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North MP - 23

Learning

MakingWaves in Education

Oceanside CollegiateAcademy

I

magine graduating from high

school with two years of college credit

already completed. Imagine doing that and

still having time as a high school student to

focus on a passion such as sports, music, arts

or a job shadow. Scholarship opportunities

could blossom. Once in college,

there could be time for collegiate

athletics or arts programs or an internship. A four-year

college degree could be completed in two years. A higher-

level degree could be attained years ahead of schedule.

Now imagine you are the parents helping foot the bill for

college. The possibilities are endless.

For 600 ninth- through 12th-grade students and their

parents, their imaginations will become reality when the

2016-2017 school year begins.

Oceanside Collegiate Academy

will make waves when it opens its

doors at full capacity in Carolina

Park. It is a public, state-funded

charter school with a model unique

to Charleston County but soundly

proven in similar schools across the

country.

OCA offers a variety of scheduling

options based on a split schedule

in which students attend classes for

half of the day and participate in

extracurricular activities the other

half. Community service hours also

are required. Students graduate with a high school diploma

and can earn up to 60 hours of transferable college credit.

Dr. Marvin Arnsdorff, the school’s chairman of the

board, first learned about the unique model when he

provided business consulting services for a charter school

management group.

“I didn’t even know there was such a thing,” he said.

“It was such an outside-of-the-box approach to education.

It would be somewhere students like my own daughter

would thrive. I was inspired, and I did something about

it. Now here we are, ready to open for the upcoming

school year.”

OCA operates on a “whole-school” educational plan.

Learning is not compartmentalized into subjects such as

English, Math and Science. Rather, the subjects are all

interrelated and are taught as such.

“The educational opportunities continue through

extracurricular activities and service,” Dr. Arnsdorff

explained. “There is a relationship between academics and

athletics in a job setting. Or, for example, if you want to

be a veterinarian, the split schedule would allow you to

work for one or perhaps spend time at an equine center.”

While nearby Wando High School is rightfully

regarded as one of the top high schools in the nation,

OCA’s comparatively small student body, rigorous

academic program, split schedule structure and “whole-

school” educational plan offer a vastly different option.

“What better opportunity for kids and parents to get

two free years of college if they apply

themselves,” Dr. Arnsdorff said. “That’s

the best investment a parent can make.”

The majority of OCA’s students

live in Mount Pleasant, but its small,

rigorous and unique dual-enrollment

program has attracted students from 21

municipalities in South Carolina.

“The students enrolled here work

hard in their studies and want to go to

college with a purpose or want to go

to college and have time to participate

in other activities,” Dr. Arnsdorff

said. “OCA’s mantra is that academics

come first, character comes second

and extracurriculars come third.”

OCA’s students will learn, grow and contribute to the

community in ways previously unavailable to students in

Charleston County.

“That this school is opening at full capacity says

something about the need,” Dr. Arnsdorff beamed. “It’s

incredible how engaged the parents and students are.

They want options and opportunities, and that’s exciting

to me.”

OCA will be located adjacent to the Mount Pleasant

Recreation Department fields at Carolina Park. For more

information, visit

www.oceansidecollegiateacademy.org

.

By ANNe TOOle

Artwork courtesy of Oceanside Collegiate Academy.