Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › Sabre Springs vs Scripps Ranch schools
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October 19, 2009 at 4:50 PM #471915October 20, 2009 at 1:55 AM #471254EugeneParticipant
[quote=gn]ocrenter,
Is this because in the older parts of Scripps, the children of the homeowners are growing out of school age ? If that is true, then other neighborhoods like Carmel Valley would have the same problem, wouldn’t they ?[/quote]
The difference between SR, on one hand, and Carmel Valley / Stonebridge, on the other, is that SR is part of a big school district. If SDUSD sees falling enrollment in SRHS and rising enrollment in City Heights, they may decide to bus excess students to SRHS. But they can’t bus them to Carmel Valley (unless CV’s school district approves such a large scale interdistrict transfer, and it surely won’t approve that – or else it will be the superintendent’s head on a platter).
Besides, CV and Stonebridge aren’t in real danger of falling enrollment any time soon, they are both desirable areas and there’s a lot of free land available. CV and Stonebridge can easily double their populations upon buildout. 4S Ranch can triple the population. Scripps Ranch is more constrained in that aspect.
The assumption that ocrenter seems to be making is that school-age population “south of the 8” will keep growing, or at least it will not decline as fast as Scripps Ranch. This seems to be a bit unjustified to me. San Diego is more or less completely built out, areas south of the 8 are already densely packed and hispanicized; even if we magically replace each white City Heights holdout retiree with a hispanic family, that’s not going to tilt the scale that much. On the other hand, white holdouts aren’t going to leave all at once, hispanic immigrants will eventually assimilate and go through demographic transition. The official SANDAG forecast is slow uniform growth of school-age population throughout the city.
October 20, 2009 at 1:55 AM #471436EugeneParticipant[quote=gn]ocrenter,
Is this because in the older parts of Scripps, the children of the homeowners are growing out of school age ? If that is true, then other neighborhoods like Carmel Valley would have the same problem, wouldn’t they ?[/quote]
The difference between SR, on one hand, and Carmel Valley / Stonebridge, on the other, is that SR is part of a big school district. If SDUSD sees falling enrollment in SRHS and rising enrollment in City Heights, they may decide to bus excess students to SRHS. But they can’t bus them to Carmel Valley (unless CV’s school district approves such a large scale interdistrict transfer, and it surely won’t approve that – or else it will be the superintendent’s head on a platter).
Besides, CV and Stonebridge aren’t in real danger of falling enrollment any time soon, they are both desirable areas and there’s a lot of free land available. CV and Stonebridge can easily double their populations upon buildout. 4S Ranch can triple the population. Scripps Ranch is more constrained in that aspect.
The assumption that ocrenter seems to be making is that school-age population “south of the 8” will keep growing, or at least it will not decline as fast as Scripps Ranch. This seems to be a bit unjustified to me. San Diego is more or less completely built out, areas south of the 8 are already densely packed and hispanicized; even if we magically replace each white City Heights holdout retiree with a hispanic family, that’s not going to tilt the scale that much. On the other hand, white holdouts aren’t going to leave all at once, hispanic immigrants will eventually assimilate and go through demographic transition. The official SANDAG forecast is slow uniform growth of school-age population throughout the city.
October 20, 2009 at 1:55 AM #471796EugeneParticipant[quote=gn]ocrenter,
Is this because in the older parts of Scripps, the children of the homeowners are growing out of school age ? If that is true, then other neighborhoods like Carmel Valley would have the same problem, wouldn’t they ?[/quote]
The difference between SR, on one hand, and Carmel Valley / Stonebridge, on the other, is that SR is part of a big school district. If SDUSD sees falling enrollment in SRHS and rising enrollment in City Heights, they may decide to bus excess students to SRHS. But they can’t bus them to Carmel Valley (unless CV’s school district approves such a large scale interdistrict transfer, and it surely won’t approve that – or else it will be the superintendent’s head on a platter).
Besides, CV and Stonebridge aren’t in real danger of falling enrollment any time soon, they are both desirable areas and there’s a lot of free land available. CV and Stonebridge can easily double their populations upon buildout. 4S Ranch can triple the population. Scripps Ranch is more constrained in that aspect.
The assumption that ocrenter seems to be making is that school-age population “south of the 8” will keep growing, or at least it will not decline as fast as Scripps Ranch. This seems to be a bit unjustified to me. San Diego is more or less completely built out, areas south of the 8 are already densely packed and hispanicized; even if we magically replace each white City Heights holdout retiree with a hispanic family, that’s not going to tilt the scale that much. On the other hand, white holdouts aren’t going to leave all at once, hispanic immigrants will eventually assimilate and go through demographic transition. The official SANDAG forecast is slow uniform growth of school-age population throughout the city.
