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.
Disclaimer: The FMS Inspection Score is an independent analysis by FindMySchool. It is not endorsed by or affiliated with Ofsted or ISI. Always refer to the official Ofsted or ISI report for the full picture of a school’s inspection outcome.
Great Walstead School is an independent day prep for boys and girls aged 2 to 13, set on a large rural site in Lindfield, near Haywards Heath. The distinctive headline is its Mud π learning philosophy, which deliberately uses the grounds, woodland and streams as a teaching asset, not just a backdrop, so lessons regularly move between classroom and outdoor space.
Leadership is stable. Chris Calvey has led the school since September 2017, following a decade leading Ardingly College Prep, and he remains a visible part of the admissions journey for families booking visits.
The most recent full-school inspection (18 to 20 November 2025) concluded that the Independent School Standards were met, including safeguarding. Recommended next steps focused on sharpening risk assessment processes and ensuring recruitment information is recorded accurately in the single central record.
The school’s identity is built around “childhood as an adventure” in practical terms, not just marketing language. Mud π is presented as a core organising idea, with examples such as using a stream edge to observe erosion or using outdoor settings to support writing and reflection.
Outdoor learning is also structured rather than occasional. Forest School is described through seasonal themes and hands-on projects, including activities like mini raft building, fire-based learning themes, and craft work using natural materials. For pupils who learn best by doing, that approach can be a genuine advantage, especially in the early years and lower school where attention and confidence often grow fastest through practical success.
The Christian character is part of the school’s history and framing, with the founder’s original intent described as a Christian school set in the countryside, and the school’s community pages still using that language.
A final contextual point that may matter to some families is governance and strategic direction. In 2024 the school announced it was joining Ardingly College’s family of schools, positioning this as a partnership that supports long-term sustainability and shared practice, while keeping Great Walstead’s separate identity.
As a prep school, Great Walstead is not inspected through Ofsted, and does not include ranked Key Stage 2 outcomes for comparison against England averages.
The most useful “results” evidence available for parents is inspection commentary on the quality of teaching, curriculum planning and pupil progress.
In practical terms, this points to a school where academic outcomes are pursued through strong classroom routines plus well-used enrichment, rather than through an exam-centred culture. For families seeking a prep that keeps academic ambition but still protects time outdoors and breadth of experience, that balance is likely to appeal.
Curriculum breadth looks thoughtful for a school that ends at 13. Modern languages are a clear example. French is taught throughout the school, and older pupils also learn Spanish, which is an unusually explicit commitment at prep level and should help pupils transition into senior-school language pathways with confidence.
The school also invests in technology capability in a tangible way. The Robyn’s Nest ICT suite (opened in 2024) includes equipment such as laser cutters and 3D printers, intended to support programming, coding, design and technology workflows, rather than limiting computing to standard classroom software.
For families comparing preps, this matters because it signals “specialist spaces” rather than general-purpose rooms. When pupils can prototype, design and iterate with real tools, it often improves both confidence and the quality of independent project work, which becomes increasingly relevant in Years 7 and 8.
This is a prep school with a deliberate “senior school readiness” focus in Years 7 and 8, framed around maturity, leadership and independence, with specialist teaching and smaller classes across subjects to help pupils develop senior-school study habits.
The school also publishes a concrete scholarship signal: over the last five years, an average of 35% of Year 8 leavers have achieved scholarships to their senior schools, across academic, sport, music, drama and art, plus “all-rounder” awards.
It is also helpful to understand the local market positioning. The school describes itself as the “traditional prep school route” preparing pupils for 13+ entry into a range of senior schools, as distinct from a through-school pathway elsewhere.
Admissions are described as personalised and relationship-led: meet the head, tour, register, then a taster day or session (with age-appropriate arrangements for younger children). This suggests the school is prioritising fit and readiness over a single exam gate, which will suit many families, especially those entering in early years or lower school.
Open events are published, with an Open Week listed for 9 to 13 February. If you are planning for 2026 or 2027 entry, treat this as a strong indicator that open weeks typically run in February, but check the school’s current listing for the exact year and booking requirements.
For families interested in scholarship pathways, the school indicates that Year 6 scholarship dates for 2026 will be announced at the end of the Spring term.
The school’s safeguarding culture is described as vigilant, with standards met in the 2025 inspection.
The inspection also highlights sport and physical activity as a consistent entitlement, positioned as supporting both physical and mental health.
There is also a clear note for parents who value learning support. The school indicates dedicated supported learning and publishes policies and structures around supervision and wraparound arrangements, which usually correlates with clearer routines and expectations for pupils who benefit from predictability.
