A primary school with the scale of a village class, and the ambition of a carefully constructed Montessori environment. With a published capacity of 35 pupils, this is intentionally small and mixed-age by design, which shapes everything from curriculum delivery to friendships and leadership opportunities.
The school is rooted in Montessori principles, so independence is not a slogan, it is a daily expectation. Work is individualised, and pupils move through materials at their own pace, with adults guiding and checking understanding rather than driving whole-class instruction. In May 2024, an ISI school inspection described pupils as making good progress and feeling positive about learning, alongside clear community strengths; it also identified weaknesses in safeguarding oversight and recruitment processes at that time.
A follow-up ISI progress monitoring inspection in February 2025 reported that the school met all the relevant standards checked during that visit, with safeguarding systems implemented effectively and leaders taking appropriate actions to safeguard pupils.
This is a setting that trades scale for closeness. The mixed-age model means younger pupils are constantly exposed to older peers working with maturity, and older pupils gain everyday chances to lead, explain, and set the tone. The ISI May 2024 report captures a strong sense of community and respectful interactions between pupils of all ages, supported by staff who act as positive role models.
The ethos is clearly Montessori, and it shows up in practical ways. Pupils are expected to manage their time, select tasks, concentrate for sustained periods, and take responsibility for routines. For some children, this feels liberating. For others, particularly those who thrive on tight teacher-led structure and frequent whole-class pacing, the adjustment can take time.
Leadership is closely associated with the proprietor-headteacher model. The school’s headteacher is Mrs Helen Everley, and the website positions her as both the educational lead and a central figure in the wider Henley Montessori community. The school’s history page also links her leadership to the development of the primary phase, noting that the primary school opened in 2007 to enable pupils to continue Montessori education through to age 11.
For parents used to mainstream comparisons, this section looks different. The school is very small, and it is not presented as a results-driven, data-heavy setting. The clearest academic picture comes through curriculum intent, day-to-day learning habits, and external inspection commentary rather than headline performance tables.
The ISI May 2024 report describes pupils making good progress, sometimes over short periods of time, supported by individualised learning programmes that match work to learning needs. It also flags an improvement point about ensuring pupils consistently apply skills and knowledge across subjects, which is a common challenge in highly individualised models where pupils can become very strong in a strand without always transferring learning elsewhere.
The core proposition is individualised learning within Montessori principles. Expect a classroom where pupils are working on different tasks at the same time, with staff circulating, observing, questioning, and adjusting next steps. In the May 2024 ISI report, children in the early years are described as quietly confident, purposeful, and resilient, moving between activities and building literacy and numeracy foundations securely before tackling more complex tasks.
A practical implication for families is that motivation and self-direction matter. Pupils who enjoy choosing work, persisting, and returning to a task to master it can do very well in this environment. Children who need frequent external prompting may need time to settle, and parents should ask specifically how the school supports attention, organisation, and task completion for different learner profiles.
As a primary school, the key transition is to Year 7. The school’s model does not appear tied to a single destination, so most families will be looking at local state secondaries and nearby independent options, depending on preference and practicalities. Because the school is small, year-to-year destination patterns can shift.
A sensible approach is to ask for the most recent list of destination schools and, if relevant, what support is provided for entrance assessments or scholarship pathways for those considering independent senior schools. If you are comparing multiple local options, FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature can help you keep notes on destinations and transition support alongside practical considerations.
Admissions are handled directly with the school rather than through a local authority coordinated process, and the website explains that registration and a registration fee place a child on a list for a future intended entry point, subject to meeting entry criteria and standards.
Two important practical points stand out on the school’s admissions page:
The school states that the primary is full for academic years 2024 to 2025 and 2025 to 2026, with waiting lists used when places are filled.
Waiting list priority is described as date of registration and fee payment, with preference to siblings of current pupils and families seeking places for multiple siblings at the same entry point.
For families targeting 2026 entry, the implication is clear: plan early, and treat the waiting list as realistic rather than exceptional. It is also wise to ask what entry points are most likely to open up, for example Reception versus in-year movement, and whether the school uses trial days or observations as part of decision-making.
Pastoral care in a school of this scale tends to be highly personalised, and the May 2024 ISI report describes pupils as well cared for, feeling safe, secure, and supported by effective pastoral systems, with pupils readily able to name trusted adults for concerns.
