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.
Disclaimer: The FMS Inspection Score is an independent analysis by FindMySchool. It is not endorsed by or affiliated with Ofsted or ISI. Always refer to the official Ofsted or ISI report for the full picture of a school’s inspection outcome.
This is a compact, traditional-feeling prep where routines, manners and achievement are taken seriously, but the tone is more family school than hothouse. The setting matters to the experience. The school operates from a large Georgian house on the outskirts of Brentwood, and it has expanded over time, including a school hall known as the Pauline Wilson building.
Leadership continuity is part of the story. Mrs Pauline Wilson is named as headteacher on the school’s staff pages, and has been head since 1994. That long tenure gives the school a distinctive consistency, including in expectations around behaviour, presentation and how pupils move on to senior schools.
Inspection status is simple to interpret. According to the most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection (31 October to 2 November 2023), all the relevant Standards are met and safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The school’s public-facing language is explicit about identity, it describes itself as a caring school with Christ at its centre, and the wider ethos sits within a Catholic tradition while welcoming families from different backgrounds. The practical implication for parents is that Catholic life is not a light touch add-on. The calendar includes Masses and seasonal services, and pupils take part in prayer and reflection as part of normal school rhythms.
Warmth shows up in concrete systems rather than vague claims. Older pupils are given formal responsibilities, and the school uses structured rewards and expectations so that behaviour is predictable for children. For many families, that consistency makes mornings easier and reduces anxiety for younger pupils, especially those who thrive on clear boundaries.
Size and structure are central. The school describes itself as single form entry with nine classes and a maximum of 20 pupils per class, with at least one teacher and one teaching assistant in each class, and higher ratios in Early Years. That creates a “known by name” feel without the constraints of very small cohorts. Pupils tend to have stable peer groups, and teachers have time to notice small changes in confidence or friendships.
Because this is an independent prep, the most meaningful outcomes are not GCSE tables but readiness for selective senior schools and the quality of Key Stage 2 performance. The school publishes its own Key Stage 2 outcomes for the 2024 to 2025 cohort, including comparisons to national benchmarks. In that cohort, the school reports 95% achieving the expected standard in reading, 100% in grammar, punctuation and spelling, and 100% in maths, against published national figures of 75%, 73% and 74% respectively.
Depth is also part of the picture. The school reports 53% at greater depth in reading and 65% at greater depth in both grammar, punctuation and spelling and maths. It also reports average standardised scores of 111 in reading and 112 in grammar, punctuation and spelling and maths, compared with published national averages of 106, 105 and 105.
The implication for parents is not simply that scores are high. Strong standardised scores typically correlate with confident readers and solid number fluency, which then supports the jump into competitive senior school entrance papers. It also helps explain why the leavers’ list contains a mixture of selective state and high-demand independent destinations.
The curriculum is described as broad, planned in phases, and designed to be accessible regardless of background or ability, with explicit reference to British values and personal development alongside academic learning. For pupils, that tends to look like a more traditional primary experience in the core subjects, combined with specialist input as children get older.
Specialist teaching appears from the junior years. The school states that Lower One is taught by subject specialists for languages, music, physical education and computing, rather than leaving those areas solely to a single class teacher. The benefit is that children meet teachers with deeper subject confidence earlier, which can raise expectations in pronunciation, technique and vocabulary, especially in languages and music.
Early Years is treated as a distinctive phase, not simply “Reception with smaller chairs”. The curriculum policy describes baseline assessment in the first term of Pre-Reception and a play-based approach aligned to the Early Years Foundation Stage. In the most recent inspection report, Early Years provision is linked to well-planned activities, good progress, and effective use of indoor and outdoor learning spaces, including a woodland area used for investigation and challenge.
For a prep, destinations are the headline outcome, and the school publishes unusually specific detail. In 2024 to 2025, it reports that 14 scholarships were awarded (8 academic, 4 sport, 2 all-rounder) and it lists individual destinations with pupil numbers.
The same year’s named destinations include Brentwood School (7 pupils) and New Hall School (5 pupils), alongside single placements to Eton College and Roedean School. It also lists selective state destinations, including Chelmsford County High School for Girls (2 pupils) and King Edward VI Grammar School Chelmsford (1 pupil).
Looking across years shows that this is not a one-off. In 2023 to 2024, the school reports 19 scholarships, and placements again include Brentwood School and New Hall School, plus a spread across other selective destinations. For parents, the practical takeaway is that the prep is set up to support multiple pathways. It can work for families targeting independent senior schools, grammar routes, or strong local comprehensives, with guidance structured through events like a Secondary School Selection Evening.
The admissions message is intentionally straightforward. The school describes its process as non-selective and emphasises a visit, a meeting with the headteacher, and a tour as the core steps. If the relevant year group is full, it states that it will offer a waiting list place.
Because this is an independent prep with a relatively small structure, availability can matter more than a single annual deadline. Families considering a 2026 start should treat admissions as space-dependent rather than date-dependent, and plan early if they want a specific year group, especially at transition points such as Pre-Reception and the move into the older junior years.
A useful practical step is to use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to keep this and a handful of local alternatives in one shortlist, then update your shortlist after a visit once you have a feel for fit and logistics.
