Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Aundria Sewell Steps Into Beverlye With a Culture-First Lens

Dothan City Schools names Aundria L. Sewell principal of Beverlye Intermediate, where she will lead a 335-student campus.

Dothan City SchoolsET has named Aundria L. Sewell principal of Beverlye Intermediate School, placing an instructional leader with Montgomery experience at a campus that served 335 students in 2026.

The district announced the appointment as part of a broader set of new principal contracts approved in April. Sewell currently serves as principal of Dannelley Elementary School in Montgomery, where Dothan said she led school improvement efforts through data-driven instruction, strategic planning and high expectations for students and staff.

"Leading is not about having all the answers," Sewell said in the district release. "It's about building a school environment where students are learning, teachers are growing, and staff are supported."

That sentence is the center of the transition. Sewell is not describing leadership as personality or command. She is describing it as an environment: one where adult growth and student learning are connected.

A School Culture Assignment

Dothan's release described Sewell as bringing a background in instructional leadership and professional learning. It said she previously served as an assistant principal and instructional leader, has been recognized as a National Presenter at the Model Schools Conference and is known for building collaborative school cultures.

Those are the kinds of credentials that matter in an intermediate school. Beverlye sits in the middle years, where students are old enough to need independence and young enough to need a school culture that teaches habits as much as content. Sewell's quote points to that balance: students learning, teachers growing, staff supported.

Beverlye's current reporting line in the Alabama enrollment data begins in 2020, when the school enrolled 585 students. By 2026, it enrolled 335 students, a decline of 250 students, or 42.7%. The 2026 count was seven students above 2025, a small uptick after several years of contraction.

Beverlye Intermediate enrollment

The older package rows use a Beverlye Magnet School label before the current Intermediate line begins. For this article, the chart stays with the current reporting line rather than merging two labels and risking a false sense of continuity.

The District Around Beverlye

Dothan City as a whole has been through a similar enrollment shift, though not as steep as Beverlye's current line. The district enrolled 7,721 students in 2026, down 1,652 students from 2015, a 17.6% decline. Its low point in the available window came in 2023, when enrollment reached 7,653. By 2026, the district was 68 students above that low point.

Dothan City enrollment

For a principal, that context is not abstract. Enrollment shapes staffing, schedules, course offerings and the amount of flexibility a school has when it tries to add support. Sewell's focus on teachers and staff is relevant because the adult side of a school has to stay steady even when the student count changes.

The 2025 student context rows show why that steadiness has to be practical. Beverlye reported 73.5% Black enrollment, 17.1% white enrollment and 8.8% Hispanic enrollment. The school also reported 90.2% economically disadvantaged enrollment, 23.2% special education enrollment and 5.2% limited English proficiency. Race and service categories overlap, and the economically disadvantaged and special education rows carry state methodology notes, so these figures describe the current context rather than a clean trend line.

Beverlye student context

What The Appointment Signals

Superintendent Dr. Garrick Askew said in the same Dothan release that the new principals bring proven experience, leadership and a shared commitment to student success. For Sewell, the district's case is that her experience with school improvement and professional learning fits Beverlye's next chapter.

That is a constructive bet. The data shows a smaller school than Beverlye was at the start of its current reporting line, but it also shows a campus with a clear student profile and a district that has moved slightly above its recent low point. Sewell's own words suggest she sees leadership as building conditions, not issuing answers from above.

The practical question is what those conditions look like by the time students and staff settle into the coming school year: the routines teachers can rely on, the support staff can feel, and the learning environment students experience every day.

That is the kind of work that can be easy to miss from outside a school and impossible to miss from inside one. Beverlye's next chapter will depend less on a single announcement than on whether students encounter steady expectations, whether teachers have useful feedback, and whether families see the school as organized and reachable. Sewell's release frames those pieces as connected, not separate.

The district response for this article came from Karris Harmon, Dothan City Schools' Public Relations Officer, who provided the official release on Sewell's appointment. Data in the charts comes from the Alabama State Department of Education's reports and data.

Detailed code that reproduces the analysis and figures in this article is available exclusively to EdTribune subscribers.

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