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Crosstown High Leader on a Journey to Reimagine High School

After spending a year exploring educational systems around the world, Crosstown High School’s executive director Chris Terrill hopes to rethink high school in terms of sustainability, leadership-focused curriculum and more.

A co-founder of Crosstown High, Terrill has spent 30 years in education, and spent the last year traveling the world, spending time in Central America, South America, Africa, Australia and more.

Terrill called his experience “life-changing,” and said the purpose of the trip was to look for innovative schools and practices around the globe.

One of the highlights from Terrill’s trip was visiting the Green School in Bali, which he said is known as the world’s most sustainable school.

“The school is based in the jungle, and the campus is made from native bamboo,” said Terrill. “They generate all of their own electricity on campus with a turbine that is built on the river that students, staff, and engineers designed and constructed.”

Terrill hopes to take some of the lessons learned from the Green School and implement them not only at Crosstown, but other high schools as well.

“Crosstown is pretty sustainable, but there are certainly things we can do better as far as that goes,” said Terrill.

Sustainability is a priority, but so is curriculum, Terrill said. He referenced the African Leadership Academy in Johannesburg, South Africa, which has an “intensive focus,” on African studies, writing and rhetoric, and entrepreneurship.

“All three of those courses are tied together in the creation of major projects,” said Terrill. “I think about the potential for Crosstown to form what you’d call Memphis Leadership Academy, or something along those lines where we’re focused on a two-year deep dive on issues that affect Memphians, and working on solutions there, and tying it to the writing and rhetoric piece, and the entrepreneurship piece.”

Terrill believes this type of curriculum would be beneficial to the community, and ties in well to the mission of Crosstown High.

Other things Terrill and his colleagues witnessed were what he called “radical parent engagement” in several ways. He mentioned that schools had built coffee shops that are open to parents, in hopes of interconnecting with the school.

“The school serves as really the hub of the community,” said Terrill. “Maybe 50 years ago things were like that, and we’ve tended to kind of lose that a little bit in the United States. I think that could be a resurgent theme if we pushed for that.”

Terrill also mentioned the addition of courses for parents to take. He added that these would not necessarily be in tandem with their children’s learning, but to further build camaraderie in a school setting.

Changes to the school calendar and schedule are also things that Terrill pondered on, as he observed other schools. He said school, in the states, has always been 180 days, six-and-a-half hours a day. He questions if it has to be that way.

“We saw in Parma, Italy, students went to school six days a week, but they went to school from 8 a.m. to noon,” said Terrill. “They had time each day for greater family time and family structure, and it’s a system they’ve had for a very long time and is working.”

He also said he saw schools that had longer school days, but a shorter school week.

“That’s something we don’t see in Tennessee, but is it a possibility?”

In order to test these things, like the school day, Terrill said it takes buy-in from parents and the district, and would ultimately need to be approved as a “pilot at the state level,” which he acknowledges is an ambitious request. However, things such as engaging and implementing parents on a higher level, is something that can easily be done.

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Crosstown High Students Stage Walkout, Demand Change

Maya Smith

Crosstown students during a walk out on Friday.

A group of about 50 Crosstown High School students, frustrated that their voices aren’t being heard by school leaders, staged a walk-out Friday morning.

The students, mostly sophomores, joined by a few freshmen, gathered on Crosstown Concourse’s main plaza.The bulk of the group took a seat, while a dozen students made their way to the front. They took turns reading a letter addressed to the school’s principal, Alexis Gwen-Miller, along with other members of the administration and the school’s board.

“We love our school, and this comes from a place of determination to see Crosstown High succeed,” the letter reads. “But we feel as if our voices are not being heard. So, we’re not giving you any choice but to listen.”

The letter details a list of concerns, including a lack of organization, communication, and a disconnect between students and faculty and the administration and faculty. Students claim that their voices aren’t being heard and that they’re opinions aren’t being considered in school decisions.

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“Students have repeatedly voiced our concerns to administration and our voices have repeatedly been ignored,” the letter reads. “There are numerous issues, which we will express fully in this letter, that have led to us, as students, feeling that Crosstown is not fulfilling its promise to give us a project-based, competency-based, relationship-driven, diverse, by-design education.”

Crosstown High School opened its doors last year with its inaugural freshman class. The public charter school now has 280 9th and 10th grade students. It bills itself as a “learner-centered” school that engages students in “meaningful project-based work and authentic relationships that will prepare them to be self-directed, lifelong learners.”

