Choosing the Right School in Spain: 11 Things Parents Should Weigh

Quiet school library in Marbella”; “Small-classroom setting in Málaga
  • Practical guide to choosing a school in Spain (public/concertado/private).
  • Languages, timetables, commute, class size, and academic outcomes.
  • Teacher quality, canteen & nutrition, after-school activities, and facilities.
  • Tailored for expat families in the Costa del Sol (Marbella/Estepona/Málaga).

Picking a school in Spain especially for expat families in the Costa del Sol is a high-impact decision shaping academics, wellbeing, and social growth. This concise guide highlights the essentials from funding and languages to schedules, facilities, and after-school life so you can compare options and choose confidently.

1) Type & Funding

Spain offers public (público), state-subsidized private (concertado), and private schools. International schools are usually private (IB/other national curricula). Consider tuition plus books, trips, and uniform policy.

2) Educational Approach

On open days, ask about pedagogy (project-based vs. book-centric), assessment frequency, tech use, and how smoothly methods shift from primary to secondary.

3) Transport

Check school buses/public transport and true door-to-door time; long commutes can sap energy and limit after-school activities.

4) Timetable

Common patterns: 9:00–17:00 with a long lunch or 8/9:00–14:30. Primary ≈25 hours/week. Confirm jornada continua vs. split sessions and on/off-campus lunch options.

5) Languages

Regions may use Castilian plus Catalan/Basque/Galician/Aranese. Public schools start English around age six; international schools teach mostly in English. Ask about a second foreign language (French/German/Italian).

6) Class Size

Lower student-teacher ratios usually mean more individualized attention; request the school’s actual figures.

7) Academic Outcomes

Review rankings, external exam results (IB, A-Levels, Selectividad, etc.), and university placement trends.

8) Teachers

Meet staff; review qualifications, methods, and for languages, native proficiency. Parental trust in the team matters.

9) Canteen & Nutrition

In-house kitchen or catering? Vegetarian/allergen-friendly menus? How long is lunch in practice?

10) After-School Offer

Sports, music, drama, and skill clubs enrich learning and help with late pickup windows.

11) Facilities

Green spaces, libraries/quiet zones, labs, and up-to-date tech shape daily learning quality.

Conclusion

Build a short checklist: type/budget, curriculum/languages, hours/commute, ratio/results, teacher quality, nutrition, after-school, and facilities. Visit multiple schools, match them to your family priorities, then decide with confidence.






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