South Oak Cliff High School | |
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Address | |
3601 South Marsalis Avenue Dallas, Texas 75216 United States |
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Coordinates | 32°41′59″N 96°48′56″W / 32.699627°N 96.815460°WCoordinates: 32°41′59″N 96°48′56″W / 32.699627°N 96.815460°W |
Information | |
Type | Public, Secondary |
Motto | To provide academic and social opportunities that will enable students to use a variety technologies, accept and excel in challenging situations, and appreciate individuals of diversity. |
School district | Dallas Independent School District |
Principal | Shon Joseph |
Faculty | 88 |
Grades | 9-12 |
Number of students | 1,338 |
Color(s) |
Old Gold and White |
Nickname | Golden Bears |
Trustee dist. | 5, Lew Blackburn |
Area | 5, Vickie Mitchell |
South Oak Cliff High School (colloquially referred to as SOC, pronounced "sock") is a public secondary school located in the Oak Cliff area of Dallas, Texas (USA). South Oak Cliff High School enrolls students in grades 9-12 and is a part of the Dallas Independent School District (DISD).
The school serves the area of Dallas known as "South Oak Cliff" (generally east of Interstate 35E and south of Illinois Avenue, though the area was never technically part of Oak Cliff). The school also previously had some students who lived in the former Wilmer-Hutchins ISD boundaries. DISD began to take in WHISD-zoned students during the 2005–2006 school year, and at that time the entire Wilmer-Hutchins High School senior class attended South Oak Cliff.
According to the federal No Child Left Behind Act evaluation, the school "did not make adequate yearly progress" in 2004–2005. The state department of education identified this school as "in need of improvement, Year 1" for 2005–2006.
In 2015, the school was rated "Improvement Required" by the Texas Education Agency.
South Oak Cliff opened in 1952 as the first DISD high school to be constructed in almost 15 years (Lincoln High opened in 1939.) The school served developing areas of south and east Oak Cliff. In the first year only a few hundred students enrolled, but the school grew rapidly as new housing developments were completed along Kiest Boulevard and Ledbetter Drive. In the late 1950s, before Kimball and Carter high schools were opened, SOC was one of the largest high schools in the city. For its first 13 years SOC was designated a "white" high school by DISD, but the neighborhoods surrounding the school began to change rapidly to African-American in the early 1960s. Many of the schools that fed into SOC (Holmes and Zumwalt junior high schools and Miller, Stone, Pease, Bushman and Mills elementary schools) were converted to "negro" elementary schools in the late 1960s.