Primary and secondary schools Public schools The Spring CDP is in the
Spring Independent School District. Marshall Elementary School was scheduled to open in 2010. Four middle schools, Bailey, Dueitt, Springwoods Village, and Twin Creeks, are in the CDP and serve sections of the CDP. All residents are zoned to Spring High School.
Carl Wunsche Sr. High School is in the Spring CDP. In February 2017 the district proposed redrawing the attendance boundaries of its high schools; this would take effect in the 2020–21 school year. According to the proposed 2020–21 high school map, the eastern portion of the Spring CDP will be reassigned from Spring High School to
Dekaney High School. Due to the impact of the
COVID-19 pandemic in Texas, the district delayed the high school boundary changes until at least 2022–23. Harris County residents with Spring addresses that are not in the CDP attend schools in either Spring ISD or
Klein Independent School District. Montgomery County residents with Spring addresses attend schools in
Conroe Independent School District. Areas in Klein ISD with Spring addresses are served by
Klein Oak High School,
Klein High School, and
Klein Collins High School. Areas in Conroe ISD with Spring addresses are served by
Oak Ridge High School and
Grand Oaks High School on the eastern side, and both
The Woodlands High School and
The Woodlands College Park High School on the western side.
Sam Houston State University operates a
charter elementary school in the CDP.
History of public schools Originally Spring was served by the
Spring Common School District. In 1935 that district and the
Harrell Common School District merged, forming the
Spring Independent School District. The Southwell School, the segregated
African-American school, served Spring from the early 1900s until 1945. In 1932 the Wunsche family donated land to the Spring school district, and the
Carl Wunsche School, serving middle and high school, opened. In 1947 an addition opened and elementary school students began to be served by Wunsche. Salyers, opened in 1959 as Spring Elementary School, was Spring ISD's first dedicated elementary school. After Salyers opened, elementary school classes were removed from Wunsche School. Spring High School opened in 1969, taking high school students from Wunsche. As a result, Wunsche became SISD's first dedicated middle school. Jenkins opened on February 6, 1977. Hirsch opened in 1978. Anderson opened in 1979. Dueitt opened in 1980. Wunsche closed as a regular middle school in 1983, and was retrofitted to become a multipurpose school. Twin Creeks, which took Wumsche's middle school population, Smith opened in 1986. Anderson was named a 1989–90
National Blue Ribbon School. Burchett opened in August 2005. Bailey opened in August 2006 and was dedicated on October 15 of that year. By 2015, Spring ISD planned to have built a new elementary school and High School #4 within the Spring CDP. Middle School #8 (Springwoods Village) is scheduled to open in fall 2020.
Private schools Langtry Preparatory Academy, a private school, is in the Spring CDP. Area private schools: •
Frassati Catholic High School • Founders Christian School • Houston Peace Academy, of the
Islamic Education Institute of Texas of the
Islamic Society of Greater Houston - At Masjid Al-Salam (Champions Islamic Center) • Elements Montessori Preschool • St. Edward Catholic School In addition,
St. Thomas High School, an all-boys' high school in central Houston, has a bus service to and from St. Edward Catholic School. In 2013
Saint John XXIII High School, in
Greater Katy, also served the Spring area; Frassati opened in 2013 with the 9th grade and did not immediately serve all grade levels.
Northwoods Catholic School Northwoods Catholic School, a private Catholic school in the Spring area, was off the intersection of
Farm to Market Road 2920 and Gosling Road, in a campus. It used a curriculum from the
Legionaries of Christ. Established , it was not affiliated with the
Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. an apartment clubhouse temporarily used as a school. In 2003 it had 200 students. By that year its permanent facility opened; it had a price tag of $6 million. In 2005 academic dean Susan Horne became the principal, and the previous principal, Joe Noonan, became Northwood's executive director. In the 2015–16 school year, the school's final year of operation, it had 268 students; it was projected to have 160 for the following year. The school announced on May 4, 2016, that it was closing because of a shrinking budget and declining enrollment. An area developer who was buying land from the school got into a legal dispute with the landowner and a Catholic priest.
Community colleges Lone Star College System (formerly the North Harris Montgomery Community College District) serves Spring ISD, Klein ISD, and Conroe ISD, and therefore the entire Spring area. Areas in Cy-Fair ISD (and therefore Lakes on Eldridge) are in
Lone Star College. Spring ISD residents and two other K–12 school districts voted to create North Harris County College. The community college district began operations in 1973.
Public libraries Harris County Public Library (HCPL) operates several library branches. HCPL operates the Baldwin Boettcher Branch Library at Mercer Park at 22248 Aldine Westfield Road, south of the Spring CDP. The branch opened in 1986. The Barbara Bush Branch Library at Cypress Creek is at 6817 Cypresswood Drive in an area with a Spring address west of the Spring CDP. The branch opened in 1976 and was upgraded and expanded in 2002. Construction of the current library began in the summer of 2000. The current branch was anticipated to house over 120,000 books and materials, making it twice as large as the previous branch. Jesse Sendejas of the
Houston Chronicle said there was "a need to provide a more spacious and accommodating facility to Spring and its surrounding areas. That was apparent when county voters approved a $15 million bond for library improvements in November 1997." ==Parks and recreation==