This is a deliberately small independent prep in Balby, set up for children from age 2 through to 11, with a registered capacity of 45 and a current roll in the mid teens. That scale shapes almost everything parents notice first: tight teacher knowledge of each child, rapid adjustment when a pupil needs extra help, and a school day that can flex around family logistics.
The most recent inspection gives a clear headline: Good overall, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management; safeguarding is effective. The report also sketches what “good” looks like here: a calm, orderly environment; strong routines; and a curriculum that aims high, including substantial exposure to Shakespeare in English as pupils move through the school.
Because it is an independent school, the practical questions tend to come quickly: fees, wraparound, and how entry works. The school publishes several ways to pay, including weekly, monthly, or termly, and it runs an early drop-off and paid after-school care to 6pm.
The tone is intentionally traditional in its expectations and routines, but it is not presented as rigid. The latest inspection describes a calm, orderly environment where pupils feel safe, and it highlights clear routines and high expectations as the mechanism behind consistently good behaviour. In a very small school, those routines matter more than in a large one because there are fewer places for a child to hide if they are anxious, unsettled, or disengaged, and equally fewer layers of staff to interpret behaviour before it is noticed.
A distinctive feature of the school’s identity is that it is founder-led. The proprietor is also the headteacher, and current official records list the headteacher/principal as Miss J Spencer; the school’s own website describes Miss J Spencer as founder and notes the school is co-run with the deputy headmistress, Mrs S Nicklin. Founder-led schools can feel very coherent when the vision is stable, and the inspection evidence here points to consistency: clear policies, staff who know and follow procedures, and regular checks on the school’s effectiveness.
The motto appears in school materials as Floreat Arbor Scientiae (May the tree of knowledge flourish). Taken at face value, it fits the way the curriculum is described: reading positioned as central, and an emphasis on building knowledge cumulatively across subjects rather than treating lessons as isolated activities.
For parents comparing schools, this is the section where independent primaries often look different from local state primaries. The standard Key Stage 2 performance metrics that dominate state-school comparisons are not always the most meaningful way to judge a very small independent prep, especially when cohorts are tiny and individual pathways vary.
The school also positions itself as oriented towards selective senior-school entry. It states that pupils achieve success in independent and grammar school entrance examinations, and that academic scholarships have been attained to a range of schools. It also claims alumni have progressed to leading institutions including Oxford and Cambridge, and to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. These statements are not accompanied by published numbers, so families who need hard statistics should ask what this looks like for the most recent leavers, not as marketing, but as a practical check on fit.
The curriculum description is unusually specific for a small prep. In Reception and Key Stage 1, literacy and numeracy are taught daily, with daily phonics and daily reading to the teacher mentioned explicitly. The same page signals a fairly traditional approach to spelling (including “look, say, cover, write, check”) and a deliberate focus on grammar, sentence structure, and punctuation.
By Key Stage 2, daily English and maths continue, with maths described as including mental maths, problem solving, and even algebra. From an inspection perspective, the strongest curricular threads are reading and mathematics. Reading is described as a high priority, with staff quick to identify pupils who struggle and to provide targeted support so they can catch up and keep up. Mathematics is framed as learning to think like a mathematician, with bespoke support for pupils with additional needs to make learning accessible.
There is also breadth beyond the core. The curriculum outline includes French, ICT, music, and PSHE/RSE, and at Key Stage 2 it expands to include German, verbal reasoning, current affairs, and world religions. Trips are referenced with named examples such as Jorvik Viking Centre, Eden Camp, and Conisbrough Castle, which suggests that learning is regularly reinforced through visits rather than being entirely classroom-bound.
As a prep to 11, the key transition question is which schools pupils move to at the end of Year 6, and how the prep supports that process.
The school’s own positioning is clear: it aims to prepare pupils for independent and grammar-school entrance, and it reports scholarship successes without publishing totals. If your child is likely to sit selective tests, the upside of a small prep is that preparation can be personalised and gaps can be addressed quickly. The trade-off is that peer benchmarking is narrower: with tiny cohorts, it can be harder for pupils to gauge where they sit relative to a wider local population.
For families not pursuing selective senior schools, the same academic approach can still suit well, especially for children who thrive on daily core instruction and frequent adult feedback. The most useful next step is to ask the school to talk you through typical pathways in the last two years, including which entrance assessments are most common, what the timetable looks like for preparation, and how they manage pressure for pupils who are less exam-driven.
Admissions are direct to the school rather than via a local authority coordinated process. Parents and children are invited to visit and meet teachers; the school says it welcomes drop-in visitors, but recommends making an appointment for a full tour and a prospectus.
After an initial visit, an application is made to the headmistress. If successful, the school provides confirmation reserving a place. Before entry, pupils are invited to attend an informal assessment morning, and the school offers free taster sessions depending on individual needs, with the aim of making the transition smooth, particularly for younger children.
For 2026 entry specifically, the school does not publish a single national-style deadline in the way state schools do. The most sensible interpretation of what it does publish is that admissions are managed on a rolling basis, with assessment and taster sessions arranged as the start date approaches.
