[quote=limkotir][quote=an][quote=sdrealtor]As I said yesterday. I don’t make things up contrary to what deadzone claims[/quote]
I’ve been following Mira Mesa for almost 2 decades now and I have never seen MM sold out.[/quote]
From my perspective, and sdrealtor said it himself, MM is a bit “undervalued” zip area, given its location (no need to explain) and public school performance, relative to the social economic class (or housing hold income level).
Obviously, MM has its own share of baggages and downsides, which we’ll save for another post…
On the public school performance, to buyers that care about such thing, instead of looking at the greatschools, USNews and all the school rating sites, I looked at the UC Admissions data for incoming undergrad freshmen for Fall 2021 (most recent data).
So I checked out how many kids applied vs admitted to Berkeley in the high schools in the within 10 mile radius of MM. (I did not include some high performing south bay and north county schools):
1. Canyon Crest – 53/359
2. Torrey Pines – 26/191
3. La Jolla High – 25/155
4. Del North – 22/187
5. Rancho Bernardo – 15/99
6. University High – 13/96
7. Westview High – 13/193
8. Scripps High – 10/124
9. Mira Mesa 11/69
10. Mt Carmel 9/82
11. Poway High 6/62
I am going to mine 5-years of data and look at UCSD and UCB admissions, obtain the zip household income, to see if which public high schools in SD County always punch above its weight class (social economically). Because we all know better schools is a function of who lives there and what social economic class they belong in — let’s normalize school ratings!
California Public Schools only
Campus = Berkeley
Filter on county = San Diego[/quote]
That will be cool and please share. I just found one thing that was really interesting to me.
UCSD 2021 applied/admitted/enrolled
Mira Mesa 153/71/47
Torrey Pines 207/95/37
Canyon Crest 397/177/71
They all have about 46% acceptance but 66% of the MM kids enroll vs about 40% of the CV kids. I guess that makes sense social economically as the MM kids are more prone to live at home and commute but still very impressive numbers