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The Philippine High School for the Arts (Filipino: Mataas na Paaralang Pansining ng Pilipinas) (commonly known as PHSA) is a specialized public high school in the Philippines offering arts-focused education established in 1978 by virtue of Presidential Decree 1287.
Calhoun High School (Georgia) Callaway High School (Georgia) Camden County High School (Georgia) Campbell High School (Georgia) Carlton J. Kell High School; Carrollton High School (Carrollton, Georgia) Cartersville High School; Cass High School (Georgia) Cedar Shoals High School; Cedartown High School; Central Gwinnett High School
DeKalb School of the Arts began in 1985 under the direction of Richard Leitgeb and became the DeKalb Center for the Performing Arts, a magnet program housed at Avondale High School. In 1999 it was established as a separate entity and became the DeKalb School of the Arts, and in 2002 it moved into the former Briarcliff High School .
Ranked among the top 1% of high schools by Newsweek [11] First place winner of the 2007 Georgia Theater Conference (one of only two schools to win twice in a row) [citation needed] Received a gold medal and was ranked 84th best high school in the nation by U.S. News & World Report in 2007 [12] The 2005 GRAMMY Gold Signature School
The Cultural Center of the Philippines administers the National Arts Center, a 13.5-hectare (33-acre) complex at the Makiling Forest Reservation in Los Baños, Laguna. The complex hosts the Philippine High School for the Arts. Its flagship venue is the Tanghalang Maria Makiling, an open-air auditorium that can seat up to 1,800 people.
The National Arts Center is a building complex situated in Mount Makiling, Los Baños, Laguna, the Philippines. The establishment was inaugurated in 1976. The establishment was inaugurated in 1976. Its theater is the Tanghalang Maria Makiling or the NAC Center, which has an audience capacity of 1,000 people.
The Savannah Arts Academy building is located on a site that was originally planned as a luxury tourist hotel called the Hotel Georgia. The Works Progress Administration, in the midst of the Great Depression, expressed interest in the site for use as the new Savannah High School, which was dedicated on June 15, 1937.
After a year at the Agusan National High School, she moved to the Philippine High School for the Arts where she majored in Theatre Arts, finishing in 1981. [4] Grace went on to complete a bachelor's degree in Humanities in 1986 from the UP College Baguio , then an extension campus of the University of the Philippines Diliman .