Davila Day School in Chula Vista is a public special education campus operated by the South County Special Education Local Plan Area in affiliation with the San Diego County Office of Education, serving Deaf and Hard of Hearing students from preschool through eighth grade at 415 Smith Avenue. The school transitioned to SDCOE governance as its own entity in 2009 and maintains an on-site audiologist and speech therapist who specialize in habilitation, with literacy programming complemented by resources at the Chula Vista Public Library Civic Center Branch nearby on the Broadway corridor. Named after Dr. Robert Davila — a trailblazer in disability advocacy born to migrant farm workers in Carlsbad, California — the school draws enrollment through IEP referrals from member districts including Chula Vista Elementary School District, San Ysidro School District, and Sweetwater Union High School District. Both spoken and signed languages are developed through a culturally inclusive curriculum, and free community ASL classes are offered quarterly to adults and siblings of enrolled students. Developmental speech-language benchmarking aligns with the clinical protocols used by area providers including Speech Tree Therapy Center for referral continuity. The most intensive service tier integrates individualized education programs with on-campus audiological assessment, video-phone communication infrastructure, and coordinated campus-sharing with Vista Square Elementary for general-education inclusion opportunities.