
LaKendra Butler moved to Nashville a decade ago with the goal of starting a public charter school.¶

At the time Butler was the principal of a middle school in Dallas and she saw an opportunity to help put students in the Donelson and Hermitage communities of Davidson County on the path to become college-ready high school graduates.¶
“Started to meet with leaders and community members in the area and felt that it was home and so we then opened STRIVE with 100 fifth-graders in 2015,” said Butler.¶
Today STRIVE Collegiate Academy serves sixth through eighth-graders in a building complex in Donelson that originally served the community as a hospital.Butler says the school has built out a section of the building to make it into a school for students but there have been obstacles to overcome, and situations traditional public schools do not experience.¶
Students attend classes at STRIVE on the second and third floor of the building that's not immediately recognizable as a school. Some classrooms have large structural pillars in inconvenient places and the building itself also serves as an office for businesses, including a security company with armed staff.¶









