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 school that uses its setting to full effect, from outdoor learning and forest school-style activities to a boarding offer that can flex around modern family logistics. It serves ages 2 to 13, with boarding options from the prep years, and it sits inside a Grade II listed former country house with major 19th century alterations, so the physical environment is part of daily life rather than a backdrop.
The current Head, Mr Nigel Reed, has been in post since September 2017, and the most recent inspection picture is strong. The result is a school that leans into academic preparation for 11+ and 13+ while keeping a clear emphasis on confidence, character and co-curricular breadth.
A castle can easily become a gimmick. Here, it reads more like a working environment that shapes how pupils see school, as something with scale, story and space. The building itself is listed as Grade II, and Historic England describes it as a former large country house with origins in the late 17th century, with extensive alterations and additions in 1850 to 1856 by Henry Clutton for Lord de Mauley. That matters for parents because the site signals a school where corridors, staircases, lawns and outbuildings are not “purpose built school” in the modern sense, and that can be either enchanting or slightly impractical depending on a child’s temperament.
The tone is broadly mixed ability rather than narrowly selective, but with clear expectations. The admissions information describes a partially selective approach, with a taster day and academic reference, and assessment in English and mathematics from Prep 1 upwards. It also means late joiners are considered carefully, which can be reassuring for families moving into the area mid-year or relocating due to work.
Leadership continuity is a real stabiliser at prep level. Mr Reed’s tenure from September 2017 gives the school a consistent “north star” across curriculum, co-curricular and boarding development, including more recent work on flexi-boarding structures.
This is an independent prep with no published Key Stage 2 outcomes provided, so the most meaningful way to understand academic performance is through curriculum structure, inspection evidence, and senior school outcomes.
The latest combined inspection (Educational Quality and Focused Compliance) judged both pupils’ academic and other achievements and pupils’ personal development as excellent. While parents should treat any single inspection as a snapshot, that language is still a strong signal at prep level because it reflects day-to-day learning behaviours, the effectiveness of feedback, and how well pupils apply skills across subjects.
Preparation for senior school is explicitly built around 11+ and 13+ pathways. The school’s 13+ page frames the Common Entrance route as a two-year programme in the upper years, intended to prepare pupils for Year 9 entry at senior school, and links this to subject specialist teaching and small class experience. The “how” matters here. A good prep does not simply rehearse exam technique. It tends to build a staircase of knowledge and habits: writing stamina and argument structure; fluent number sense and problem solving; the ability to revise independently; and the confidence to perform under timed conditions.
For families considering a later entry point, the admissions policy also clarifies that pupils can join at the start of any of the three terms, and occasionally mid-term when appropriate (for example, a house move). That flexibility can be valuable in a rural area where relocating does not always align neatly with September starts.
The most distinctive pattern here is the blend of traditional prep school academics with a deliberate “learning through doing” angle. The open day information highlights den-building in one of the forest school spaces, practical science demonstrations (gravity and electricity), and arts learning that can take place outside as well as in classrooms. The implication for families is that the school is trying to avoid an overly desk-bound model in the younger years, while still building towards more formal exam preparation by Prep 7 and Prep 8.
Entry assessment is light-touch in the early stages and becomes more structured in the prep years. From Prep 1 upwards, pupils are assessed in English and mathematics during their day visit, and the school notes it may use GL Assessment further up the school for benchmarking. This is typical of schools aiming to match support and stretch to the individual, but parents should understand the trade-off: a school that benchmarks and sets expectations clearly can feel energising to an academically motivated child, and slightly pressurising to a child who needs longer to settle.
In the early years, the nursery model is based around a key worker approach, supporting continuity of care and consistent communication with parents. That matters because it reduces “handover risk” between home and setting, and it can make transitions into Reception smoother when a child is ready.
For a prep school, destination schools are the headline outcomes. Bloxham School, Marlborough College, Westonbirt School, Dean Close School, Cheltenham College, Malvern College, Stowe School, Roedean School, Rendcomb College, Monkton Combe School, and an international destination, Pike Road High School, are named as destinations for Prep 8 leavers in 2025. That is a broadly “top independent senior” profile for the region and beyond.
