TACT: Who Attends NCTC Auditions?
Every year, representatives from my department at the University of North Carolina at Asheville go to the North Carolina Theatre Conference to attend the high school theatre auditions. Most of the colleges and universities from across the state sent their representatives to recruit talented young people who are interested in theatre. We all sell our programs, and many of the private schools make scholarship offers on the spot.
I have been wondering about the demographics of this group of young people, who usually number around 100 plus or minus (this year, it was 84). So I gathered together the resumes of the auditionees and started crunching numbers. What I found is interesting in a lot of ways. What follows is a snapshot.
I have been wondering about the demographics of this group of young people, who usually number around 100 plus or minus (this year, it was 84). So I gathered together the resumes of the auditionees and started crunching numbers. What I found is interesting in a lot of ways. What follows is a snapshot.
- There are 100 counties in North Carolina; the auditionees come from 18 of them.
- Two counties -- Mecklenburg and Forsyth -- provide 61% of the auditionees.
- The median household income for NC in 1999 was $39,184; the median household income for Mecklenburg County was $60,608 (2nd in state), and the median household income for Forsyth County was $52,032 (8th in the state).
- The average median household income for the 18 counties who sent students was $51,514.
- Of the eighteen counties who sent students, only one was a county with a median household income below the median for NC; the two students from there attended a private college preparatory school.
- Five schools provided 52% of the auditionees; three of them are schools for the arts.
- 73% of the auditionees had some sort of arts training outside of high school; for the students who attended the arts schools, that figure rose to 91%.
- 20% of the auditionees were people of color; of those, 76% were from Mecklenburg or Forsyth Counties.
Read more at the Theatre Arts Curriculum Transformation blog: http://www.theatretactorg.
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