A prep where the setting does some of the work. The school sits within a historic hall whose story stretches back to medieval references, later remade in the 1800s, with Arts and Crafts elements that remain part of the school’s identity today.
Leadership has been stable for over a decade, and that continuity shows up in how the school frames itself: calm routines, personal knowledge of families, and a strongly guided route through 11+ applications rather than a hands-off approach.
This is an independent day prep from 6 months to 11, with nursery provision and wraparound care, so it can work for families who want one setting from early years through to Year 6.
The distinctive feature here is the blend of old and new without trying to turn the building into a museum piece. The school’s own heritage timeline describes original Arts and Crafts features sitting alongside specialist facilities, including science labs, performance spaces, and outdoor classrooms. That matters day to day because it creates a “setting-led” feel, where history is used as a backdrop for modern teaching rather than as a branding exercise.
The house system is an example of that approach. Houses are named for figures and families connected to the estate and the school’s earlier identity, including Clarke, reflecting the founder of Wilmslow College in 1895 and the later relocation to the hall. For pupils, this is a practical structure for teamwork and cross-age connection, not just a badge system.
Leadership is a visible part of the culture. official records lists the headteacher as Mr David Goulbourn, and the school positions his role as hands-on and closely involved in daily life. The school also marks a decade of transformation under his leadership, with the narrative explicitly describing him stepping into the headmaster role “just ten years ago”; public corporate records also show his appointment date as 1 January 2014 in the school’s trust company filings.
For families, the implication is consistency. You are buying into a well-established way of doing things, rather than a school in the middle of frequent reinvention. The trade-off is that the culture has a clear “Pownall way”, which will suit some children strongly and feel a little structured for others.
For independent preps, the most useful “results” for parents are destinations and the quality of preparation for senior school assessments. The school publishes a detailed example from its Year 6 cohort of 2024: 25 pupils secured 71 senior school offers, including 9 scholarships, across a range of North West independent and selective options.
The same publication lists multiple destination schools and indicates that offers include both independent day schools and selective grammar routes, which suggests that preparation is not tied to one specific senior school brand. The implication for families is choice, but also a culture where older pupils are likely to be thinking quite explicitly about assessments and next steps, especially from the junior prep years onwards.
The school frames its approach as specialist-led, even in the younger years. In Pre-Prep, it highlights specialist teaching in music, PE, science and French, and names specialist roles and settings such as science lessons taught in the science lab from Form 1. This matters because it tends to raise subject ambition earlier than you see in many small preps, where generalists carry most of the timetable until Year 3 or 4.
Learning beyond the classroom is built into the curriculum rather than treated as an occasional add-on. Forest School is positioned as timetabled rather than optional, with weekly sessions across early years and into the prep years. It also names the Forest School lead and describes practical, structured activities such as den building, gardening, tool use, and obstacle courses. For pupils, the implication is that outdoor learning is not just a treat, it is part of how confidence, independence, and managed risk are developed over time.
The formal admissions policy also gives a useful window into how the school thinks about fit. For children under three, it states there is no summative assessment, with observation against Development Matters guidance and time spent in the setting with a parent. For older applicants, the expectation is a day or preferably two in school with the prospective class, so teachers can check cognition and core skills while also observing motivation and group contribution.
The school’s clearest published “destination” evidence is the Year 6 outcomes summary referenced above, which indicates a spread of offers across senior schools, including Manchester Grammar School, Manchester High School for Girls, Cheadle Hulme School, Stockport Grammar School, and Alderley Edge School for Girls, plus an overseas example in Dubai College.
Scholarships are part of this picture. The school describes a scholarship pathway aimed at supporting pupils as they move through the 11+ process, with preparation tailored to the senior schools being applied for. It also states that scholarships carry a partial remission of fees, with the level discussed individually.
For parents, the practical implication is that the school expects to be active in next-step planning rather than leaving families to interpret the landscape alone. The best question to ask on a tour is not “where do children go”, but “what does the school recommend for a child like mine, and when does that guidance start”.
Admissions are explicitly personal rather than event-driven. The school states it does not run large open events, instead inviting families to book a private, one-to-one tour led by the headmaster during a normal school day. That approach suits families who want detailed conversation and a tailored look at the relevant year group, and it is less convenient for those who prefer a fixed open morning format.
The written admissions policy sets expectations clearly. Applicants should register in the year preceding the desired year of admission. Under-threes are observed in-setting with a parent rather than tested. Older applicants are expected to spend a day or preferably two with the prospective class. Where several children request limited places, the policy indicates places are offered on merit.
One practical detail families often miss is the structure of registration and deposits. The admissions policy specifies a £60 non-refundable registration fee and a £500 deposit payable on entry.
Parents looking to be systematic about shortlisting can use the FindMySchool Saved Schools feature to keep notes from each tour and track how each setting handles assessment, stretching, and support across the age range.
Pastoral language on the school site emphasises a structured framework with form teachers as the first point of contact and senior oversight to maintain continuity. That structure is reinforced in operational documents too, for example the attendance policy describes daily routines, registration windows, and safeguarding-related follow-up when a child is absent without explanation.
