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CEDAR CREST EL vs TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL

CEDAR CREST EL and TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL are very closely rated, both scoring around 9.4 out of 10. In math proficiency, TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL leads at 27.0%.

Ratings Comparison

Metric CEDAR CREST EL TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL
Overall Rating 9.4 / 10 9.2 / 10
Academic Score 8.7 9.1
Growth Score 10.0 10.0
Diversity Index
Free/Reduced Lunch 99.2% 78.9%
Environment Score 9.2 7.6
State Rank #35 of 8,547 #73 of 8,547
State Percentile 100th 99th

Test Scores

Subject CEDAR CREST EL TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL
Math Proficiency 22.0% 27.0%
Math (State Avg)
ELA Proficiency 22.0% 27.0%
ELA (State Avg)

School Details

Detail CEDAR CREST EL TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL
Type Elementary School Elementary School
Grades Pre-K – 6th 1st – 8th
Enrollment 373 313
Student-Teacher Ratio 11.3:1 14.2:1
Per-Pupil Spending
Free/Reduced Lunch 99.2% 78.9%
Chronic Absenteeism
District DALLAS ISD DALLAS ISD
City Dallas Dallas

Neighborhood

Metric Dallas (75203) Dallas (75216)
Median Household Income $46,358 $37,613
Median Home Value $125,000 $138,900
Median Rent $1,110 $1,169
College Educated (Bachelor's+) 16.9% 9.1%
Poverty Rate 30.5% 31.5%
Avg Commute 31 min 29 min

The data story: CEDAR CREST EL vs TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL

Cedar Crest El holds a narrow overall rating edge over Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School — 9.4/10 versus 9.2/10 — but both schools sit in elite company statewide. Cedar Crest El ranks #35 of 8,547 schools in Texas, while Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School ranks #73 of 8,547. That 38-position gap is real but slim; either school places a Dallas student in the top 1% of the state.

On academics, Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School actually outscores Cedar Crest El — 9.1/10 versus 8.7/10 — a 0.4-point advantage that reflects its specialized curriculum. Both schools post a perfect 10.0/10 growth score, meaning students at each campus outperform state expectations for academic progress regardless of starting point. The academic gap favors Trinity Heights, while Cedar Crest El's stronger overall rating is lifted by its equity and environment components.

Cedar Crest El enrolls 373 students against Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School's 313, but the more consequential demographic difference is free/reduced lunch eligibility: Cedar Crest El serves a 99% FRL population versus 79% at Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School. Cedar Crest El's student-teacher ratio of 11.3:1 also offers meaningfully more classroom contact than Trinity Heights' 14.2:1 — a 2.9-student-per-teacher gap that can matter in early elementary grades. Cedar Crest El's near-perfect growth score achieved against a nearly entirely economically disadvantaged population makes it a standout equity story in Dallas ISD.

The two schools diverge sharply on grade span and program identity. Cedar Crest El covers PK through 6th grade, giving families a single campus from pre-kindergarten onward. Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School runs grades 1 through 8, skipping pre-K but extending into middle school — and as a designated gifted-and-talented magnet, it requires qualifying for admission rather than enrolling by attendance zone. The two campuses sit only 0.7 miles apart in Dallas, making the choice less about geography and more about program fit.

Editorial summary generated April 2026 · sonnet

Who each school fits

CEDAR CREST EL

Cedar Crest El suits families seeking a neighborhood elementary with pre-K access, a lower student-teacher ratio, and a proven track record of exceptional growth with a high-need student population. Parents who value an inclusive, zoned school where staff consistently outperform state growth benchmarks — and want a single campus from pre-K through 6th grade — will find Cedar Crest El hard to beat in Dallas ISD.

TRINITY HEIGHTS GIFTED AND TALENTED SCHOOL

Trinity Heights Gifted and Talented School fits families with a child who qualifies for gifted-and-talented identification and wants a dedicated accelerated program extending through 8th grade. The 9.1/10 academic score and magnet structure appeal to parents who prioritize subject-matter depth over classroom size, and who are willing to navigate the application process for a specialized curriculum in a setting that still earns a top-100 statewide rating.

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