This is a very small all-through independent school, registered for ages 3 to 18, with a strongly Christian character and a distinctive way of organising learning. Rather than a typical class-and-lesson model all day, much of the academic morning is structured around individual workstations (described as pupils working in their own “offices”) and moving through the Accelerated Christian Education programme at an individual pace.
In the most recent inspection cycle, the school’s overall effectiveness was rated Good, with safeguarding confirmed as effective. The current head teacher is Jill Holt, appointed in February 2019, and leadership stability is an important part of the school’s recent improvement story.
Capacity is small (60 places), and inspection reporting indicates a very small roll at the time of the latest inspection, which can shape the feel of the school: intimate, relationship-led, and potentially less “busy” than larger settings.
Small schools can either feel limiting or reassuring, and here the evidence points to the second. The latest inspection describes the setting as friendly and welcoming, with pupils and staff treating each other with warmth and mutual respect. For families looking for a calm day and a close-knit staff team, that matters as much as any headline metric.
The Christian ethos is not a light overlay. It is described as shaping day-to-day life across the school, rather than being confined to assemblies or timetabled religious education. That will suit families who want an education explicitly aligned to Christian beliefs, and it will not suit families who prefer faith to be a smaller part of school identity.
The age range creates a particular social dynamic. In an all-through setting, younger pupils often benefit from familiarity and stability, while older students may gain from leadership opportunities and responsibility. Here, the small scale tends to amplify those effects. For some children, that predictability is grounding. For others, especially those who want large peer groups, multiple sports teams, or a broad choice of friendship circles, it can feel tight.
For this school, the usual public headline measures and rankings used for large cohorts are not available through the standard results in the way parents may be used to seeing for mainstream primaries and secondaries. That means it is better to judge academic quality through what is verifiable: the curriculum model, the inspection evidence on learning, and the way pupils are prepared for next steps.
The most recent inspection describes the curriculum as ambitious and clearly sequenced, with learning building coherently from early years onwards. It also highlights frequent checking of knowledge and timely support when pupils need extra help. The main area flagged for improvement is coherence between the core ACE programme and some wider curriculum activities, so that pupils can connect and apply learning across contexts.
The organising principle here is individual progression. Pupils move through Packets of Accelerated Christian Education (PACE) at a pace that reflects what they know and can do, supported by frequent “check-up” opportunities and staff intervention when needed. In practice, that can work well for children who enjoy independent study, like tangible short-cycle goals, and benefit from a steady routine.
Early reading is treated as foundational, because it unlocks access to the wider programme. The latest inspection emphasises a structured approach to phonics and early reading, including extra sessions for pupils who struggle, and matching books to the sounds pupils know. For families comparing small schools, this is a concrete strength: it suggests the school has a system, not just goodwill.
There is also clear evidence of attention to inclusion. The inspection notes structured support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, and targeted support for pupils who speak English as an additional language. Given the scale of the school, support is likely to be highly relationship-based, but parents should still ask practical questions about how plans are set, reviewed, and resourced as pupils get older.
Because the school is registered through to 18, it is easy to assume a full sixth form experience. However, the latest inspection states that there were no students in the sixth form at the time of inspection. If sixth form is important for your family, this needs a direct conversation about current post-16 options, whether teaching is provided on-site for Years 12 and 13, and how progression is handled in practice.
The school describes preparation for next steps as part of its purpose, and inspection reporting notes careers guidance and support for further education and employment applications, with independent advice to help pupils make informed decisions. The 2021 inspection also referenced past pupils progressing to sixth-form colleges, apprenticeships and university, but without published destination numbers.
For an all-through provider with very small cohorts, destination patterns can change year to year. A useful parent approach is to ask for the last two or three leaver cohorts and discuss the range of pathways pursued (college, apprenticeships, employment, and any university progression), without expecting large headline percentages.
Admissions appear to be handled directly rather than through the local authority’s coordinated process, which is typical for an independent school. The available application form indicates a registration and testing fee of £25 for applicants aged 5 and above, and it states that an interview with parents and prospective pupil(s) is required before final acceptance.
Given the size of the school, places are likely to depend on current roll and how cohorts are distributed by age. For September 2026 entry, do not assume there is a single annual deadline in the way there is for state school Reception or Year 7. Instead, ask directly about:
Whether applications are considered year-round or in fixed windows
What the assessment involves by age (especially for entry beyond early years)
How transition works for pupils joining mid-phase
How the school handles progression from early years into primary, and from primary into secondary, in such a small setting
If you are comparing multiple local options, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful here, because travel time can be a deciding factor when a school is small and daily routines are tightly structured.
