New Frayser high school means families may get assigned to different schools
“With the Frayser (high school) new build, we’re also trying to, again, rightsize that community, so that we can shore up those feeder patterns,” Interim Memphis-Shelby County Schools Superintendent Roderick Richmond said. (Mark Weber/The Daily Memphian file)
Next fall, more than 1,000 families in Frayser may be reassigned to different schools.
The changes could be an example of what’s to come for other families as Memphis-Shelby County Schools makes plans to close, consolidate, repurpose and build new campuses. That multi-year plan, set to debut by the end of 2025, is meant to better align the district’s resources with its student population.
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Memphis-Shelby County Schools Roderick Richmond FrayserLaura Testino
Laura Testino is an enterprise reporter on The Daily Memphian’s metro team who writes most often about how education policies shape the lives of children and families. She regularly contributes to coverage of breaking news events and actions of the Tennessee General Assembly. Testino’s journalism career in Memphis began six years ago at The Commercial Appeal, where she began chronicling learning disruptions associated with the pandemic, and continued with Chalkbeat, where she dug into education administration in Memphis. Her reporting has appeared in The New York Times, The Times-Picayune, The Tuscaloosa News and USA Today.
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