intermediate School.
Both CHARTER schools cater to students in grades 7 through 12 with talents in performing, visual, literary and other arts who are willing to put in a longer-than-usual school day.
OCSA students, who participate in an audition/interview placement activity as part of their application for admittance, flock to the campus from 120 cities across multiple counties, as distant as Temecula, Lake Arrowhead and Redondo Beach; 200 commute by train. Each year, the school gets about 3,000 applications for 400 openings.

OCSA has 2,200 students and nine buildings. Only one structure鈥攖he dance, music and science center鈥攚as built from the ground up. The others include creatively renovated former bank buildings and a onetime Christian Science church turned Michael F. Harrah Symphony Hall.
Now in its 32nd year, OCSA puts on about 200 performances annually, many in Symphony Hall or Margaret A. Webb Theatre (where an old bank vault serves as a lounge). The U.S. Department of Education and the National Endowment for the Arts have recognized the school as a model arts-education program.
鈥淥ver and over again, I鈥檝e heard from students that, at best, they felt invisible at other schools,鈥 Opacic says. 鈥淚n this setting, they feel safe to be themselves.鈥
Jason Cohen, 17, a junior in the instrumental music conservatory who drives 45 minutes from his home in Aliso Viejo, credits OCSA with sparking his interest in a career in entertainment. He has played trumpet since fifth grade, when he attended a traditional public school in Orange County where he endured bullying. After trying home-schooling and public middle school (鈥淚 ate lunch by myself every day鈥), he followed his older sister to OCSA.
鈥淚 enjoy it so much,鈥 says Cohen, who takes audio classes and, on the side, serves as executive producer of clever videos for the in-house Watch What Happens OCSA (available on YouTube). 鈥淚 might be in the instrumental music conservatory, but teachers haven鈥檛 stopped me from going out to explore.鈥
Robust fundraising is key to the success of both OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV. As public charter schools, they receive funding from the state, but benefactors and education organizations provide financial support that would be the envy of many elite private schools. It also doesn鈥檛 hurt that famed OCSA alum Matthew Morrison (1997), who starred as the choir director in the musical series Glee, routinely touts the school.
Both schools ask for a voluntary tax-deductible donation from each family, but regardless of a family鈥檚 ability or willingness to give, the schools are committed to providing the same quality educational experience to all.
鈥淚n the same year that OCSA was created, we launched the Orange County School of the Arts Foundation,鈥 says Opacic. 鈥淚ts mission is to raise funds so that there are no barriers for students at OCSA鈥攁nd now CSArts鈥揝GV鈥攄ue to families鈥 financial constraints.
鈥淲e created the Artist Scholar Sponsorship Program, which annually raises money specifically for this cause,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭his past year, the foundation raised over $500,000 to support families who had a financial need.鈥
OCSA has an operating budget of about $30 million, nearly $10 million of which is raised from parents and donors.
In Duarte, the budget is about $10听million from the state, with $2.5 million raised from parents and donors through the California School of the Arts Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization modeled on the OCSA Foundation.

The role of CSArts鈥揝GV鈥檚 Levine also reflects the schools鈥 interconnectedness.
鈥淔our years ago, Ralph approached me about this pie-in-the-sky idea of becoming OCSA鈥檚 director of arts enrichment and program expansion,鈥 she says.
Her role began with increasing arts outreach around Santa Ana but grew into realizing the dream of expanding to a second location where they could have a positive effect on a new community.
The Duarte campus, just blocks from the Metro Gold Line, underwent a $7.5 million renovation that included soundproofing for music rooms and new floors for dance spaces. It now has six buildings and a dozen 鈥減ortable鈥 classrooms. Performance spaces include a 500-seat theater and a 60-seat recital hall.
The current enrollment of 1,000 is expected to grow in the next school year to 1,220. CSArts鈥揝GV draws students from more than 80 cities in the San Gabriel Valley and beyond.
Once the enrollment stabilizes, plans call for replacing portables with permanent art facilities.
In addition to its smaller size and more modest offerings, the Duarte school differs in another significant way from OCSA. Seventh- and eighth-graders take most of their academic classes at one of four nearby public schools. They then ride shuttle buses to CSArts鈥揝GV for afternoon conservatory classes. The arrangement, Levine says, has helped to bolster the Duarte district鈥檚 numbers and funding.