Open days appear to run at least in some years, with an example published for October (an event listing shows an open day on 11 October). For families planning ahead, it is safer to treat October as a typical open-day month rather than relying on historic dates, and then check the school’s current events listings.
In a very small prep, pastoral care often depends on everyday relationships rather than a large formal structure. The inspection evidence indicates pupils feel safe, behaviour is strong, and staff refocus pupils quickly when attention drifts, which is a good proxy for a school where adults are consistently “on it”.
The school also presents personal development as part of daily life, not an add-on. The inspection describes pupils learning about different faiths, beliefs and relationships, and it highlights structured leadership roles such as prefects and mentors with practical responsibilities.
For families who prioritise safeguarding culture, the formal position is clear: safeguarding is effective. The practical question to explore on a visit is how this works day-to-day in a setting with small numbers, including how concerns are raised, recorded, and followed up when staff wear multiple hats.
Small schools can be either limited or surprisingly rich outside lessons, depending on how deliberately they organise enrichment. Here, there are enough named activities to suggest a structured offer rather than ad hoc extras.
The school’s FAQs list lunchtime activities including piano use, Traditional Toys, Chess Club, and Gardening Club. Drama and dance are positioned as a recurring strand, culminating in an annual school play. The inspection adds colour to this by referencing pupils praising each other’s singing during school play rehearsal, which reinforces that performance work is not a one-off.
Trips also feature as part of the wider experience, with several destinations named in the curriculum outline. For parents, the key implication is that enrichment is used to build knowledge, language, and confidence, not simply to keep children busy. Because trips and lunch are not included in fees, it is worth asking for a typical termly view of extras so you can budget realistically.
Sycamore Hall publishes flexible payment routes and states fees include VAT at 20%. As of the current published schedule, fees can be paid:
Weekly at £190 (36 payments during term time)
Monthly at £570 (12 payments from September to August)
Termly at £2,280 (three payments)
The school also explains that, following the VAT change applied to private school fees from 01 January 2025, it increased the monthly fee from £475 to £570 and states it is not able to absorb the VAT cost.
Extras are clearly flagged. Fees do not include lunch or additional items such as trips. After-school club is available each weekday for £5 per child, and holiday care is offered during October, Easter and the summer break at £25 per day, booked and paid in advance and subject to demand.
On financial support, the school states a sibling discount is available, with details provided on enquiry. No published bursary programme or means-tested support is set out on the main pages referenced above, so families needing that kind of assistance should ask directly what is available and what the criteria are.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Wraparound is unusually generous at the start of the day. The school day starts at 9:00am; pupils are asked to be in by 8:45am, and children may be dropped off from 7:30am with no additional charge. School ends at 3:45pm, with after-school care available from 3:45pm to 6:00pm for £5 per night per child; the school describes homework time followed by activities such as piano, cinema night, reading and art.
Holiday care is offered in October, Easter and the summer break for £25 per day, subject to demand and booked in advance. Term dates for 2025 to 2026 are published on the school’s term dates page, but as an independent school these may not match the local authority calendar, so parents should rely on the school’s published pattern when planning work and childcare.
Tiny cohorts. The school roll is reported in the mid teens with a capacity of 45, which can be excellent for individual attention but offers a narrower peer group. Consider whether your child thrives in a very small social setting, particularly as they approach Year 5 and Year 6.
VAT is built into fees. Fees are published inclusive of 20% VAT, with the school stating it could not absorb the cost after the January 2025 change. If affordability is close to your limit, ask for a full-year view of tuition plus typical extras.
PSHE content is still embedding. Inspectors highlighted that the PSHE curriculum was in its early stages and staff were still learning the new content. Ask how this has developed since the inspection, especially if relationships education and personal development are priorities for your family.
Sycamore Hall Preparatory School offers an unusually small-scale prep experience with a traditional academic emphasis, strong routines, and practical wraparound that starts early and runs late. The latest inspection judgement of Good, alongside effective safeguarding, supports the picture of a settled, orderly setting where pupils are known well.
Who it suits: families who actively want a very small school, value daily focus on reading and maths, and prefer admissions that are handled directly with informal assessment and taster sessions rather than a single competitive entry point. The main caveat is that small cohorts are not right for every child, and costs beyond tuition, such as after-school care and holiday provision, need factoring in from the start.
The latest inspection judged the school Good overall, with Good grades for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management; safeguarding was found to be effective. The report also highlights a calm, orderly environment and strong routines that support learning.
Fees are published with weekly, monthly, or termly payment options, and they include VAT at 20%. The school also notes that lunch, trips, and some wraparound and holiday care elements sit outside the core fee.
Applications are made directly to the headmistress after a visit. The school describes an informal assessment morning before entry and offers free taster sessions depending on the child’s needs, which points to a rolling, relationship-led admissions approach rather than a single annual deadline.
Yes. The school states children can be dropped off from 7:30am with no additional charge, and after-school care runs from 3:45pm to 6:00pm for a nightly fee.
The school lists lunchtime options such as Chess Club and Gardening Club, plus piano access and traditional toys. Drama and dance culminate in an annual school play, and trips are referenced through the curriculum, including named destinations.
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