Maya Smith

Crosstown students during a walk out on Friday.


The students’ main concern, that “sparked most of the current frustration,” the letter said, is the cohort model, which students say reflects a racial bias.

“Fundamentally, there is nothing wrong with the cohort model,” the students wrote. “The issue is how it’s being implemented. There is an unfair distribution of students between the two, 10th-grade cohorts, whether intentionally or not, (which) limits diversity in both cohorts.”

Students claim that one cohort is made up of a “majority of black and minority students,” while the other cohort consists of “most of the white students.”

“Many of the students in 10B feel that 10A has far more privilege in terms of academic opportunities and structure,” the students wrote. “Due to the fact that cohort B holds most of the minority and black students, this seems, whether done intentionally or not, to reflect bias. Whether this was intentional or not is beside the point. Another fundamental principle of Crosstown High is that it’s meant to be diverse by design.”

The students said that the “fact that either the school deliberately segregated its students” or “ignored race as a factor in splitting up the cohorts creating an unintentional lack of diversity, shows that the school obviously isn’t fulfilling its original mission of designing a racially and culturally diverse classroom experience.”

Maya Smith

Crosstown students during a walk out on Friday.

Maya Smith

Crosstown students during a walk out on Friday.

Maya Smith

Crosstown students during a walk out on Friday.

Continuing, the letter claims that the students in cohort B, one they say is made up largely by minority students, “faces a unique set of challenges in our education.” One of those challenges is the number of teachers assigned to the group — four, compared to the other cohort’s six.

“Our faculty is being placed with an unfair burden of last-minute preparation, coordination, and expansion, beyond what can be reasonably expected of them,” the letter reads. “As a result the education of my peers and I have suffered.”

Maya Smith

Crosstown students during a walk out on Friday.

Additionally, the students say that those in cohort B have not been offered participation in the school’s advisory program, in which 14 students are paired with a faculty member to receive support with social-emotional development and enhancing leadership and advocacy skills.

“This opportunity was promised to all students, yet it has only been given to the more fortunate students, 10A,” the letter reads.

Other issues cited in the letter include a shift from individualized, competency-based learning toward traditional learning styles, the school’s grading scale, which students say does not adequately reflect their mastery of their classes, and the school’s curriculum itself.

The students said it has become “increasingly obvious that we have a need for change here at Crosstown High. We have explicitly express our concerns, so the question remains: how do we move forward?”

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The students proposed solutions to their concerns. They include selecting two, non-voting student representatives to sit on the school’s board, allowing a group of students to work with the school’s leadership moving forward, and a “promise from the leadership at Crosstown High that from now forward student’s voices will no longer be ignored.

Terill

“As a school that preached about valuing the student voice, we want a guarantee that the school will work with students to ensure that we have a significant influence on the current and future experience at Crosstown High.

In response to the students’ Friday action, Chris Terill, executive director of Crosstown High, said he “appreciates the approach that the students are taking.”

“One of our key competences is to express oneself boldly, and our students are doing that,” Terill said. “We are taking their concerns and we seriously value student voices.”

Terill did not detail what actions the school would take to address the students’ concerns.

Read the students’ full letter below.



[pdf-1]

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Crosstown Concourse: The Vertical Village Comes to Life

Saturday will be a crazy Memphis moment. At least, that’s how Todd Richardson sees it.

Richardson is a co-founder of Crosstown Arts, the group that spurred the redevelopment of the massive, empty Sears Crosstown building.

Since 2010, Richardson’s mind has been focused on recruiting partners, signing tenants, finding funding, construction schedules, paperwork, designs, plans, and meetings, meetings, meetings. But at its core, Richardson still calls Crosstown a “miracle.”

“Yeah, at the end of the day, what a crazy Memphis moment?” Richardson says with a laugh. “It was the middle of the recession, and it couldn’t be done. It’s a completely unique redevelopment; there’s not another one like these in the country. So, we’re really celebrating the tenacity of the city for this miracle to happen. To me, that’s what August 19th is all about.”

Saturday is the Crosstown Concourse Opening Celebration, a moment eight years (or, nearly 90) in the making. The celebration starts at 3 p.m. with a dedication ceremony in the Central Atrium. The day continues with tenant open houses, live music, and a screening of a feature-length documentary about the Crosstown project.

Much of the building is already alive with residential and commercial tenants. But loose ends will be tied up as the year goes on — more apartments will be filled, programs will be started, and office workers will soon move into now-empty floors.

