Where Crocker Ranch
is choosing high school.

Four grid codes — 452A, 455A, 458A, 454A — cover the Crocker Ranch neighborhood inside Roseville Joint Union High School District. Over ten years, the share of these families enrolling at Roseville High has fallen from sixty-two percent to thirty-one percent. Woodcreek High has risen from sixteen percent to thirty-nine. West Park High, which opened in the fall of 2021, now draws fifteen percent. The numbers are the anchor for a community conversation about boundary, capacity, and connection.

Audience · Superintendent, cabinet, site administrators Source · RJUHSD Boundary Info, grid codes 458A, 454A, 455A, 452A
Crocker Ranch students
369
In RJUHSD this year, from these four grid codes
Roseville High share
31%
Down from 62% six years ago
Woodcreek High share
39%
Up from 16% six years ago
West Park High share
15%
From zero in 2020, since the school opened

Where Crocker Ranch enrolls, year by year.

Share of RJUHSD students from these grid codes
RHS / WHS / WPHS / Other RJUHSD schools  ·  percent of total

Total headcount from these codes.

Total RJUHSD students from grid codes 452A / 455A / 458A / 454A

Enrollment from Crocker Ranch rose from 420 in 2016 to a peak of 499 in 2021, then fell to 369 by 2026. The share story and the volume story are separate — both matter for a boundary conversation.

The freshman pattern.

2025–26 Crocker Ranch cohorts at RHS and WHS

Among this year's twelfth graders from Crocker Ranch, RHS and WHS are nearly balanced. Among ninth and tenth graders, WHS leads by a wide margin. The trend has not plateaued.

Grid code by grid code.

369 students from Crocker Ranch grid codes, 2025–26
Grid RHS WHS WPHS Total
452Asouthwest quadrant 16181256
455Anorthwest quadrant 3142495
458Anortheast quadrant 5658162
454Asoutheast quadrant 132556
Total 11614355369

West Park counts for 458A and 454A are combined in the source file as thirty-nine students, not broken out by grid. Fifty-five students in these codes attend other RJUHSD schools, which rounds the total to 369.

Connection signal.

Crocker Ranch share of RHS rosters
Athletics
Programs

Of the 116 Roseville High students from Crocker Ranch, most rosters draw under one in ten from the neighborhood. Three teams list none.

The moments the ten-year shift turned.

2021
West Park High opens.

Fall of 2021 was the first year Crocker Ranch families had a third RJUHSD option inside the district. WPHS drew eighteen students from these four grid codes in its opening year. Roseville High dropped from sixty-two percent to fifty-three percent that same year, and Woodcreek held flat. The option itself, not the building, is what changed the math.

Crocker Ranch at RHS · 62% → 53% in one year
2023
Woodcreek crosses twenty percent.

The 2022–23 cohort was the first year Woodcreek drew twenty percent of Crocker Ranch students — the share had sat between twelve and seventeen percent for six straight years before that. West Park was now steady at thirteen percent. Roseville High had slipped below half. The neighborhood's high school was no longer a majority decision.

Woodcreek share · 17% → 20% · first sustained break
2025
Woodcreek passes Roseville.

In 2024–25, Woodcreek became the most-chosen high school for Crocker Ranch students, edging past Roseville at twenty-nine percent to thirty-two. By 2025–26, the gap had widened: Woodcreek thirty-nine, Roseville thirty-one. The crossing point was close, but it has not reversed. Ninth and tenth graders at Woodcreek now outnumber their Roseville peers nearly two to one.

Crossover year · RHS 32% / WHS 29% → reversed the following year

Candid framing for the community meeting.

What the numbers can say

The directly observable.

  • The share of Crocker Ranch students at each RJUHSD high school this year, and each year since 2016.
  • Total enrollment from these four grid codes is down roughly one hundred and thirty students from its 2021 peak.
  • The freshman and tenth-grade cohorts at Woodcreek have grown faster than at Roseville, meaning the trend has not plateaued.
  • Crocker Ranch students at Roseville High are underrepresented in athletics and signature programs relative to their share of the student body.
What the numbers can't say

The honest limits.

  • Why families are choosing Woodcreek or West Park over Roseville — the data shows the pattern, not the reasons.
  • How many Crocker Ranch eighth graders live in the area but never enroll at any RJUHSD school, and where they go instead.
  • Whether the participation gap at Roseville is a cause of the enrollment shift, an effect of it, or both.
  • What a boundary change would do — the data is a description of today, not a prediction of tomorrow.

Questions to anchor the community conversation.

Five questions worth asking out loud.

01
What are Crocker Ranch families telling us, with their enrollment decisions, about what they need from a neighborhood high school? Sixty-two percent to thirty-one percent is a signal. The cause is not in the data. Asking families directly is the only way to get there.
02
Is the story we tell about Roseville High the story current Crocker Ranch families hear? The underrepresentation in RHS athletics and programs suggests a connection gap. Boundary is one answer. Brand and experience are another.
03
What would a boundary change actually change — and what would it leave the same? Fifty-five students from these grid codes currently attend other RJUHSD schools, and roughly one in five has for a decade. A boundary can redirect students; it cannot force a choice.
04
Who carries the weight of this conversation in the community, and who should hear from cabinet first? Current families, graduates, feeder-school leaders, and site administrators each bring a different stake. Sequence matters.
05
What will we be able to say in five years — and what do we want the shape of the next ten-year chart to look like? The decision in front of us is a choice about which version of this chart we are trying to produce.
The sentence to carry into the room
Ten years ago, sixty-two percent of Crocker Ranch students attending our district enrolled at Roseville High. This year, it is thirty-one percent — with Woodcreek at thirty-nine, West Park at fifteen, and a smaller total cohort choosing RJUHSD at all. The numbers are the starting point for the boundary conversation, not the decision.
Proposed framing for community engagement