The FMS Inspection Score is FindMySchool's proprietary analysis based on official Ofsted and ISI inspection reports. It converts ratings into a standardised 1–10 scale for fair comparison across all schools in England.
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A prep where muddy knees are treated as a feature, not a bug, and where the arts sit alongside a traditional primary curriculum rather than being an optional extra. Set on a large rural site, the school runs from age 2 through to 11, with Nursery feeding into Reception and on through Preps 3 to 6.
Leadership is stable, with Mrs Therésa Jaggard in post since Autumn 2020, and the website makes clear that family partnership and a close-knit feel are central to how the school wants to be experienced.
This is an independent school, so fees apply for the main school years, and there is a means-tested bursary route for eligible families (details are published by the school, but without a headline percentage of pupils supported).
The setting does a lot of the work here. The core of the school sits within a Georgian house dating to 1674, and the grounds extend to 14 acres, a scale that shapes daily routines because outdoor learning and sport can be part of the ordinary timetable rather than a special event. The Early Years space is separated out, with its own outdoor areas, which helps the youngest children feel contained and secure even on a larger site.
The school’s own history pages lean into the idea of Spring Grove as a place with layers. The building has a literary connection, with Joseph Conrad living at Spring Grove for part of 1919, and the school also notes the possibility of Jane Austen visiting when staying nearby. That sort of storytelling matters mostly because it signals a school that likes tradition, but does not treat it as a museum.
Leadership is personalised rather than corporate. Mrs Jaggard writes with a strong emphasis on confidence, curiosity and creativity, and the staff list suggests a structure with defined roles in safeguarding, academics, operations and specialist subjects, rather than a small team wearing every hat.
For parents, the underlying implication is that the school is aiming to combine warmth and high expectations. That balance is easiest to maintain at prep scale if systems are clear, and several pages describe routines (assemblies, clubs, and wraparound) in a way that suggests planning rather than improvisation.
This review cannot use GCSE or Key Stage 2 performance tables as a proxy for quality because they are not available for this setting and the school itself is a prep rather than an exam-centre brand. What parents can usefully rely on instead is how the school describes its curriculum and how external inspection frames academic development and personal development.
The most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate educational quality inspection (8 to 10 February 2023) reported the top grade, excellent, for both pupils’ academic and other achievements and for pupils’ personal development.
In practice, what tends to matter for a prep is whether children leave as confident readers and writers, fluent with number, and ready for selective and non-selective senior pathways. The school positions itself explicitly as preparing pupils for a mixed set of next steps, including local grammar routes and independent senior schools, with targeted support for tests and interviews where needed.
The school describes an increasingly specialist model as children move through the years. In Preps 3 to 6, form teachers are complemented by specialist teaching in areas including mathematics, English, French, art, music, dance and sport. The practical implication is that children who thrive on variety, and who respond well to being taught by different adults, are likely to enjoy the rhythm of the later prep years.
Technology is positioned as a tool rather than a selling point. The prep overview states that every pupil is provided with a Chromebook, which suggests digital competence is expected to be part of everyday learning, particularly for research, drafting and presentation work.
Early years is not treated as a bolt-on. The Nursery is described as having two classes, Teddies for 2 to 3 and Giraffes for the pre-school year, with access to specialist teaching in music, PE, French and Forest School. For families, that means the youngest children may experience specialist input earlier than they would in many state primaries, but within a small-setting framework.
A school like this lives or dies on the quality of assessment and feedback, especially if it is supporting pupils towards selective tests at 11. The prep pages state that children are assessed regularly, and the school sets out three parent consultations per year alongside written reporting. That level of formal touchpoint should suit parents who want visibility without having to chase it.
For a prep, destinations are the closest thing to an outcomes dashboard. Spring Grove lists a set of linked senior schools that appear regularly in leaver pathways, including The King's School Canterbury, St Edmund's School Canterbury, Kent College, Ashford School, Benenden School, and Sutton Valence School.
