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Community college education in San Diego can be traced to 1914 when the board of education of the San Diego City Schools authorized postsecondary classes for the youth of San Diego. Classes opened that fall at San Diego High School with four faculty members and 35 students, establishing San Diego City College.
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By 1946, City College moved back to San Diego High School and reorganized into three branches: San Diego Vocational High School, San Diego College Arts and Sciences, and San Diego Evening Junior College. City College took its permanent campus and during the 1950s and 60s, land was acquired to allow expansion through various blocks of today's ...
San Diego City College, public, two-year community college location in downtown San Diego; San Diego Mesa College, public, two year community college located in the community of Clairemont Mesa; San Diego Miramar College, public, two-year community college in the Miramar neighborhood
San Diego Christian College, a private, evangelical university in El Cajon, California; San Diego City College, a public, two-year community college in San Diego, California; San Diego Comic-Con, an annual comic book convention and entertainment event in San Diego, California
East Village High School (EVHS) is a public high school in downtown San Diego, California. It is located on the campus of San Diego City College. The school is part of San Diego Unified School District. It was previously named San Diego Early/Middle College until 2016. [4]
In 1994-95, Saddleback left the Conference and joined the Orange Empire Conference. In 1987, Cuyamaca College, a second campus in the Grossmont District, became a member. Prior to 1982, the Conference colleges belonged to several different conferences. San Diego City College, and later San Diego Mesa College, belonged to the Metropolitan ...
Community college education in San Diego began in 1914 when the Board of Education of the San Diego City Schools authorized post-secondary classes for San Diego high school students. In 1956, San Diego voters authorized the first of two bonds to establish and construct what would become San Diego Mesa College on an 85-acre mesa next to Stephen ...