External accountability matters here because it checks whether the culture is matched by systems. The most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate progress monitoring inspection report (dated 29 September 2025) states the school meets all relevant standards that were considered, focusing on welfare, health and safety and safeguarding practice.
An earlier routine inspection in October 2024 identified compliance issues to address, including supervision at certain transition times, fire doors being propped open during inspection, and ensuring emergency medication is immediately available, while also confirming safeguarding standards were met.
The strongest extra-curricular evidence is the level of specificity. Rather than “clubs for everyone”, the school publishes named clubs and providers. Examples include Art Club with Mrs Cutts, Origami, Hama Beads, and age-group language clubs such as Spanish for Kindergarten to Form 2.
Performing arts is supported by a named venue, the Boddington Theatre, used for drama teaching for Forms 3 to 6, including stagecraft and production design alongside performance. The Parents’ Association also references investment into theatre lighting and a radio station, which suggests co-curricular work that extends beyond end-of-term productions.
Sport is framed around both participation and fixtures. The PE and Games curriculum page lists football, netball, rugby, hockey and cricket as core Games options, with fixtures, tournaments and festivals. The same parental funding note references an astro pitch used year-round, which is often the limiting factor for winter sport at smaller preps.
Forest School is a second pillar. The school describes a purpose-built outdoor woodland classroom, a firepit with installed seating, canopies, mud kitchens, a tool station, and den building areas. It also states 15 hours of Forest School sessions each week and references an Eco Club run by the Forest School lead for Forms 2 to 5.
For Reception to Form 6, fees are published per term, with different rates for younger and older year groups: £4,145 plus VAT per term for Reception to Form 2, and £4,615 plus VAT per term for Form 3 to Form 6. Lunches are charged separately at £380 per term.
There is also a stated sibling discount for children in the Owl Room up to Form 6, at 10% for a second child and 15% for a third.
Financial support is described as limited means-tested bursaries for Forms 1 to 6, intended for families for whom full fees would otherwise be prohibitive, with awards following a confidential assessment process. The scholarship programme indicates partial fee remission, with the level discussed individually at offer stage.
Nursery fee details are published separately by the school, and families should refer to the official fees page for the current early years pricing.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school day timing is set out in the attendance policy. For Reception to Form 2, the day ends at 3.30pm; for Forms 3 to 6 it ends at 3.45pm. Pupils from Reception to Form 6 are expected to be in school from 8.20am, with registration between 8.20 and 8.40.
Wraparound options are published, including breakfast club from 7.30am and aftercare running to 6.00pm, with itemised charges on the fees page. Holiday provision is also described as running during school holidays, with sessions and care offered from 7.30am to 6.00pm.
For day-to-day logistics, tours are held during the working day and are intended to show families normal routines, including drop-off rhythms and how children move between indoor learning spaces and outdoor areas.
Recent compliance history. The October 2024 routine inspection listed specific safety and supervision issues to address, including fire doors, transition supervision, and emergency medication accessibility. The September 2025 progress monitoring inspection reported the relevant standards considered were met. Families should ask what operational changes were made and how they are checked day to day.
A clear 11+ culture. Published outcomes highlight a high volume of senior school offers and scholarships at Year 6. That can be motivating for academically ambitious pupils, but it can also create a sense that the later years are oriented toward assessment.
Fees structure and extras. Tuition is per term plus VAT, lunches are additional, and wraparound is optional and charged separately. Budgeting needs to include the full package you expect to use, not just the headline tuition fee.
Early years funding changes. The fees page notes that government funding will no longer be accepted from the end of the Summer term 2026. Families who rely on funded hours should check how this affects their plans and timing.
This is a heritage-setting prep that has put real thought into the practicalities of modern schooling, specialist teaching early on, structured outdoor learning, and a guided route to selective senior school entry. The strongest fit is for families who want continuity from early years through to Year 6, value a personal admissions process, and want a school that takes senior school preparation seriously while still protecting childhood through play, performance, and outdoor time. Competition for places and the level of 11+ focus in the older years are the main factors to weigh.
It has stable leadership, a clearly structured approach to teaching across early years and prep, and published evidence of strong senior school outcomes at Year 6. The most recent ISI progress monitoring inspection report (September 2025) states that the school met all relevant standards considered during that inspection.
For Reception to Form 6, fees are published per term with different rates by stage. Reception to Form 2 is £4,145 plus VAT per term, and Form 3 to Form 6 is £4,615 plus VAT per term, with lunches charged separately at £380 per term.
Admissions are handled directly by the school, and visits are typically arranged as private tours led by the headmaster during a normal school day. The admissions policy states that families should register in the year preceding the desired year of admission, with age-appropriate observation or in-school taster time used to assess fit.
The school describes limited means-tested bursaries for Forms 1 to 6, awarded via a confidential assessment process. It also runs a scholarship programme where awards can carry partial fee remission, with the level discussed individually.
The school publishes named clubs and providers, plus specialist facilities that support performance and outdoor learning. Examples include the Boddington Theatre for drama teaching, Forest School with a purpose-built outdoor classroom and Eco Club, and a range of creative clubs such as Origami and Art Club.
Get in touch with the school directly
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