October 20, 2009 at 1:55 AM #471874EugeneParticipant[quote=gn]ocrenter,
Is this because in the older parts of Scripps, the children of the homeowners are growing out of school age ? If that is true, then other neighborhoods like Carmel Valley would have the same problem, wouldn’t they ?[/quote]
The difference between SR, on one hand, and Carmel Valley / Stonebridge, on the other, is that SR is part of a big school district. If SDUSD sees falling enrollment in SRHS and rising enrollment in City Heights, they may decide to bus excess students to SRHS. But they can’t bus them to Carmel Valley (unless CV’s school district approves such a large scale interdistrict transfer, and it surely won’t approve that – or else it will be the superintendent’s head on a platter).
Besides, CV and Stonebridge aren’t in real danger of falling enrollment any time soon, they are both desirable areas and there’s a lot of free land available. CV and Stonebridge can easily double their populations upon buildout. 4S Ranch can triple the population. Scripps Ranch is more constrained in that aspect.
The assumption that ocrenter seems to be making is that school-age population “south of the 8” will keep growing, or at least it will not decline as fast as Scripps Ranch. This seems to be a bit unjustified to me. San Diego is more or less completely built out, areas south of the 8 are already densely packed and hispanicized; even if we magically replace each white City Heights holdout retiree with a hispanic family, that’s not going to tilt the scale that much. On the other hand, white holdouts aren’t going to leave all at once, hispanic immigrants will eventually assimilate and go through demographic transition. The official SANDAG forecast is slow uniform growth of school-age population throughout the city.
October 20, 2009 at 1:55 AM #472094EugeneParticipant[quote=gn]ocrenter,
Is this because in the older parts of Scripps, the children of the homeowners are growing out of school age ? If that is true, then other neighborhoods like Carmel Valley would have the same problem, wouldn’t they ?[/quote]
The difference between SR, on one hand, and Carmel Valley / Stonebridge, on the other, is that SR is part of a big school district. If SDUSD sees falling enrollment in SRHS and rising enrollment in City Heights, they may decide to bus excess students to SRHS. But they can’t bus them to Carmel Valley (unless CV’s school district approves such a large scale interdistrict transfer, and it surely won’t approve that – or else it will be the superintendent’s head on a platter).
Besides, CV and Stonebridge aren’t in real danger of falling enrollment any time soon, they are both desirable areas and there’s a lot of free land available. CV and Stonebridge can easily double their populations upon buildout. 4S Ranch can triple the population. Scripps Ranch is more constrained in that aspect.
The assumption that ocrenter seems to be making is that school-age population “south of the 8” will keep growing, or at least it will not decline as fast as Scripps Ranch. This seems to be a bit unjustified to me. San Diego is more or less completely built out, areas south of the 8 are already densely packed and hispanicized; even if we magically replace each white City Heights holdout retiree with a hispanic family, that’s not going to tilt the scale that much. On the other hand, white holdouts aren’t going to leave all at once, hispanic immigrants will eventually assimilate and go through demographic transition. The official SANDAG forecast is slow uniform growth of school-age population throughout the city.
October 20, 2009 at 9:35 AM #471324enron_by_the_seaParticipantAt least on the northern side of scripps ranch, near scripps poway pkwy (aka “new scripps” or “Miramar Ranch” or “Scripps ranch villages”) feeding Dingeman & EBS schools, I see a lot of young kids.
Unscientifically, there might be 10% kids in my son’s KG class that are from outside SR. However all of them live on the other side of 15, in Mira Mesa/Sorrento Mesa. I have met some of these parents and I am not concerned about them attending SR schools.
Not sure of the situation in Jerebek, MRE, Marshall or SRHS schools. Maybe the “old” scripps ranch is getting “older” and this is a bigger issue at middle school/ high school levels.
October 20, 2009 at 9:35 AM #471506enron_by_the_seaParticipantAt least on the northern side of scripps ranch, near scripps poway pkwy (aka “new scripps” or “Miramar Ranch” or “Scripps ranch villages”) feeding Dingeman & EBS schools, I see a lot of young kids.
Unscientifically, there might be 10% kids in my son’s KG class that are from outside SR. However all of them live on the other side of 15, in Mira Mesa/Sorrento Mesa. I have met some of these parents and I am not concerned about them attending SR schools.
