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Set just outside Chichester, Oakwood School is a co-educational independent day prep for pupils aged 2 to 11, with nursery provision and two Reception classes feeding into a broadly two-form entry prep structure. The school describes itself as academically non-selective, provided a child can cope with mainstream education.
The latest Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) routine inspection (May 2024) presents a school with clear leadership and strong governance, a broad curriculum with notable creative and outdoor elements, and an embedded safeguarding culture. It also points to two areas that matter for parents: consistent stretch across the full ability range, and a stronger, more global approach to cultural education beyond the immediate community.
For families weighing up prep options in the Chichester area, the proposition is straightforward. Oakwood aims to combine a traditional prep-school breadth, strong pastoral structures, and a purposeful curriculum, with the space and freedom to learn outdoors and develop confidence early.
Oakwood’s identity is closely tied to being a family school, small enough for children to be known well, and structured enough to keep routines calm and predictable across nursery, Reception, and the prep years. The ISI report describes values that are reinforced regularly so they become second nature to pupils, with behaviour that is consistently positive and pupils committed to lessons and activities.
Leadership stability tends to show up in the day-to-day. The headteacher, Mrs Clare Bradbury, is listed as headteacher on official records. On the school’s own headteacher page, she notes this is her tenth year as headteacher, which signals continuity for families who value a settled approach to curriculum and pastoral systems.
A distinctive element is the way pupils are encouraged to contribute to school life. The inspection highlights pupil voice through the school council, with initiatives emerging from those discussions, and planned activities that put pupils into social contact with other schools and local residents, including older people in local care settings. The implication is a community-minded culture that does not stop at the classroom door, while still being rooted in a prep school’s need for clear boundaries and routine.
What can be evidenced is the curriculum intent and the quality checks around teaching. The ISI routine inspection states that the curriculum is broad and promotes pupils’ learning across core areas alongside creative, technological, physical, and life skills. It also describes cross-curricular links, including topic-based work where historical learning supports art and writing, and science knowledge is used as a stimulus for creative outcomes.
A practical takeaway for parents is to treat Oakwood’s academic picture as one that must be judged through the school’s own reporting, work samples, and discussion with staff, rather than through headline national benchmark data.
Oakwood’s strongest evidence-backed theme is breadth, with deliberate time and attention given to subjects that some preps treat as secondary. The inspection notes knowledgeable teachers, and it gives concrete examples of curriculum design, including increased time in Year 6 for personal, social, health and economic education, plus variation in modern foreign languages at different ages. French sits alongside introductions to languages such as Spanish, German, and Japanese at various stages.
Early years practice is described in practical, child-centred terms, including structured opportunities for mark making and a “tea table” used by adults to encourage social interaction, as well as planned activities that build communication and motor skills. For parents of nursery and Reception-aged children, this matters because it suggests the setting is not only caring, but also intentional about language development and readiness for more formal learning.
Two areas to probe in a prospective visit or conversation align with the inspection’s recommended next steps. First, ask how teachers ensure tasks are consistently adapted so pupils across the ability range are appropriately challenged. Second, ask what the school has done since May 2024 to deepen pupils’ appreciation of cultures beyond the local community, and how that shows up in curriculum materials and events.
As a prep school through Year 6, the destination question is about transition to senior schools. The school’s own published destinations list is not available from the approved sources accessible here, so specific senior destinations should be confirmed directly with the school.
What can be stated confidently is the kind of preparation implied by the curriculum. A broad subject mix, strong literacy expectations, and early exposure to languages and creative disciplines tends to suit pupils moving on to a wide range of independent and state secondaries, including academically competitive schools. The best way to validate fit is to request the school’s most recent leavers’ destinations and any scholarship outcomes, and to ask how they support families with different senior-school pathways.
Oakwood states that it is academically non-selective in its intake, provided a child can cope with mainstream education. For many families, that framing is appealing because it signals that the school is not driven by entrance testing at prep entry points, while still expecting pupils to be able to access a mainstream curriculum.
The school also indicates it is accepting registrations for Reception entry in September 2026, and that there may be some places in other year groups. That is a useful prompt for timing: families considering Reception should treat the current period as an active admissions window, and those looking for in-year entry should ask early, as availability can change quickly.
A financial point to understand upfront is the acceptance deposit structure described on the school’s admissions journey page: a confirmation of entry deposit is stated as £300 for pre-school children, and £500 for Reception to Year 6 entry. Families should confirm the current deposit terms and the circumstances in which deposits are refundable or offset against fees.
If you are shortlisting, FindMySchool’s Saved Schools tool can help track entry points, open events, and the questions you want to ask about challenge, pastoral systems, and transition destinations.
Pastoral strength is a recurring theme in the formal evidence. The inspection describes leaders proactively considering wellbeing, including creating new “hub” spaces where pupils can go to relax, and listening to pupil feedback through multiple channels.