The school also references support for pathways that use the Independent Schools Examinations Board 11+ and Common Entrance style frameworks, alongside local selective routes such as the Kent Test. The practical takeaway is that this is not a prep that assumes one single destination pattern, it is built around multiple plausible routes at 11.
One point worth understanding as a parent is timing. If a child is aiming for a selective route, the prep years become progressively structured, and the school’s own language about leadership roles in Prep 6 and preparation for senior transition suggests that the final year is treated as a deliberate bridge rather than a slow fade-out.
Admissions are direct to the school, not local-authority coordinated. The first step is registration, with a published registration fee, after which children from Reception upwards are typically invited in for a taster day or session. That taster is positioned as both a familiarisation visit for the child and an informal assessment opportunity for staff.
Open events are clearly scheduled. The school states it holds two Saturday open mornings each year in October and March, plus weekday open days in November and May, and it has a specific Open Morning listed for Saturday 14 March 2026.
For Reception 2026 entry, a dedicated Stay and Play session is advertised for Friday 6 March 2026 (9am to 10am), aimed at children aged 3 or 4 who are due to start Reception in September 2026. In practice, that is useful because it gives families an early chance to see how reception is organised and how quickly a child settles into a classroom and garden-based routine.
Because this is an independent setting with a Nursery on site, there is also an internal progression dynamic to consider. The Nursery pages encourage early registration for Reception because places can fill quickly, but they also state that children not in the Nursery are welcome in Reception subject to availability. Parents who want optionality should treat registration as an early, low-friction way to keep pathways open.
Parents comparing options can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check commute practicality, especially if school days end later in parts of the week for older prep pupils, and wraparound is likely to be part of the routine rather than an occasional backup.
Pastoral signals show up in structure more than slogans. The school describes wraparound care from Nursery through to Prep 6, and the daily rhythm includes assemblies, clubs and structured end-of-day care, which tends to support consistency for children who find transitions difficult.
The 2023 inspection report also provides a useful lens because it treats personal development as a core outcome, not an add-on, which matters to parents who care about social confidence and independence as much as academic readiness.
For children with additional needs, the site indicates learning support exists and that the school identifies SEND within its pupil body (including neurodiversity), though parents should still probe what support looks like in practice for a specific child, for example how interventions are timetabled, and how specialist teaching interacts with support plans.
Spring Grove has several identifiable pillars that go beyond generic club lists.
Forest School is described as an off-site programme established in 2016, with awards including the Woodland Trust Green Tree School Scheme bronze, silver and gold awards, and the school states it has three fully qualified Forest School practitioners leading regular sessions from Nursery through to Year 6. The implication is that outdoor learning is planned and resourced, which tends to suit children who regulate better outside, and children who learn confidently through practical tasks.
The Eco Committee is pupil-led and linked to the school’s Eco-Schools work, with the site referencing a Green Flag award and describing regular committee meetings and an annual environmental review. This is useful because it gives older pupils real responsibility, and it gives younger pupils a visible model of leadership that is not purely academic.
The school reports an Artsmark Gold award (January 2024), which is not a casual badge, it indicates a structured approach to arts education across the curriculum and routines. The likely impact is that performance, making, and presentation skills are normalised early, which can pay off for confident speaking, drama scholarships later, and for children who learn best when creativity is part of the learning method.
An ISI report notes a music faculty opened in 2014, including a multi-purpose performance space and practice rooms, alongside a purpose-built science block and the school hall. That matters because many schools claim arts strength, fewer can show dedicated, named infrastructure that makes rehearsal and performance practical within the school day.
The sport page describes fixtures for all pupils in Preps 3 to 6 and also references opportunities for higher-level representation, including IAPS cross country. The implicit message is that sport is used for confidence and teamwork across the cohort, while still giving ambitious children room to push.
Fees are published for 2025-26 and are stated per term, with three terms per academic year, and the figures shown are inclusive of VAT.