At full tilt, nearly 3,000 people will come and go there each day, according to Crosstown officials. That impact (economic and otherwise) will hit the area like an “atom bomb,” at least, in the words of a city official years ago. That energy will flow from a long-neglected “big empty” and revitalize a neighborhood that’s already feeling positive effects, with the potential for transforming a whole section of the city.

The (Way) Backstory

Company men from Sears, Roebuck & Co. quietly arrived in Memphis in the late 1920s, seeking sites for a retail center and catalog order plant. They knew if local property owners thought Sears was interested in their property, their prices would skyrocket. So, the Sears officials drove around town, pointing to sites from their car windows, while, behind them, real estate brokers followed in another car and took notes.

The company eventually settled on Crosstown, a then-suburban neighborhood about two miles from downtown. One hundred and eighty days after construction began, on August 27, 1927, Memphis Mayor Rowlett Paine cut the ribbon on a 640,000 square-foot facility that would employ more than 1,000 people.

That first day, almost 30,000 shoppers came to visit the 53,000-square-foot retail center. At its peak, nearly 45,000 catalog orders left Sears Crosstown each day.

The building also had a small hospital, cafeteria, ladies recreation area, administrative offices, a credit union, board rooms, and “The Cypress Room,” for executive dining.

Forty years later, Crosstown had grown to a mammoth 1.5 million square feet on 19 acres. Unfortunately, like the original mammoth, it had become outdated. Shoppers had headed east and elsewhere. Sears closed the Crosstown retail store in 1983.

The site remained a regional distribution center for Sears. But less than 30 years later, due to the decline in the company’s mail-order business, Sears closed many of its warehouses across the country, including Crosstown. The building was left vacant in 1993 and remained an iconic emtpy tower for more than 20 years.

The (Recent) Backstory

Richardson can tell the story of Crosstown’s recent history in about a minute. He’s an art historian, a professor at the University of Memphis, but he knew the Crosstown property owner. Richardson asked about the building, and that started a “wouldn’t-it-be-cool conversation,” he says, which hasn’t stopped.

“The biggest challenge we had was to get people to see beyond what they see,” Richardson says. “This was a building the size of the Empire State Building that had been empty for 20 years in Memphis. It was in the middle of the recession, so, where do you start and could [anything] ever happen?”

Richardson and Christopher Miner formed Crosstown Arts in 2010 as a nonprofit arts organization that would serve as the building’s developer and would one day also be building tenant.

Two years later, the two had commitments from eight local tenants willing to lease a total of 600,000 square feet, nearly half of the building. By the time Crosstown officials asked the Memphis City Council for $15 million (the project’s final piece of funding) a year later, the building’s tenants included Church Health, Methodist Healthcare, Gestalt Community Schools, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, ALSAC, Memphis Teacher Residency, Rhodes College, and, of course, Crosstown Arts.

So, What Is It?

The Crosstown website now calls its facility a “vertical urban village,” and some variation of that term has been used to describe it from the beginning. The website also tries to invoke Crosstown’s spirit by calling it “a local heart for the cultivation of well-being, shifting focus from products to people, from commodity to quality of life,” adding that Crosstown will build “on three of Memphis’ strongest community assets — arts, education, and health care. Concourse is now a mixed-use vertical urban village with a purposeful collective of uses and partners.”

So, what’s in the village?

The building will include Crosstown Arts, Crosstown High School, and numerous health-care agencies. It’ll also be home to the Curb Market grocery store, numerous restaurants, a pharmacy, a nail shop, a FedEx Office store, apartments, and more. To anyone in commercial real estate, it looks like a classic mixed-use development, a mix of residential, commercial, and retail spaces. Many of the tenants, including Curb Market, FedEx, Farm Burger, Mama Gaia’s, and others, are already doing business in Crosstown.

But Richardson says it’s more than that and that it “can’t be managed like any other building in Memphis.” He said the building and the tenants who fill it have a deliberate tone, personality, and a spirit of inclusivity. They all “are intimately related, interconnected, and interdependent and, as a result, better because they are together.”

The building was designed for tenant interaction. Those tenants who have have chosen to locate in Crosstown did so because their individual missions will be lifted through those interactions, a Crosstown official says. All of the tenants, whether in arts, education, food, or health care, intersect at wellness, an idea that Ginger Spickler, Crosstown’s director of strategic partnerships and projects, said serves as an overall ethos for Crosstown Concourse.