Scholarships are also explicitly tracked. In 2025, the school lists scholarship awards including academic scholarships (to Roedean, Rendcomb College, and Westonbirt School), sports scholarships (to Stowe and Westonbirt School), plus music (to Tudor Hall) and art (to Rendcomb College). Importantly, this is not framed as “one type of success”. The awards span academics, sport, art and music, which suggests staff are supporting different strengths rather than pushing a single template.
The school also notes that while most pupils leave at 13, it supports pupils who leave at the end of Prep 6 for state and grammar routes. For parents, this matters because the senior school decision is not one-size-fits-all. A child who is thriving at 11 may still benefit from two more years of specialist prep teaching before moving at 13; another child may be ready to move earlier, particularly if a strong local state option is the right fit.
Admissions are built around fit and readiness rather than a single exam score. The standard route begins with an enquiry, a visit and meeting with the Head, then registration, and finally an offer subject to a satisfactory school report or reference plus a taster day.
For pupils entering from Prep 1 upwards, the admissions policy indicates assessment in English and mathematics during the day visit, and the school may use GL Assessment further up the school. If a child is a prospective boarder, the admissions policy describes a “Hatherop 24 Hours” experience, which is a sensible way to check that a child is comfortable with the rhythms of boarding life.
Entry points are flexible. The admissions policy states children can join at the start of any of the three terms, with occasional in-term joining where appropriate. For families relocating into Gloucestershire or moving within the Cotswolds, this can reduce the “all or nothing” pressure of a single September intake.
Open mornings run termly, and the next whole school open morning is listed as Friday 20 March, 9.30am to 11.30am. If your family is at the shortlisting stage, this is where FindMySchool’s Map Search can help: check commute time, school run logistics and practical distance from your home address before booking a visit.
Scholarships are part of the picture. The admissions page states scholarship exams are held in Lent term, and it lists academic, music, art and sport awards, with means-tested bursaries also noted as potentially available. Practically, parents should assume that the scholarship route is competitive and preparation begins well before the assessment window, especially for music and sport where evidence of sustained commitment tends to matter.
A prep school with boarding needs to “get the small things right”, routines, sign-out procedures, staff visibility, and a calm sense that children are known. The school’s policies describe clear end-of-day times for nursery, pre-prep and prep, and a sign-out approach that tracks pupils as they leave, including those staying later for activities.
For nursery-age children, the key worker system is a practical strength because it provides continuity in both care and learning communication. For older pupils, boarding adds another layer of pastoral oversight. The ISI report describes boarders being accommodated in one boarding house within the main school building, which implies a relatively compact boarding community rather than a sprawling multi-house system.
Wellbeing support is also signposted through leadership roles. The staff list identifies a Deputy Head Pastoral who is also the Designated Safeguarding Lead, as well as an ELSA and Mental Health Lead role.
This is where the school differentiates itself for many families, especially those weighing a prep against local state options.
the international boarders page references after-school activities including Lego Robotics, cookery and Scottish country dancing, alongside a wider programme of trips and activities. The co-curricular overview also names programmes such as Sports Aspire, Academic Aspire, and Positive People, which suggests a structured approach rather than an ad hoc clubs list.
the co-curricular section describes coaching across football, rugby, hockey, netball, cricket and athletics, plus tennis, swimming, fencing, gymnastics and golf. It also notes an Aspire Sports Scholarship pathway for pupils with particular talent. For parents, the implication is that sport is being used as a vehicle for self-management and leadership, not only fixtures and team sheets.
fencing is a useful example because it is not a “default” prep offering. The school’s news includes an account of a pupil’s development in fencing from an in-school club into higher-level competition contexts, and this points to staff or coaching continuity in less common sports.
the co-curricular page positions music as taught and encouraged from nursery through to Prep 8, with an emphasis on practical music-making and performance confidence. If your child is happiest on stage, in ensembles, or using performance as confidence-building, this is an area to explore carefully during a visit.
Boarding here is designed to be flexible rather than “all in or nothing”. The school describes introducing new arrangements for flexi boarding, including a voucher system intended to make booking easier around family routines. It also describes the intention to move supper earlier and extend the activity slot in the early evening, which indicates a focus on making boarding feel like a coherent part of school life rather than an add-on.
Term dates matter for boarding families because they shape the rhythm of return and exeat weekends. The published term dates include boarders’ return times, exeat weekends, and end-of-term finish times, which is exactly the kind of operational clarity parents need when planning travel and work schedules.