Pastoral language on the site is backed by specific programmes rather than slogans. The school references personal, social, health and economic education, themed weeks, counselling, and wellbeing activities such as yoga and mindfulness. That suggests a school trying to normalise emotional vocabulary early, rather than treating wellbeing as a reactive service.
The 2023 inspection report adds detail that is useful for parents. It describes pupils understanding online safety, leaders using wellbeing surveys, support plans for individuals where needed, and pupils reporting that bullying is dealt with effectively, supported by an anti-bullying ambassador programme for older pupils.
For families, the implication is that pastoral care is likely to feel structured and adult-led, with clear expectations, rather than laissez-faire. That suits children who like clarity and routines. Children who need very high levels of autonomy and choice all day may find the tone more formal than some progressive settings.
The extra-curricular offer is unusually well defined, and it is not limited to sport. The school’s published club timetable includes activities such as Construction Club, Problem Solving, Computer Club, Theatre Club, Yoga, Sign Language, Chess, Science Club, Art Club, Fitness and a St Angela Gardening Club. These are concrete options that go beyond the generic “after-school clubs” line that many schools rely on.
There is also a strong “included in fees” approach for many activities. The school states that, except for musical instruments and singing lessons, clubs including LAMDA, sports coaching and swimming are included in the fees. For parents, that can make budgeting easier, because a child can try several clubs without each one becoming an extra invoice.
Sport appears to be organised and outward-facing. The inspection report describes specialist physical education teachers and participation in a range of sporting activities, with success in local and regional competitions. The school’s news section also shows regular inter-school fixtures and tournaments, which typically indicates a prep that takes team sport seriously without it dominating the whole identity.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year (effective from 1 September 2025), the school publishes termly fees by stage, with both excluding VAT and including VAT figures. For junior and prep-age children, the published termly fees are £4,915 excluding VAT or £5,898 including VAT for Intermediate and Transition, and £5,160 excluding VAT or £6,192 including VAT for Lower One to Upper Two.
The fees page also clarifies what is generally included. Aside from musical instruments and singing lessons, clubs including LAMDA, sports coaching and swimming are included, and break-time refreshments are not charged termly. Some extras are listed as variable, such as uniform, trips, and iPads for Upper School (with VAT noted on iPads).
Details of means-tested bursaries or fee-remission scholarships are not prominently published on the public pages accessed for this review. The school does, however, publish a fees-in-advance scheme which offers a discount for paying fees upfront, and families considering this option should ask for the current terms and rates before committing.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Wraparound care is clearly explained. Before school care runs from 8:00am to 8:40am and is charged at £7 per session, and after school care runs from 3:00pm to 5:15pm and is charged at £7 per hour (or part of), with booking requested in advance.
The website pages accessed do not publish a single start and finish time for the core school day across all classes, and they note that pick-up times can vary slightly due to staggered end-of-day arrangements. Families for whom exact timings are critical should confirm the daily schedule for their child’s class directly, particularly for Early Years.
For travel and drop-off logistics, the school notes that the car park can be used for before-school drop-off and after-school care collection, with access via a side gate. That is a practical advantage in a busy area, especially for families with multiple drop-offs.
Catholic life is a real part of the timetable. Masses and services across the year, plus daily prayer and reflection, are woven into school routines. This will feel reassuring to some families and less aligned for others.
Small cohort, high visibility. Single-form entry and a maximum of 20 pupils per class can be a major strength for attention and continuity, but it can also mean fewer friendship “lanes” for children who want lots of peer variety.
Senior-school ambition can feel normalised. With published scholarship counts and destination lists, older juniors are surrounded by talk of next-step schools. That can motivate pupils, but families should consider whether their child will experience that as exciting or pressurising.
This is a focused, traditional-leaning prep where clear expectations, stable routines and strong outcomes are central, and where Catholic life is integrated rather than symbolic. The senior-school record is a genuine differentiator, with detailed destination lists and scholarship counts that show consistent success across multiple pathways.
Who it suits: families who want a small school, structured pastoral systems, and an education designed to prepare children for selective senior options, including both independent and grammar routes. The main decision point is fit, specifically whether the religious life and the more formal tone match your child’s temperament.
It has strong published Key Stage 2 outcomes for its 2024 to 2025 cohort and a track record of pupils moving on to highly selective senior schools, including scholarships and placements at a mix of independent and selective state options. Its most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection (November 2023) reports that the Standards are met and safeguarding is effective.
Fees are published as termly figures for 2025 to 2026, with excluding VAT and including VAT amounts shown by stage. For junior and prep ages, the published termly fees range from £4,915 to £6,192 excluding VAT depending on year group, with the corresponding including VAT figures also shown on the school’s fee schedule.
The school publishes a detailed destinations list with pupil numbers and scholarship counts. For 2024 to 2025 it reports 14 scholarships, and destinations include Brentwood School, New Hall School, Eton College, Roedean School and selective state schools in the Chelmsford area.
The school describes admissions as non-selective, centred on a visit and tour, and it states that applicants may be offered a waiting list place if a year group is full. There are no published, fixed annual deadlines on the admissions pages reviewed, so availability in the relevant year group is likely to matter more than a single cut-off date.
Yes. Before school care runs 8:00am to 8:40am, and after school care runs 3:00pm to 5:15pm, both offered to children from Pre-Reception through Upper Two, with published charges and booking expectations.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.