International American School of Cancun
Reviews & Information

4.2 from 6 reviews
School Overview Reviews

About International American School of Cancun


The International American School of Cancun, Mexico, is a private, non-profit, non-sectarian, co-educational institution offering a bilingual, bicultural education for students from preschool through high school. The school was founded in 1990 and is dedicated to an American style education, high academic standards and the caring environment a small school can offer. The International American School of Cancun is accredited by Cognia (SACS/AdvanCED) and SAIS in the United States and by Mexico’s Ministry of Education (SEP) and the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).

The International American School of Cancun maintains a highly trained professional staff, composed of teachers from the U.S., Mexico, England, and Canada. Thirty-three percent of the teachers hold a graduate degree. These teachers support the efforts of the school community to provide an American model of education in a bilingual, bicultural setting. The school enjoys a blend of staff members who are permanent residents of Cancun and others with shorter time commitments, as well as diversity in age and experience. This is yet another aspect that helps create a professional atmosphere where ideas are exchanged freely and challenges and goals are addressed in many different and unique ways.

Our elementary school students (CES) receive bilingual instruction that meets both Mexican and U.S. standards. Most of our high school students are enrolled in a full dual program, receiving both a U.S. diploma and a Mexican preparatory (high school) certificate. Thus, the majority of our graduates speak both English and Spanish fluently. These students are taking as a minimum the 24 Carnegie units required for a U.S. high school diploma as well as the Mexican program requirements in Spanish Literature, Mexican History, Geography, Law and Civics. English is the major language of instruction: English literature, science, social studies, math, and some electives and extracurricular activities are taught in English. In K-6, students spend 50% of their time in English and 50% in Spanish. In grades 10-12, eighty percent of the classes are taught in English and twenty percent in Spanish.

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Curriculum

American, Mexican

Primary Language

English

Ages

3 to 18

Max Class Size

Unknown

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6 Reviews of International American School of Cancun

Average Ratings

Overall 4.20
Facilities 5.00
Academics 5.00
Teachers 5.00
Sports 5.00
Music & Arts 5.00
Science & Tech 5.00

Reviewer Nationalities


Mexican (1)

How would you rate International American School of Cancun?

Hector, 11/08/2023 @ 15:21:57
Relationship   Ex Pupil

Facilities
Academics
Teachers
Sports
Music & Arts
Science
Overall

Attended the school and it does give humanistic and scientific foundations for the future fomenting personal growth through continued studying and activities

Reviews from Google

Recent reviews posted on Google.

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Isabella Ulloa Garcia, 10 months ago


Amazing pics

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Jay Bee, 2 years ago


Great positive environment for optimal learning!

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daniono, a year ago


Very good school

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Staci 'The Track Star' Nichols, 6 months ago


I can’t even begin to explain how completely disorganized, heartless, and unprofessional this school is. My kid started during Covid (so school was online). We received zero orientation. There was no introduction of the staff or any sort of parent group chat. The way they handled online school is very indicative of their overall callous, poorly-run, “education sweat shop” philosophy. They had kids staring at screens from 8am to 2:30pm everyday with their only “break” being a short lunch. No recess. No social hour. 2 weeks after school started, the school asked for a Zoom meeting with me. No reason was given. When the meeting started, I was accosted by 8 people I didn’t know (minus 2 teachers). None of these people bothered to introduce themselves. They attacked me about why my daughter was struggling and went so far as to blame her intelligence--she broke out in tears overhearing the staff’s remarks. I explained that we have no idea where the work is, how to turn it in, etc. I had been messaging the English teacher repeatedly asking for help. She was completely useless, sending me back an incomplete, poorly organized document supposedly answering my questions (see attached photos). The teachers finally started typing up a weekly outline. It had to be printed (boo) & was insanely hard-to-follow (normally a 5 page document) because they wrote it out in long sentences. We had to start writing out a “3rd grade appropriate” version of the lesson plan each day that listed short bullet points of what was homework & what was an in-class activity. The kids were not allowed AT ANY POINT to openly converse with their friends. As a new kid in town, this made my kid EXTREMELY isolated. Once my daughter took a screenshot of a classmate, wrote “BFF” on it, and posted it as her Zoom background. This was the only way to communicate to her classmate that she was a special friend--how heartbreaking is that! A “class lunch” was scheduled for the last day before Christmas vacation. Several students begged for the teachers to simply allow the children to speak freely among each other. The teachers would not allow this during what was supposed to be a fun party. On our last day of school here (we left mid-year), my kid announced that it was her last day. For some reason, the school counselor Miss Tere teaches classes (one thing she definitely doesn’t do is ANY actual counseling--like offering tohelp a new student who is obviously drowning) asked why she was leaving. My kid said, “I prefer not to say.” Then my sher added that if someone wanted her uniform, they could come pick it up for free at our house. Miss Tere, who is truly a machiavellian spawn from hell, said for kids to call me to make arrangements. My daughter said, “Actually, that’s one of the reasons I’m leaving. Nobody knows how to contact my mom.” She tried to say my phone number so the kids could actually contact me, & Miss Tere muted her while telling the kids, “Woops, looks like Jenni’s audio went out.” She then removed my kid from the Zoom session. Just a typical day at the sweatshop. Once the art teacher required the kids to paint a king & queen. She said that the queen had to be wearing a dress. My daughter asked why. The teacher’s response: “Tradition.” My daughter asked if she could have permission not to draw the queen in a dress. The teacher said no. Finally, on not one but two report cards my daughter received in her time here, the staff evaluated her “curiosity” as a 2 out of 4. I feel deeply disgusted, disturbed--almost to the point of nausea, every time I think about this assessment. How is ANY child not curious? Again, finally, the International American School of Cancun is not a safe space for children.

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Leonardo Medina, 2 years ago


not a good environment for a teenager

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