North CarolinaSchoolsSouth Academy of International Languages

South Academy of International Languages

PublicGrades 08
Charlotte, North Carolina · Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
SCHOOL SNAPSHOT
Students1,227
Student:Teacher15.0:1
Free/Reduced Lunch36%
Title INo
South Academy of International Languages

Free/Reduced Lunch (FRL)

Free/Reduced Lunch (FRL) eligibility is the primary federal poverty proxy used in US K-12 data. Students qualify based on household income relative to federal poverty guidelines. Schools where 40% or more students are FRL-eligible may qualify for Title I school-wide programs.

Free/Reduced Lunch eligibility36%
0% (least disadvantaged)Moderate equity need100% (most disadvantaged)
School FRL36%
Title INo

South Academy of International Languages has moderate FRL eligibility at 36%. This is within the mid-range for US public schools.

Source: NCES CCD (2023).

Accountability & Performance

NC School Report Cards — Each US state publishes its own school accountability dashboard under the federal ESSA framework. We display that data when it is available for this school.

State accountability data coming in the next ingestion pass.

Location & Governance

Administrative and geographic context for South Academy of International Languages.

SectorPublic
School Type
LevelElementary
Grade Span0–8
District (LEA)Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
District ID3702970
County37119
CityCharlotte
CharterNo
MagnetNo
Title INo
NCES School ID370297001273
Source: NCES Common Core of Data (2023).

Understanding These Measures

FRL (Free/Reduced Lunch)

FRL eligibility is the most-used poverty proxy in US K-12 data. Students qualify based on household income — free lunch at 130% of the federal poverty level, reduced-price at 185%. Many schools at 40%+ FRL qualify for Title I school-wide program funding.

Title I

Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act directs federal funds to schools serving high concentrations of low-income students. Funding supports supplemental instruction, professional development, and wraparound services.

Charter vs Magnet vs District

District schools are run by the local education agency. Charters are publicly funded but operate under independent contracts. Magnets are district-operated schools with a specialized theme open to students beyond their attendance zone.

NC School Report Cards

Each US state runs its own ESSA-compliant accountability system. North Carolina's system (NC School Report Cards) is what we surface in the Accountability & Performance panel above.