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Dayton Heights Elementary vs Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary

Dayton Heights Elementary and Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary are very closely rated, both scoring around 9.1 out of 10. In math proficiency, Dayton Heights Elementary leads at 42.0%.

Ratings Comparison

Metric Dayton Heights Elementary Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary
Overall Rating 9.1 / 10 9.5 / 10
Academic Score 8.7 8.7
Growth Score 9.3 10.0
Diversity Index
Free/Reduced Lunch 95.5% 93.5%
Environment Score 9.2 9.4
State Rank #166 of 9,533 #18 of 9,533
State Percentile 98th 100th

Test Scores

Subject Dayton Heights Elementary Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary
Math Proficiency 42.0% 17.0%
Math (State Avg)
ELA Proficiency 43.0% 22.0%
ELA (State Avg)

School Details

Detail Dayton Heights Elementary Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary
Type Elementary School Elementary School
Grades Kindergarten – 5th Kindergarten – 6th
Enrollment 242 232
Student-Teacher Ratio 18.6:1 17.8:1
Per-Pupil Spending
Free/Reduced Lunch 95.5% 93.5%
Chronic Absenteeism
District Los Angeles Unified Los Angeles Unified
City Los Angeles Los Angeles

Neighborhood

Metric Los Angeles (90004) Los Angeles (90043)
Median Household Income $62,655 $65,496
Median Home Value $1,457,200 $867,800
Median Rent $1,752 $1,424
College Educated (Bachelor's+) 40.0% 30.8%
Poverty Rate 18.8% 16.9%
Avg Commute 32 min 36 min

The data story: Dayton Heights Elementary vs Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary

Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary holds a 9.5/10 overall rating against Dayton Heights Elementary's 9.1/10 — a 0.4-point gap that translates into a dramatic difference in state standing. Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary ranks #18 of 9,533 schools in California, placing it in the top 0.2% statewide. Dayton Heights Elementary ranks #166 of 9,533, which is still an elite position in the top 2%, but the distance between these two schools in the state rankings is substantial: 148 spots separating schools just 7.0 miles apart in Los Angeles.

On academics, the two schools are dead even — both Dayton Heights Elementary and Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary score 8.7/10 in academic proficiency. The gap opens on growth: Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary earns a perfect 10.0/10 growth score, meaning its students are gaining more than nearly any comparable school in the state. Dayton Heights Elementary's 9.3/10 growth score is strong, but lags by 0.7 points — a meaningful delta when growth scores predict long-term trajectory rather than just a single-year snapshot.

Both schools serve demographically similar, high-need student populations. Dayton Heights Elementary enrolls 242 students with 96% qualifying for free or reduced-price lunch; Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary enrolls 232 students with 94% qualifying — a 2-percentage-point difference. Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary's student-teacher ratio is 17.8:1, slightly tighter than Dayton Heights Elementary's 18.6:1, giving students marginally more individual attention per teacher.

The two schools differ in one structural way: Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary serves grades KG–06, adding a sixth-grade year that Dayton Heights Elementary does not offer — Dayton Heights caps at fifth grade (KG–05). For families who want to delay a middle school transition by one year, Fifty-Fourth Street's grade span provides a longer runway inside a known environment.

Editorial summary generated April 2026 · sonnet

Who each school fits

Dayton Heights Elementary

Dayton Heights Elementary suits families in the western Los Angeles corridor who want a top-2%-statewide school with a strong 9.3/10 growth score and a slightly larger peer cohort of 242 students. Its KG–05 structure fits families already aligned to a traditional elementary-to-middle pathway.

Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary

Fifty-Fourth Street Elementary is the better fit for families prioritizing maximum academic growth — its perfect 10.0/10 growth score and #18 statewide rank are rare at any income level. The KG–06 grade span also suits parents who want one additional year before middle school transition.

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