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Cerro Coso Community College is a public community college in the Eastern Sierra region of Southern California. It was established in 1973 as a separate college within the Kern Community College District. [3] The college offers traditional and online courses and two-year degrees. The college serves an area of approximately 18,000-square-miles. [1]
C. Cabrillo College; Calbright College; Cañada College; Cerritos College; Cerro Coso Community College; Cerro Coso Community College (Kern River Valley Campus)
Kern Community College District is a community college district in Kern County, California. Colleges part of the district are: Bakersfield College, Porterville College, and Cerro Coso Community College. [2]
In 1957, COS was founded after a special election. [1] Buildings on the current location first opened their doors on September 8, 1959. [1] Facilities at the Weed Campus include Herschel Meredith Stadium for football and track and field events, Tom Powers Court at Eagle Gymnasium for basketball and volleyball events, Kenneth W. Ford Theater for musical and theatrical performances, tactical ...
Cerro Coso Community College, a part of the Kern Community College District, was established in 1973 and has a full-time enrollment of 2,347. [37] The 420 acres (1.7 km 2) Indian Wells Valley Campus (IWV) is located in the upper Mojave Desert near Ridgecrest. [38] The IWV Campus is the largest of the Cerro Coso campuses.
The Grossmont–Cuyamaca Community College District is a California community college district comprising two colleges, Grossmont College and Cuyamaca College that serve about 28,000 students a year.
UC San Diego Tritons: University of California, San Diego: San Diego: Big West: UC Santa Barbara Gauchos: University of California, Santa Barbara: Santa Barbara: Big West: USC Trojans and Women of Troy: University of Southern California: Los Angeles: Big Ten [g] FBS
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 ...