A smaller boarding community can suit younger boarders well. It typically means fewer “social layers” to navigate and more adult visibility, which can be reassuring for families considering boarding from age 7. The trade-off is that a child who wants a big house system with lots of peers in their year may prefer a larger boarding prep.
Fees are published per term and effective from September 2025. For Reception (after a child’s 5th birthday) through to Prep 8, the published range runs from £4,180 per term (Reception after 5) up to £7,250 per term (Prep 6 to Prep 8). The school also publishes a full boarding supplement of £4,105 per term and a weekly boarding charge of £3,005 per term.
The school notes that since 1 January 2025, independent school fees from Reception upwards have been subject to VAT, and it states the fees shown are inclusive of VAT.
Financial support is present, but parents should expect it to be limited and targeted. The admissions information states means-tested bursaries may be available, and it also lists scholarships in academic, music, art and sport, with scholarship exams held in Lent term. For families with three or more children, the fees schedule also sets out a sibling discount for the third and subsequent child, subject to conditions, and it includes a Forces discount structure for eligible families.
Nursery and early years fees are published separately; for current nursery pricing, use the school’s official fees information. Government-funded hours are available for eligible families, and the school references early years funding in its fees documentation.
Fees data coming soon.
The school day structure varies by age. Policies set out different finishing times for nursery, pre-prep and prep, and indicate that later collection windows can apply for children staying for activities. For wraparound, the school documents breakfast club and later care options, but parents should check what is currently offered for their child’s year group because the pattern can change term by term.
Transport is a practical strength for a rural setting. The school runs a subsidised bus service, notes that routes vary with demand, and uses a booking and tracking app so families can manage changes and see bus location in real time.
Senior school transition at 13. Most pupils leave at the end of Prep 8, so families need to engage early with the senior school decision. If you want a single setting through GCSEs, this model will not suit.
Boarding at a young age. Boarding from the prep years can be a major confidence-builder, but it requires a child who is ready for routine, independence and shared living. Flexi boarding can help families test readiness without committing immediately.
Costs and VAT. Fees are termly and include VAT from Reception upwards, which is a meaningful budget line for families. Financial support exists, but it is described as limited and should not be assumed.
A historic building is part of the deal. The listed castle setting is unusual and memorable, but families should pay attention to practicalities like accessibility, transitions between spaces, and how a child who prefers modern, predictable environments reacts to an older building.
This is a prep for families who want a strong route into selective senior schools, but who also value a childhood that includes outdoor learning, performance, and the occasional boarding night that builds independence rather than simply extending the school day. It suits pupils who respond well to clear expectations and who enjoy variety, from Forest School-style learning to structured sport pathways.
The limiting factor is usually fit rather than a single pass mark. Families interested in this option should use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to keep it alongside a couple of realistic senior school pathways, then visit on an open morning to test whether the setting and routines feel right for your child.
The most recent inspection picture is very positive. The May 2023 ISI inspection judged pupils’ academic and other achievements and pupils’ personal development as excellent, and it also found the school met the required standards including boarding requirements. Senior school outcomes also look strong, with a wide spread of well-known independent senior destinations listed for recent leavers.
Fees are published per term and effective from September 2025. Reception (after a child’s 5th birthday) is listed at £4,180 per term and Prep 6 to Prep 8 is listed at £7,250 per term, with separate boarding supplements for full or weekly boarding. Fees shown are inclusive of VAT from Reception upwards.
Admissions typically involve a visit, a taster day, and consideration of a school report or reference. From Prep 1 upwards, pupils are assessed in English and mathematics during the day visit, and benchmarking tests may be used in the upper years. Scholarships are assessed separately, with exams held in Lent term.
Recent destinations listed for 2025 include Bloxham, Marlborough College, Westonbirt School, Dean Close, Cheltenham College, Malvern College, Stowe, Roedean School, Rendcomb College, Monkton Combe School, plus an overseas destination. The school also lists scholarships achieved in 2025 across academic, sport, music and art.
Yes. Boarding is available with options that include flexi patterns, and the school has described introducing a voucher system to make flexi boarding easier to book around family schedules. Published term dates also include boarders’ return and exeat weekend timings.
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