“We’ve all been to office parks, where you’ve got lots of people in different buildings, none of whom interact with each other,” Spickler says on a recent tour. “So we knew even if we put people in this building, they would not necessarily interact unless we create spaces and experience for them to share together.”

So, Spickler says, the design of the building deliberately includes common spaces — a small open theater, large balconies, a massive central atrium — “where those unexpected connections and intersections can happen.”

That’s precisely why Gary Shorb, the new executive director of the Urban Child Institute, says he wanted to move his organization there, noting they’ll “be right next door to Pyramid Peak Foundation and the Poplar Foundation.”

“Geography always helps with collaboration,” Shorb says. “The closer you are, the better it will be.”

Crosstown Now

Bowties and sport coats mingled easily with hard hats and work boots during an early afternoon last month. The smells of electrical work pierced the aroma of roasting vegetables close to Curb Market. The mid-tempo thump of chilled-out EDM at Mama Gaia was often overcome by the scraping whine of power tools. It was easy to see how far the building had come — and that it still had a little way to go. Richardson says the building is mostly full: About 98 percent of the office space is leased. The apartments are around 80 percent occupied. Retail spaces were about 60 percent leased. The next step will be getting everyone moved in.

Curb Market

The celebration will be gratifying, Richardson says, but Crosstown Concourse’s true success won’t be realized Saturday.

“Success for us will be five or 10 years down the road,” he says, “when people are still here and enjoying it, and Crosstown is still the vibrant vertical village we all hoped and dreamed it would be.”

A Closer Look

Some of the tenants that will be based in Crosstown Concourse

Church Health

One of the founding tenants of Crosstown, Church Health spans 150,000 square feet over three floors in the building’s West Atrium. According to its mission, Church Health strives to provide affordable health care to Memphis’ working, uninsured population and their families. It’s served some 70,000 people since its inception in 1987.

But after the move to Crosstown, for the first time in those 30 years, all of Church Health’s services are in the same building. At its former location, 120,000 square feet of clinics, exam rooms, and offices were spread over 13 buildings on Peabody, Bellevue, and Union, says communications director for Church Health, Marvin Stockwell.

Church Health

The move to a space 30,000 square feet larger, yet still all under one roof, he says, will enable the center to “serve more people and serve them better.”

Stockwell says Church Health now has 62 medical rooms, compared to 34 in its previous locations. This increase, as well as more than twice the number of dental, eye, and counseling rooms, Stockwell says will vastly increase the amount of patients Church Health is able to treat.

In step with Crosstown’s “better together” vision of cross-organizational collaboration, Stockwell says the move has already paved the way for partnerships with other organizations, like the YMCA. Together they formed the Church Health YMCA for Church Health patients and others in the community to utilize.

He says when leadership from both organizations discussed their programming and missions, much of it overlapped, like fitness and “creative movement” classes, such as Zumba, yoga, and pilates. “The organization has grown because of partnerships now that we’re tucked into an urban village,” Stockwell says.

Church Health CEO Scott Morris says partnerships with more tenants such as Southern College of Optometry, Teach for America, Crosstown Arts, and others are also in the works. All of the partnerships, Morris says, will help Church Health be more effective at caring for its patients, adding, “We truly are better together for all of Memphis.”

Morris says the move has also made it possible for expansions into “new, vibrant areas such as culinary medicine — or food as medicine,” which he says will enrich Church Health’s overall work.

Church Health’s new teaching kitchen, located on the first floor, is more than twice the size of the former kitchen, says Stockwell. A larger, new, modern kitchen allows Church Health to offer coursework for a culinary medicine certificate from Tulane University, as well as community nutrition and cooking classes on how to prepare healthy food.

A notable part of the new kitchen is the commercial section, where Stockwell says Church Health is ramping up its own bread line, Whole Heart Bread.

He says after speaking with some local restaurant owners around the city, Church Health staff realized there was a need for locally-sourced bread in Memphis.

Stockwell says the bread line will be a way for the kitchen to do mission-type work while bringing in revenue to fund Church Health’s efforts to serve the community.

Another goal for the kitchen is to eventually partner with Memphis Tilth, which plans to hire someone to manage the kitchen full-time, and work with local food entrepreneurs who need access to commercial equipment.

Other spaces of Church Health’s operation include a chapel, community meeting room, child-care center, and “control room,” which will eventually be a broadcast workspace, producing health- and faith-related podcasts, Stockwell says.