The two most important pieces of evidence here are consistency and safeguarding. The latest inspection describes pupils as feeling safe and well looked after, and it confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective. That matters in any school, and especially in a small setting where relationships and routines carry a lot of weight.
Pastoral care in very small schools can be a major advantage, because staff can know pupils extremely well and pick up changes quickly. The flip side is that formal pastoral layers (multiple tutors, year teams, specialist pastoral staff) are less likely to exist. Parents should ask who holds responsibility for pastoral concerns day-to-day, and what happens if a pupil needs specialist support beyond what a small staff team can provide.
The strongest evidence here points to purposeful enrichment rather than a large menu of clubs. The latest inspection describes an annual student convention where pupils compete and perform against pupils from other Christian schools across Europe, and it links this to confidence, social skills, and resilience. It also references wider experiences such as camping to help pupils develop skills for adulthood.
There is also a tangible motivational system described through the “merit shop”, which pupils can use by earning merits. In a small school, these structures often matter, because they provide shared routines and community moments that larger schools get automatically from scale.
If your child thrives on high-frequency team sport fixtures, large productions, or extensive music ensembles, you should ask specifically what currently runs weekly, not just annually, and how mixed-age groups are managed in activities.
This is an independent school, so fees apply. The latest inspection report includes an “annual fees (day pupils)” figure presented as a range of £3,770 to £1,783. Because that figure is taken from inspection documentation rather than a current published fee schedule, families should confirm the full 2025 to 2026 fee schedule directly with the school, including what the range reflects (age, year group, part-time early years, or other factors).
The school’s publicly accessible documents reviewed did not set out bursary or scholarship arrangements in a way that can be verified in the same way as inspection evidence. If affordability is a key factor, ask directly about fee reductions, sibling policies, and whether any support is means-tested.
Nursery and pre-school pricing can vary significantly by pattern of attendance. For early years costs, use the school’s official information, and remember that government-funded hours may apply for eligible families.
Fees data coming soon.
This is a town-centre setting within Dewsbury, operating from Dewsbury Gospel Church premises. Daily timings, wraparound care, and holiday provision are not clearly set out in the publicly accessible documents reviewed, so families should confirm start and finish times directly, and ask whether breakfast and after-school care are available for younger pupils.
Very small cohorts. A roll of this scale can be a real advantage for children who like routine and close adult support, but it can feel limiting for children who want a wide peer group and lots of parallel activities.
Curriculum model is distinctive. The ACE and PACE approach suits independent learners; children who need a more discussion-led, class-based day should look carefully at fit.
Sixth form expectations. The school is registered through 18, but the most recent inspection states there were no sixth form students at that time, so post-16 options need a direct, up-to-date conversation.
Wider curriculum coherence. The latest inspection highlights improvement work needed so that wider activities connect more consistently with core programme learning.
This is a niche, values-led choice: a small Christian all-through independent with a highly structured, individualised approach to learning. It suits families who actively want an explicitly Christian ethos and who believe their child will thrive with independent work, clear routines, and close adult support. The challenge is that very small scale cuts both ways, it can be reassuringly personal, but it can also feel narrow if your child wants breadth of peers and activities.
The most recent inspection rated the school Good overall, and it confirms that pupils feel safe and that safeguarding arrangements are effective. It is best judged on fit: the academic model relies on structured independent learning and steady progression.
As an independent school, fees apply. The latest published inspection documentation includes an annual day fee range of £3,770 to £1,783; families should confirm the full 2025 to 2026 schedule and what drives the range directly with the school.
Applications appear to be handled directly by the school rather than through the local authority process. The available application form references a £25 registration and testing fee for applicants aged 5 and above, plus a family interview before final acceptance; ask the school for current timelines for September 2026 entry.
The school is registered to age 18, but the most recent inspection states there were no students in the sixth form at the time of inspection. If post-16 is important, ask what is currently offered on-site and what pathways are most common.
Much of the programme is organised around the Accelerated Christian Education model, where pupils progress through PACE materials at an individual pace, supported by frequent checking of knowledge and staff support when needed. This can suit self-motivated learners who like clear structure.
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