Duarte had experienced declining enrollment for many years as the city鈥檚 population aged and as dissatisfied parents found slots for their children in districts with more to offer. In 2015, the district hired Allan J. Mucerino to reverse the trend. As superintendent, he and the local Board of Education agreed to partner with OCSA because it vowed to provide arts instruction for all of the district鈥檚 students, not just those who chose to attend CSArts鈥揝GV.
Mucerino acknowledges that many proponents of traditional public schools view charters with suspicion, contending that they drain needed resources and could pave the way for a shift to vouchers for private schools鈥攁n outcome they fear could spell the demise of the vaunted system of free public education.
Charters can be 鈥渁s politically polarizing as any issue in education or politics,鈥 says Mucerino, now superintendent of the Alvord Unified School District. But, he adds, 鈥渢he fact that the 15-year trend of declining enrollment has been reversed in two years is further evidence that a planned public school鈥揷harter school partnership works.鈥
Duarte is now the only district in the area without declining enrollment, says Gordon Amerson, who replaced Mucerino as superintendent: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a direct result of the instructional program and innovative partnership.鈥
For Opacic, OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV have become the incarnation of what he had envisioned in his 1994 doctoral dissertation, 鈥淭he Role of Education Foundations in Supporting Public Alternative School 海角论坛 in California.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檝e created a unique, nurturing culture for students who might not otherwise be successful in a traditional public school setting,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut here they are flourishing and developing to their full potential as artists, scholars and well-rounded human beings.鈥
Eighth-grader Andrea Alhuay, 13, commutes from West Covina to CSArts鈥揝GV, where she is in the integrated arts conservatory.
鈥淭o be in a place where I can share my passion for the arts is amazing,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e are all very kind to one another. I have students and teachers that are here for me. I feel I belong.鈥
Cohen, the trumpet-playing OCSA junior, feels much the same.
鈥淚t鈥檚 such a strong community and outlet for creative voices,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 eat lunch by myself anymore.鈥
THE ART OF GIVING BACK
Community service is a hallmark of students at both OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV, especially bringing inspirational arts-education opportunities to local elementary-school-age children.

鈥淭he arts inspire happiness,鈥 says OCSA鈥檚 Ralph Opacic EdD 鈥94, 鈥渟o we connect our students with opportunities to share their talents with those who could use uplifting.鈥
鈻禾 CSArts鈥揝GV provides funding for a free dance program for all Duarte Unified K鈥8 schools.
鈻禾 Camp OCSA is a free, 10-week after-school arts program led by juniors and seniors who teach children acting, dance, drawing, guitar, painting, singing and more.
鈻禾 OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV partner with the Dragon Kim Foundation to provide free instrumental music instruction and instruments for children in Santa Ana and Duarte.
鈻禾 Through grants from the Max H. Gluck Foundation, OCSA provides free artistic performances and programs to youth centers, schools, retirement facilities, homeless shelters, parks, health centers and more. CSArts鈥揝GV will launch its program this year.
SPARK OF GENIUS
鈥淭he arts teach us to be human,鈥 says Ralph Opacic EdD 鈥94. 鈥淭hey are a universal language that bridges cultures and helps us see our commonalities.鈥

OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV exist because the arts-loving Opacic dreamed big. But, years before it secured its charter, OCSA began small鈥攁s an after-school choir program at Los Alamitos High School, where he was teaching English.
At the time, the high school had one choir class with 30 kids. The school allowed Opacic to add a 鈥渮ero period鈥 class, for which he recruited 60 singers in the first year. By the third year, he had five choirs with 300 kids.
Opacic applied for a grant to create an extended-day program for a school within a school; OCSA opened at Los Alamitos High in 1987 with 120 students from across Orange County. The three-year grant provided $250,000 a year, with an agreement that the program would then become self-sustaining.
While teaching full-time, Opacic earned his EdD from 海角论坛.
鈥淢y experience there strengthened my educational leadership skills, deepened my business and financial acumen, and laid the groundwork for the trailblazing work we have done in our fundraising and development efforts at OCSA and CSArts鈥揝GV,鈥 he says.
Even better: In class at Rossier, he met his future wife, Sherry EdD 鈥94, who went on to serve in the Vista Unified School District and the Orange County Department of Education.
鈥淲hen people ask,鈥 he laughs, 鈥淚 like to joke that she鈥檚 the smarter, more attractive Dr. Opacic.鈥