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Fort Bend Independent School District, also known as Fort Bend ISD or FBISD, is a school district that operates 86 schools in Fort Bend County. Based in Sugar Land, Texas , it is the 5th most diverse school district in Texas and is the 43rd largest district in the United States .
In 2012, Schoology raised $6 million in a round led by Firstmark Capital; in 2014, Schoology raised $15 million in a funding round led by Intel Capital; [2] [3] in November 2015, Schoology raised $32 million in a funding round, led by JMI Equity. [4] In November 2013, Schoology had over 7.5 million users across about 60,000 schools. [5]
Stephen F. Austin High School is a secondary school located in unincorporated Fort Bend County, Texas [4] and is named after Stephen F. Austin, who helped lead American settlement of Texas, and who is widely regarded as "The Father of Texas."
Clements was occupied in 1983, [9] making it FBISD's third comprehensive high school. [10]The school was named after William P. Clements.. In 2023, as part of a $1.26 billion bond package by Fort Bend ISD, a proposition was made calling for the construction of a new $222 million rebuild of Clements on the current site's athletic facilities.
Crawford High School was envisioned by FBISD as a method of alleviating overcrowding at Sienna's Ridge Point High School, which opened a decade earlier in 2010.The school will divert students away from RPHS, in addition to Hightower High School, which since mid-2020 had enrolled students previously zoned to Ridge Point, again to combat the latter's excess. [9]
Girls from Elkins and the other Fort Bend High Schools of Dulles and Clements, were cyber-bullied in April 2010 on a Facebook page titled Whimsical Girls of FBISD. The page listed several female students on each school's "naughty" list.
FBISD may refer to: The Fort Bend Independent School District, in Fort Bend County, Texas; The Flour Bluff Independent School District, in Corpus Christi, Texas
Travis High School is named after Texas pioneer William B. Travis.The campus opened on August 21, 2006 and received its dedication on October 15 of the same year. [9] The opening of Travis relieved Austin High School and George Bush High School, [10] with grades 9 and 10 immediately zoned to Travis, [11] and grades 11 to 12 continuing to go to Austin with a phaseout of one grade per year. [12]