SYSO-in-the-Schools support public school instrumental music programs by providing instruction in 25 Seattle-area public schools serving over 600 students annually, and the Marrowstone Summer Festival provides learning for over 500 students ages 7 to 25 each summer. The Academic-Year Orchestra Program serves over 490 students each year through four symphonic orchestras, one string orchestra, and two extracurricular ensembles serving the South Seattle community. In 2022,
Music Youth Southeast (MYSE) was begun. MYSE is an extracurricular orchestral ensemble that was created in partnership with the community of South Seattle. It is open and tuition-free to musicians grades 6-12 with at least one year of experience. It is conducted by Kim Roy. Launched in 2023,
Cadenza is an after-school program that brings together fourth and fifth graders across Southeast Seattle. These string musicians participate in rehearsals, masterclasses, and concerts, led by Daniel Mullikin, Kim Roy, and Matt Hopper. SYSO also offers three summer music programs. The
Marrowstone Music Festival, hosted by
Western Washington University in
Bellingham, serves around 185 musicians aged 14–24 with a two-week intensive summer program. Faculty members and guest performers at Marrowstone have included
Dale Clevenger,
Glenn Dicterow, and Simone Porter(external link). Up until 2020, two sessions of
Marrowstone in the City (
MITC) were held in suburbs that surround Seattle, and served over 330 younger players annually. SYSO and the Seattle Conservatory of Music work with local schools through the
Endangered Instruments Program, started by Walter Cole, a project that exposes students to less commonly played instruments including oboe, bassoon, percussion, viola, double bass, tuba, trombone, and horn. The first of its kind in the United States, the program has been emulated in many other cities worldwide, including
New York City,
Fort Lauderdale, Florida and
Vancouver, B.C. EIP partners with 13 Seattle-area public schools to serve over 170 students a year. Participation in the EIP is tuition-free for students who also participate in SYSO's Academic Year Orchestra Program. Through all of its programs, Seattle Youth Symphony Orchestras serves over 1,100 young musicians each year. Its concerts reach over 14,000, and are replayed over
KING-FM to audiences in excess of 200,000. SYSO regularly receives funding and grants from individuals, foundations, schools, and government agencies. In November 2008, the Seattle Youth Symphony Orchestras received a grant of $500,000 from the Wallace foundation. ==Seattle Conservatory of Music==