The Parcels at Concourse

Creating something new from something old — that’s how Laura Anna Hatchett, senior community manager for LEDIC, describes the process of the realty company’s newest project: The Parcels at Concourse.

The Parcels are comprised of 265 apartments on floors seven through 10 at Crosstown. The unique interior of the building and the infrastructure of those top floors — once a Sears warehouse — shaped how the Parcels were designed, says Hatchett.

In order to fit 265 units on the top four floors of the building, 38 unit layouts were created, which are available in studio and one-, two-, and three-bedroom apartments.

Hatchett says the renovation focused on “maintaining the integrity of what the building used to be” by keeping the historical elements intact, such as the exposed brick walls and wood floors.

The Parcels

“Better together,” the idea behind Crosstown, inspired the various gathering spaces and community seating areas throughout the Parcels, including the leasing office itself, which protrudes from the seventh floor of the central atrium and will serve as a “living room” for residents, Hatchett says.

Another design element meant to foster community building, she says, are the indoor front porches that several of the units have and that residents are able to personalize.

“It’s a true live, work, play environment,” Hatchett says. “Residents can participate in numerous activities that are only an elevator ride away.”

The apartments — between 1,000 and 1,100 square feet per unit, run about $1.40 a square foot per month. Hatchett says an affordable housing grant allows 20 percent of the units to be rented at affordable market rate.

Of the 265 units, about 103 will house Memphis Teacher Residency residents, families of St. Jude patients, along with scientists working at the hospital, Church Health Scholars, Crosstown Arts residents, and Iris Orchestra Artist fellows. Residents began moving into the units in January and, as of press time, the Parcels were 82 percent occupied.

Madison Pharmacy

Though Madison Pharmacy’s old location is less than two miles down the road from its new home at Crosstown, owner Rende Bechtel says, and the biggest challenge in relocating is the logistics of moving and setting up the new space.

“It’s very scary,” Bechtel says, “But it’s a risk that could lead to a lot of opportunities.”

The privately owned pharmacy has stood on Madison near Auburndale for about 13 years, and Bechtel says they were happy there. But when she heard that Crosstown was looking for a resident pharmacy, it was an opportunity she couldn’t pass up.

“It was like fate,” she says, explaining that her parents both worked in the old Sears Tower and that that was where they first met.

Bechtel, who’s owned the pharmacy since 2012, says they have about 300 regular customers now and after the move are hoping to expand by taking advantage of the other health-care services housed in Crosstown, perhaps partnering with Church Health to serve some of its patients.

Madison Pharmacy

“Once we get there, I’m sure we’ll be right at home,” Bechtel says.

The new pharmacy will not only be larger than the old one, it will also become a convenience store, offering an expanded dollar section, essential oils, dog food, household products, makeup, and “a little bit of everything you might need.”

The hope, Bechtel says, is that “people who live and work here will come in on a regular basis and we’ll get to know them, while providing them with what they need.”

Area 51 Ice Cream

Area 51 Ice Cream, a family-owned ice cream shop out of Hernando, Mississippi, will make Crosstown its second location.

Karin Cubbage, who owns Area 51 Ice Cream with her husband, says they have been looking for a second location in Memphis for a while now, but no location seemed just right — until they saw the Crosstown space. She says they knew immediately that Crosstown was a good fit for the company and it was a project they wanted to be a part of.

Area 51 has been serving homemade ice cream along with fresh-baked goods at its location in Hernando for about three years. Cubbage says their foods are made with no artificial flavors — only fresh, locally-sourced ingredients.

“We try to do as much by hand as we can,” Cubbage says. “We even hand-make the chocolate chips that go into our mint chip ice cream.” Cubbage says she and her husband have good relationships with local farmers, like those at Cedar Health Farms, where they often buy seasonal berries.

Like its mother shop, the new location at Crosstown, will offer 12 ice cream flavors, as well as a specialty cookie and brownie each day. Since the new space is significantly smaller than the shop in Hernando, Cubbage says the ice cream will be made daily in Mississippi and transported to Crosstown.

After wrapping up the finishing touches on the new shop, including installing sidewalk-style cafe tables, Cubbage says the Crosstown location will open in late August. “We’re excited about exposing our product to another part of town that we haven’t been able to reach yet … and to be a part of the larger project in general.”

Crosstown High School

Around this time next year, 125 ninth-graders will walk through the doors of Crosstown as the inaugural class of Crosstown High School.