For Reception to Prep 6, the termly fee range is £3,185 to £6,035, depending on year group and, in Reception, whether a child is receiving Early Years funding (up to and including the term the child turns 5). For Year 1 and Year 2, fees are £4,630 and £4,905 per term respectively, and Prep 4 to Prep 6 are £6,035 per term.
The school also publishes a sibling discount for school fees (5% for a first sibling, 10% for second and subsequent siblings), and sets out one-off charges such as a registration fee and deposits.
On affordability, the bursary route is explicitly means-tested, and the school notes awards are made from a limited fund and assessed on a sliding scale that considers assets as well as income. Financial support is described as being available from Prep 3 upwards for new applicants, with hardship support possible for existing families whose circumstances change.
Fees data coming soon.
School hours vary by phase, which is important for working families.
Reception to Year 2 runs 8.30am to 3.30pm. Preps 3 to 6 match those timings on Wednesdays and Fridays, and have longer days (8.30am to 4.30pm) on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Wraparound care is available from 7.30am to 6pm for children from Nursery through to Prep 6, with breakfast club and after-school options described as bookable sessions.
On travel, the school’s location suits families who want countryside without losing transport links. The site notes it is a short walk from Wye railway station, and it references Ashford International railway station as the main wider-rail hub nearby.
Parents building a shortlist can use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to keep practical comparisons tidy, particularly where day length and wraparound patterns differ across local options.
Cost and add-ons. Termly fees are clearly published, but families should budget for extras such as wraparound sessions, uniform, clubs and trips. Ask for a realistic year plan so you know what is optional versus routine.
Progression pressure at 11. The school supports Kent Test and independent entry routes; for some children this is motivating, for others it can feel like a long runway of preparation. Align early on about which route you actually want.
Day length variation. Preps 3 to 6 have later finishes on some weekdays. That can be a big positive for enrichment and sport, but it changes after-school logistics compared with Reception and Key Stage 1.
Nursery to Reception demand. The school encourages early registration for Reception and notes places can fill. Families joining from outside the Nursery should engage early, especially for September starts.
Spring Grove suits families who want a prep experience where outdoor learning is properly resourced, and where the arts and performance are treated as part of daily schooling rather than an occasional enrichment slot. The 2023 inspection outcome and the school’s visible investment in Forest School, eco leadership, and arts infrastructure support that positioning.
Best suited to children who enjoy being busy, getting outside, and having multiple ways to show what they can do, academic work, performance, sport, leadership. For families needing a very tight, purely academic prep track with minimal co-curricular focus, the balance here may feel broader than necessary.
It has a strong external validation point for a prep, with the latest ISI educational quality inspection (February 2023) awarding excellent for both pupils’ academic achievements and pupils’ personal development. The school also shows consistent investment in specialist areas such as Forest School, arts education and structured wraparound routines, which tends to translate into confident, capable leavers at 11.
For 2025-26, the school publishes termly fees for Reception through Prep 6, with figures stated inclusive of VAT. The termly range for the main school is £3,185 to £6,035 depending on year group and Reception funding status. Means-tested bursaries are available, with the school describing a sliding-scale approach based on family circumstances.
Yes. The Nursery takes children from age 2 and is organised into two groups, Teddies (2 to 3) and Giraffes (pre-school year). Nursery children have access to specialist subjects such as music, PE, French and Forest School, alongside their own dedicated spaces including a large walled garden.
Admissions are direct. Families typically register, then children from Reception upwards are invited for a taster day or session. For Reception 2026, the school advertises a Stay and Play morning on Friday 6 March 2026, and an Open Morning on Saturday 14 March 2026, both of which are designed to help families understand how the day is structured and how children settle.
Reception to Year 2 runs 8.30am to 3.30pm. Preps 3 to 6 finish later on some weekdays, and earlier on Wednesdays and Fridays. Wraparound care is available from 7.30am to 6pm for children from Nursery through to Prep 6, with breakfast and after-school options bookable in sessions.
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