About Texas Spanish Academy
Texas Spanish Academy ( Day care center ) is located at 2471 A W Grimes Blvd Building 200, Round Rock, TX 78664, United States. It is categorised as : .
Other categories: Day care center, Language school, Preschool, Private educational institution, School
Ratings & Ranking
Texas Spanish Academy has a rating of 4.6 and is ranked number 11551 in the US.
- Academic Excellence:
- School Culture & Environment:
- Extracurricular Activities:
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- Parent & Community Engagement:
4.6/5
Overall Score
Address & Location
Texas Spanish Academy is located at 2471 A W Grimes Blvd Building 200, Round Rock, TX 78664, United States.
Schools Fees
Given that it is categorised as , the school fees for Texas Spanish Academy range between 0 USD and 0 USD.
Vacancies:
No vacancies found at the moment.
Admissions:
Admissions are currently open at Texas Spanish Academy.
Texas Spanish Academy Proximity Zone:
The map below illustrates the average distance between Texas Spanish Academy and student residential areas.
Parents & Students Reviews:
Texas Spanish Academy has 23 reviews with an overall rating of 4.6. Some reviews have been edited for clarity.
The bad: the communication is not great, and if you’re looking for a daycare with an organized learning curriculum, you need to spend additional dollars and look elsewhere.
As your child gets older, you will stop receiving organized updates on their progress. If you are looking for a daycare that will tell you if your child is progressing appropriately for their age, learning letters, shapes, etc., go elsewhere. These updates do not come in Brightwheel. Prior to COVID, there were parent teacher conferences, but these had vanished by the time we left in mid-2022. I’ve stayed in touch with other parents still there, and it seems like these have resumed…sort of? There was one for the entire past year (2023-24), so perhaps you’ll get a single progress report on your child.
TSA would also randomly hold “events” in the afternoon at 2 or 3pm, and these events would often be announced days in advance. If parents could not make it because it’s hard to adjust your work schedule two days in advance, your child would be SOBBING in the classroom that their mom or dad didn’t make it to the ad hoc luncheon. The unspoken expectation was that you took your child home after these events.
TSA recently announced they’d offer summer camp for K-5 kids who were former TSA attendees. A form was made available and then…nothing. TSA has literally vanished on parents who submitted the form – I followed up multiple times, resulting in an email titled “Response Requested” with the director looped in that finally got a response, but with no details and no answers to the questions I actually asked. For comparison, I reached out to INIC, who responded within a few hours.
Finally, during COVID, TSA implemented a policy that when a class was required to close, all families in that class would receive tuition back for the days closed…EXCEPT for the family of the child who tested positive first. Re-read that. Yes, that was the real policy. When I pointed out to the director that this was incentivizing parents to lie about their child’s illness, she told me no parent would lie to her and heavily implied this was a me problem. I connected with other parents in class on the policy, and they were surprised to learn the policy existed because it had been buried in a long email of COVID requirements.
For comparison, our daughter now attends Magellan International School preschool and will enter kindergarten next year. We can tell a significant difference in her learning development compared to TSA – we attend three formal parent teacher conferences a year, we get weekly email blogs, and events that parents are expected to attend are announced significantly in advance and parents get multiple reminders to either be present OR bring their child late to avoid the sobbing situation TSA repeatedly created. It is both farther and more expensive for us, but seeing the difference made me aware of how much TSA does not provide in terms of both learning and structure for the kids.
All that said, we stayed at TSA because our children had formed strong friendships there over the years, and we wanted to limit their transitions as we approached elementary school. I don’t think TSA is a bad option – to be honest, it’s an average, 3 star daycare, and that’s what you’re getting.
This is the first time my daughter has been in a daycare so I went on 2 tours and they were so patient with me, answered all my questions and all my husbands. They have an app so we can see what they are doing throughout the day, when our daughter eats, is changed, if there is an incidents (like she falls and scrapes her knee).
Out of all the research I did, TX Spanish Academy comes out first every time! They have part time options which is what we started off with (that lasted all of a week) then we jumped into full time! Best decision EVER. Plus it is 100% Spanish, so my daughter is learning a second language at the same time.
So without hesitation, I recommend Texas Spanish Academy HIGHLY!!!!