Safeguarding is also described as embedded, with appropriate policies and training in place, and staff vigilance for concerns. This is the kind of baseline parents should expect, but it is still meaningful to see it explicitly confirmed in the most recent inspection cycle, particularly for a school with early years provision.
A good admissions conversation here is specific. Ask how concerns are logged and escalated, what pastoral staffing looks like across early years and the prep school, and how the “hub” spaces are supervised and used, for regulation, friendship support, or structured interventions.
The inspection gives several concrete examples that help differentiate Oakwood from a generic “lots of clubs” description. Pupils develop creative skills in art, drama, and music with encouragement from knowledgeable teachers, and the report explicitly mentions music ensembles such as the choir and a ukulele group, as well as dramatic productions.
There is also evidence of a practical, modern enrichment strand. The inspection notes computer programming and additional language clubs as routes through which pupils extend learning beyond the core timetable. For families who want a prep that treats coding and languages as normal, not as occasional extras, this is a strong signal.
Outdoor learning appears as more than a marketing line. Pupils enjoy outdoor learning and physical education that helps them develop appreciation for exercise and the natural world. The implication is that children who learn best through movement, exploration, and structured outdoor activity may thrive, particularly in the younger years when attention and motivation are closely tied to environment and variety.
Finally, the inspection references an “entrepreneurs” programme for Year 6, encouraging pupils to shape business ideas, consider marketing, costs, sales, and wider themes such as sustainability and ethics. That is a distinctive prep-school enrichment element, and worth asking how it is assessed and how it links to personal development goals.
Oakwood publishes termly fees for the 2025 to 2026 school year on its fees page, stated as termly fees and VAT inclusive. Reception is £4,540 per term; Years 1 and 2 are £4,885 per term; Years 3 and 4 are £6,800 per term; Years 5 and 6 are £7,315 per term.
Because the school has nursery provision, early years pricing should be checked on the school’s own admissions materials. Eligible families may also wish to explore government-funded early education hours for younger children.
Financial assistance varies widely between independent preps, and bursary arrangements should be confirmed directly with the school if this is relevant to your decision.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Oakwood is an independent day school for ages 2 to 11, located near Chichester and operating as a Church of England school in ethos and character, while serving a mixed intake.
The school’s published calendar materials indicate that classrooms open from 8.15am, with registration indicated in the 8.15am to 8.30am window for the prep school. Details of before and after-school care, and how late collection is handled, should be confirmed directly with the school if you need wraparound care.
Holiday provision is referenced via a third-party provider operating on-site, described in the school calendar materials as an Ofsted-registered holiday provision for Reception to Year 6. Families should check availability, booking requirements, and which weeks are covered.
Stretch and challenge. The May 2024 inspection recommends ensuring learning activities are consistently adapted so pupils across the ability range are appropriately challenged. This is worth probing if your child is highly academic, or if they need careful scaffolding without lowering expectations.
Global cultural breadth. The inspection also notes that pupils’ appreciation and respect for other cultures in the wider world is limited, and recommends leaders address this. Ask what has changed in curriculum content and whole-school events since 2024.
Published outcomes data.
Wraparound specifics. Start-of-day timings are referenced in published calendar materials, but wraparound care details should be confirmed directly if you need reliable early drop-off and late pick-up.
Oakwood School, Chichester reads as a settled, values-led prep with a broad curriculum and a clear emphasis on outdoor learning, creative subjects, languages, and purposeful enrichment. The latest ISI inspection confirms strong leadership, positive behaviour, and an embedded safeguarding culture, while also highlighting two sensible improvement areas around consistent challenge and cultural breadth.
Who it suits: families looking for an independent day prep from nursery through Year 6, with strong pastoral structures and a curriculum that gives real weight to arts, languages, and learning beyond the classroom. The key decision point is whether the school’s approach to differentiation and stretch matches your child’s learning profile.
The most recent ISI routine inspection (May 2024) confirms that the school meets the standards across leadership and governance, quality of education, wellbeing, contribution to society, and safeguarding. It also highlights strengths in curriculum breadth, behaviour, and pupil voice, alongside clear next steps around consistent challenge and wider cultural education.
Fees are published as termly and VAT inclusive for 2025 to 2026. Reception is £4,540 per term; Years 1 and 2 are £4,885 per term; Years 3 and 4 are £6,800 per term; Years 5 and 6 are £7,315 per term.
The school states it is academically non-selective, provided a child can cope with mainstream education. Families should still ask how the school supports different learning profiles, including pupils who need extension or pupils who need additional learning support.
The school indicates it is accepting registrations for Reception entry in September 2026, and that there may be some places in other year groups. Availability for in-year entry can change, so early contact is sensible.
The inspection references creative and performing opportunities including dramatic productions and music ensembles such as choir and ukulele group, plus computer programming and additional language clubs. It also describes a Year 6 entrepreneurs programme that develops economic understanding and practical enterprise skills.
Get in touch with the school directly
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