Great Walstead’s extracurricular programme is unusually specific about named clubs and activities, which helps parents judge “fit” beyond generic sports-and-arts claims.
Examples include chess, pop choir, fencing, horse riding, street dance, ceramics (run with on-site artists), outdoor adventures and mountain biking. The EEI pattern is clear here: the evidence is specific, and the implication is that pupils can find an identity beyond academics, whether that is performance, practical art-making, or outdoor challenge.
The other standout is the facilities-driven enrichment in computing and design. Robyn’s Nest, with laser cutters and 3D printers, creates a pathway for pupils who love making, building, coding and prototyping. That can be particularly valuable for pupils who are bright but not always inspired by purely written outcomes.
For 2025 to 26, published tuition fees (VAT included) are:
Reception, £3,996 per term
Year 1, £4,644 per term
Year 2, £5,384 per term
Years 3 and 4, £6,858 per term
Years 5 to 8, £7,592 per term
The school also publishes a registration fee and deposit in its schedule of fees, plus session-based wraparound charges and sibling discount rules.
Early years fee detail is published by the school, but as with any early years setting, session patterns and optional care add-ons matter as much as the headline rate. Use the school’s own fees document for the most accurate picture, and ask for an itemised example that matches your intended attendance pattern.
On financial support, Great Walstead has established a named bursary fund, the Burbidge Fund, intended to widen access for children whose families could not otherwise afford fees. The school also runs scholarships in areas such as academic, sport, drama, music and art, linked to senior-school scholarship readiness.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
School hours vary by section. A published supervision policy states that Pre-Prep children start at 08.30 and leave at 15.30, while Junior, Middle and Senior pupils’ day runs 08.00 to 16.30.
Wraparound care is a major practical strength. The school describes term-time coverage from 07.30 to 19.00, with holiday coverage also available (with timings varying by programme).
Term dates for Autumn 2026 are published, with term starting Thursday 3 September 2026 and ending Friday 11 December 2026.
For transport and commute planning, this is a rural site in Lindfield, and families typically rely on car travel for daily drop-off and pick-up. If you are comparing options, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check your drive times at peak school traffic, not just map distance.
Fees now include VAT. The school states it is required to charge VAT on educational services and expresses fees on a VAT-inclusive basis, which can materially change family budgeting.
Outdoor learning is a central method. Mud π and Forest School are not occasional extras. Pupils who strongly prefer indoor, desk-based learning may not enjoy the frequency of outdoor, practical activities.
Inspection improvement points are operational, not academic, but still worth asking about. The 2025 inspection recommended more systematic risk assessment management and accurate SCR recruitment recording, with some errors corrected during inspection. Ask how processes have been tightened since then.
Admissions are individualised. That suits many families, but it also means timelines can vary by year group and availability. If you need certainty by a specific month for relocation or childcare planning, request a clear admissions timeline early.
Great Walstead School is best understood as a traditional prep with a modern, outdoors-led learning model and a clear focus on producing confident 13+ leavers. The strongest evidence points are its published senior-school scholarship rate over time, substantial wraparound coverage, and an inspection picture of well-planned teaching with good pupil progress.
Who it suits: families who want a grounded prep education that uses outdoor space as a core learning tool, and who value a strong runway into senior schools at 13, including scholarship preparation where appropriate. The main decision point is whether the Mud π philosophy matches your child’s learning style, and whether the 2025 to 26 fee level fits your budget once VAT and extras are accounted for.
The most recent whole-school inspection (18 to 20 November 2025) confirmed the Independent School Standards were met, including safeguarding, and described well-planned teaching with pupils making good progress. The school also reports a strong senior-school track record, including a published multi-year average scholarship rate for Year 8 leavers.
For 2025 to 26, published tuition fees (VAT included) range from £3,996 per term in Reception up to £7,592 per term for Years 5 to 8. Fees vary by year group, and wraparound options can add to the overall cost.
The published process is meet and tour, then registration, then a taster day or session, followed by an offer. Open events include an Open Week listed for 9 to 13 February, which suggests February is a common time for open-week scheduling, but families should confirm the current year’s details directly with the school.
Yes. The school describes term-time wraparound from 07.30 to 19.00, with holiday coverage also available. Specific day timings vary by school section.
Great Walstead positions Years 7 and 8 as senior-school preparation, with specialist teaching and confidence-building. It also publishes that over the last five years an average of 35% of Year 8 leavers have gained scholarships to their senior schools, across multiple disciplines.
Get in touch with the school directly
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