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Hoover Street Elementary vs Sierra Vista Elementary

Hoover Street Elementary and Sierra Vista Elementary are very closely rated, both scoring around 9.5 out of 10. Hoover Street Elementary is significantly larger with 579 students, about 3.8× the size of Sierra Vista Elementary (151). In math proficiency, Hoover Street Elementary leads at 53.0%.

Ratings Comparison

Metric Hoover Street Elementary Sierra Vista Elementary
Overall Rating 9.5 / 10 9.8 / 10
Academic Score 9.5 9.5
Growth Score 9.8 10.0
Diversity Index
Free/Reduced Lunch 97.1% 84.1%
Environment Score 8.9 9.5
State Rank #19 of 9,533 #1 of 9,533
State Percentile 100th 100th

Test Scores

Subject Hoover Street Elementary Sierra Vista Elementary
Math Proficiency 53.0% 37.0%
Math (State Avg)
ELA Proficiency 58.0% 52.0%
ELA (State Avg)

School Details

Detail Hoover Street Elementary Sierra Vista Elementary
Type Elementary School Elementary School
Grades Kindergarten – 5th Kindergarten – 6th
Enrollment 579 151
Student-Teacher Ratio 20.0:1 16.8:1
Per-Pupil Spending
Free/Reduced Lunch 97.1% 84.1%
Chronic Absenteeism
District Los Angeles Unified Los Angeles Unified
City Los Angeles Los Angeles

Neighborhood

Metric Los Angeles (90005) Los Angeles (90032)
Median Household Income $52,755 $81,563
Median Home Value $1,084,400 $780,100
Median Rent $1,648 $1,571
College Educated (Bachelor's+) 38.0% 24.8%
Poverty Rate 24.6% 14.2%
Avg Commute 32 min 31 min

The data story: Hoover Street Elementary vs Sierra Vista Elementary

Sierra Vista Elementary holds the top position in California — ranked #1 of 9,533 schools statewide — while Hoover Street Elementary sits at #19 of 9,533, placing both schools in a rare tier of performance for Los Angeles. The overall rating gap between the two is just 0.3 points (Sierra Vista Elementary at 9.8/10 versus Hoover Street Elementary at 9.5/10), meaning parents are genuinely choosing between two exceptional schools rather than a clear frontrunner and a fallback.

On academic and growth measures, the two schools track closely but diverge at the margin. Both Hoover Street Elementary and Sierra Vista Elementary score 9.5/10 on academic achievement. Growth separates them slightly: Sierra Vista Elementary earns a perfect 10.0/10 growth score versus Hoover Street Elementary's 9.8/10 — a difference that indicates Sierra Vista students are advancing at a marginally faster pace relative to their starting points, even within a small school environment.

Enrollment and resources tell a markedly different story. Hoover Street Elementary serves 579 students compared to Sierra Vista Elementary's 151 — nearly four times the enrollment. That size difference shows up directly in classroom density: Hoover Street Elementary carries a 20.0:1 student-teacher ratio against Sierra Vista Elementary's 16.8:1. Sierra Vista Elementary also serves a somewhat less economically stressed population, with 84% of students qualifying for free or reduced lunch versus 97% at Hoover Street Elementary — a 13-point gap that reflects meaningfully different family income profiles across the two campuses 7.7 miles apart.

Grade span is worth noting for families with children approaching sixth grade. Sierra Vista Elementary extends through sixth grade (KG–06), while Hoover Street Elementary tops out at fifth grade (KG–05), meaning Sierra Vista students stay on campus one additional year before transitioning to middle school. For families planning ahead for that transition, the extra year of continuity at Sierra Vista may factor into the decision.

Editorial summary generated April 2026 · sonnet

Who each school fits

Hoover Street Elementary

Hoover Street Elementary suits families comfortable with a larger school community and who prioritize a campus deeply embedded in serving high-need students — 97% free and reduced lunch enrollment signals a staff experienced with equity-focused instruction. Parents who value a more diverse, higher-enrollment environment in Los Angeles will find a top-20 statewide school here.

Sierra Vista Elementary

Sierra Vista Elementary suits families who want the smallest possible classroom setting — 16.8:1 student-teacher ratio in a 151-student school — combined with the single highest state ranking in California. It's the stronger fit for parents with a child entering kindergarten through sixth grade who prioritize individualized attention and maximum growth trajectory over a larger school culture.

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