We consider the problem of classification in nonadaptive dimensionality reduction. Specifically, we bound the increase in classification error of Fisher’s Linear Discriminant classifier resulting from randomly projecting the high dimensional data into a lower dimensional space and both learning the classifier and performing the classification in the projected space. Our bound is reasonably tight, and unlike existing bounds on learning from randomly projected data, it becomes tighter as the quantity of training data increases without requiring any sparsity structure from the data.