Ultimately, it’s expected that 500 students will comprise the student body at the public charter school. Those students, who will be chosen through a lottery, will be part of a learning experience that’s never been tried in Memphis. Instead of a teacher lecturing in front of a class, students will learn with hands-on projects based on student interest or on challenges issued by other tenants inside the Concourse.

Church Health, for example, may ask the students to help them design a wellness campaign for senior citizens in the Klondike neighborhood, says Spickler. “The students might then accomplish some of their math or English standards through creating different signage or something else by actually solving a community-based challenge.”

Students’ interests, talents, and learning pace will be taken into consideration at Crosstown High, and each student will have a personal learning plan.

Spickler says the school plans to have a diverse student body by reaching out to the community to recruit students to the school’s entrance lottery in hopes of making a school “that looks like Memphis.”

All of this will be fueled with a $2.5 million grant from XQ: The Super School Project, an initiative that challenged education officials to rethink the high school model.

For Crosstown’s model, school personnel talked with students, parents, teachers, and employers. Much of the school’s model is based on the design challenge, which Crosstown High began in November 2015.

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Crosstown High School Named a Finalist in Quest for $10 Million

Crosstown High School is one step closer to becoming a reality. The proposed public high school’s board of directors has been notified that Crosstown High was selected as a finalist in the XQ Super School Project, which will award five winning schools with $10 million prizes. The school would be located inside the Crosstown Concourse building.

The initial field of applicants included 700 schools, and now in the final round, Crosstown High is one of 50 schools left. The school, which would have an independent board but still fall under the purview of Shelby County Schools, would differ from more traditional public schools in that each student would have a personalized learning plan and students would interact with employees of the other businesses within the Concourse building as part of their education.

“Crosstown High will be a new type of school unique to Memphis,” said Crosstown High board member Justin Jamerson. “It will be a place where young people are empowered and encouraged to learn in an environment that is collaborative, conscientious, and supported. There are many great schools in Memphis, but the vision of the XQ team was to bring a unique learning environment to the city; as of today, we are one huge step closer to making that vision a reality. The school is being designed as nothing less than a model for the future of education, so our investment will pay dividends not only for Crosstown Concourse, but the entire Memphis region.”

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Crosstown High School Proposes Personalized Learning Model

Against a backdrop of the under-construction Crosstown Concourse, prospective Crosstown High School (XTH) students, their parents, and XTH board member Michelle McKissack held a press conference on Thursday afternoon to show support for the proposed high school inside the Concourse building.

The nonprofit behind the school, Crosstown High, Inc., has submitted a proposal to Shelby County Schools (SCS) to operate the high school. If approved by SCS, they have a goal of having it open by the 2017-18 school year.

McKissack said the proposed school, which would have an independent board but still fall under the purview of SCS, would differ from more traditional public schools in that each student would have a personalized learning plan and students would interact with employees of the other businesses within the Concourse building as part of their education.

“Our school will be distinguished by its use of project-based learning, in which teams of students working under the guidance and supervision of adult mentors will research real-life community challenges and develop solutions. Students will benefit from relationships with employees of Methodist Healthcare, Church Health Center, ALSAC, Crosstown Arts, Christian Brothers University, and many other Crosstown partners and tenants,” McKissack said.

Students would also have two-week long elective courses in areas of their personal interests, such as art, music, athletics, or internships. The school would host a maximum of 500 students in grades 9-12.

“We believe that student potential is found, not only in a test score, but the talents and passions inherent in every individual,” McKissack said. “There are so many types of learning, and we’re going to be tapping into that here at Crosstown High. From where and how we recruit our students to assuring that our student body reflects the population of Memphis and Shelby County in all ways — raciallly, econonomically, socio-economically, ethnically, and by learning styles and differences.”

Memphian Nicole Dorsey attended the press conference with her daughter Vera, who will be starting seventh grade at Colonial Middle School in the fall. Dorsey said she opted to put Vera in Colonial, an optional school, even though they live in Midtown. But if XHS becomes reality, Dorsey said she’d much prefer for Vera to attend school much closer to home.

“As a Midtowner, this gives me another high school option that is equivalent to all the many high schools in East Memphis,” Dorsey said. “I’m not a fan of the optional program, but I’m a fan of integrated learning from all levels, which is what this school is hoping to do.”

Crosstown High has a new website — crosstownhigh.org — and more of their plan can be found there.