Not sure of the situation in Jerebek, MRE, Marshall or SRHS schools. Maybe the “old” scripps ranch is getting “older” and this is a bigger issue at middle school/ high school levels.
October 20, 2009 at 9:35 AM #471867enron_by_the_seaParticipantAt least on the northern side of scripps ranch, near scripps poway pkwy (aka “new scripps” or “Miramar Ranch” or “Scripps ranch villages”) feeding Dingeman & EBS schools, I see a lot of young kids.
Unscientifically, there might be 10% kids in my son’s KG class that are from outside SR. However all of them live on the other side of 15, in Mira Mesa/Sorrento Mesa. I have met some of these parents and I am not concerned about them attending SR schools.
Not sure of the situation in Jerebek, MRE, Marshall or SRHS schools. Maybe the “old” scripps ranch is getting “older” and this is a bigger issue at middle school/ high school levels.
October 20, 2009 at 9:35 AM #471944enron_by_the_seaParticipantAt least on the northern side of scripps ranch, near scripps poway pkwy (aka “new scripps” or “Miramar Ranch” or “Scripps ranch villages”) feeding Dingeman & EBS schools, I see a lot of young kids.
Unscientifically, there might be 10% kids in my son’s KG class that are from outside SR. However all of them live on the other side of 15, in Mira Mesa/Sorrento Mesa. I have met some of these parents and I am not concerned about them attending SR schools.
Not sure of the situation in Jerebek, MRE, Marshall or SRHS schools. Maybe the “old” scripps ranch is getting “older” and this is a bigger issue at middle school/ high school levels.
October 20, 2009 at 9:35 AM #472164enron_by_the_seaParticipantAt least on the northern side of scripps ranch, near scripps poway pkwy (aka “new scripps” or “Miramar Ranch” or “Scripps ranch villages”) feeding Dingeman & EBS schools, I see a lot of young kids.
Unscientifically, there might be 10% kids in my son’s KG class that are from outside SR. However all of them live on the other side of 15, in Mira Mesa/Sorrento Mesa. I have met some of these parents and I am not concerned about them attending SR schools.
Not sure of the situation in Jerebek, MRE, Marshall or SRHS schools. Maybe the “old” scripps ranch is getting “older” and this is a bigger issue at middle school/ high school levels.
October 20, 2009 at 10:01 AM #471344gnParticipantEugene,
Thanks for the good explanation. I didn’t know that a school district would bus students from as far away from Scripps as from “south of the 8”. I thought the district would go to nearby areas like Mira Mesa/Sorrento Valley or Tierra Santa. Does anyone know how a school district would go about doing this ? Previously, I like Scripps a lot but this issue concerns me.
Enron,
I think you are right about the difference between north & south Scripps. I know a parent who lives in Mira Mesa & tried to get her son into Dingeman, but she couldn’t. He ended up going to Jerabek.
October 20, 2009 at 10:01 AM #471526gnParticipantEugene,
Thanks for the good explanation. I didn’t know that a school district would bus students from as far away from Scripps as from “south of the 8”. I thought the district would go to nearby areas like Mira Mesa/Sorrento Valley or Tierra Santa. Does anyone know how a school district would go about doing this ? Previously, I like Scripps a lot but this issue concerns me.
Enron,
I think you are right about the difference between north & south Scripps. I know a parent who lives in Mira Mesa & tried to get her son into Dingeman, but she couldn’t. He ended up going to Jerabek.
October 20, 2009 at 10:01 AM #471887gnParticipantEugene,
Thanks for the good explanation. I didn’t know that a school district would bus students from as far away from Scripps as from “south of the 8”. I thought the district would go to nearby areas like Mira Mesa/Sorrento Valley or Tierra Santa. Does anyone know how a school district would go about doing this ? Previously, I like Scripps a lot but this issue concerns me.
Enron,
I think you are right about the difference between north & south Scripps. I know a parent who lives in Mira Mesa & tried to get her son into Dingeman, but she couldn’t. He ended up going to Jerabek.
October 20, 2009 at 10:01 AM #471964gnParticipantEugene,
Thanks for the good explanation. I didn’t know that a school district would bus students from as far away from Scripps as from “south of the 8”. I thought the district would go to nearby areas like Mira Mesa/Sorrento Valley or Tierra Santa. Does anyone know how a school district would go about doing this ? Previously, I like Scripps a lot but this issue concerns me.
Enron,
I think you are right about the difference between north & south Scripps. I know a parent who lives in Mira Mesa & tried to get her son into Dingeman, but she couldn’t. He ended up going to Jerabek.
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