Safeguarding deserves a properly informed reading. In May 2024, the ISI school inspection reported that safeguarding-related standards were not met consistently, citing issues such as role delineation and aspects of safer recruitment, alongside areas for action. The February 2025 ISI progress monitoring report states that the school met the relevant standards checked during that inspection and describes effective implementation of safeguarding arrangements, including training, recording, and monitoring.
When considering a small independent school, parents should still ask practical questions: who holds the designated safeguarding lead role, how training is refreshed, and how low-level concerns are logged and reviewed. In a close-knit setting, clarity and consistency matter as much as warmth.
Extracurricular life here is less about a long menu and more about meaningful projects that fit the scale of the school. The May 2024 ISI report highlights engagement with the local community and pupils’ understanding of service and the impact of their actions.
Outdoor learning appears to be a real strand rather than an occasional add-on. The inspection report refers to outdoor learning and a forest area used for activities, with risk assessment practices described, and the staff list explicitly includes Forest School provision.
For a concrete example of community-facing activity, local parish council reporting describes a pupil-led pond and wildlife initiative associated with the school’s headteacher, which aligns with the school’s stated emphasis on responsibility and real-world learning.
The school publishes its primary fees and the basis clearly. For 38 weeks of opening, fees are payable in three equal termly instalments, with a stated term fee of £3,300 including VAT at 20%. The same page also notes a 5% discount for a second and subsequent child in full-time education.
The fee page sets out what is included and flags typical extras such as class outings, instrument tuition if arranged through the school, and after-school clubs. The website does not present detailed published information about means-tested bursaries or scholarships, so families who need support should ask directly what, if anything, is available and how decisions are made.
Fees data coming soon.
The school’s published day structure for the primary phase runs from 08:45 to 15:15, with lunch in the middle of the day. Term dates are published for 2025 to 2026, which is useful for planning around a three-term year.
Wraparound care information is available via a school policy document, stating before-school care from 08:15 to 08:45 for primary pupils. Families should still confirm current availability and how booking works, as wraparound capacity can be sensitive in very small schools.
For travel, the setting is in Henley-in-Arden, and most families will be thinking for local driving routes and walkable access depending on where they live. If proximity is a deciding factor, FindMySchool’s Map Search is a practical way to compare options in a consistent way when shortlisting.
Very small scale. With a published capacity of 35 pupils, friendship groups, cohort mix, and staffing changes can feel more noticeable than in larger primaries. This suits some children extremely well, but others prefer the anonymity and breadth of a bigger intake.
Montessori fit matters. Independence and self-direction are daily expectations. Children who need constant adult prompting may need targeted support to thrive, so ask how the school builds routines, concentration, and task completion for different ages.
Admissions reality. The school states the primary phase is full for 2024 to 2025 and 2025 to 2026, with a waiting list used when places are filled. For 2026 entry, early engagement is sensible.
Safeguarding trajectory. The May 2024 ISI inspection identified safeguarding and leadership standards not met consistently at that time; the February 2025 ISI progress monitoring inspection reports that relevant standards checked were met. Parents should understand what changed and how it is sustained.
This is a highly distinctive option for families who actively want a Montessori primary experience in a very small, close-knit setting. The strongest fit is a child who enjoys independent work, steady concentration, and learning alongside a mixed-age group, with parents who value philosophy and culture as much as outcomes data. The main challenge is practical: places are limited, and the school’s admissions page signals high demand.
The school offers a clearly defined Montessori approach and very small-scale education. Recent external scrutiny includes ISI inspections in 2024 and a progress monitoring inspection in February 2025, which reported the school met the standards checked during that visit. Parents should still assess fit carefully, particularly around independence, mixed-age learning, and the school’s plans for sustaining safeguarding processes.
The school publishes fees as £3,300 per term for the primary phase, payable in three termly instalments, with VAT included as stated on the fee page. Families should also budget for extras such as trips, instrument tuition if arranged, and some clubs.
Admissions are handled directly with the school. The website explains that registration and a registration fee are used to confirm a future intended entry point, subject to meeting entry criteria and standards. It also notes that the primary phase is full for 2025 to 2026, so families considering later entry points should ask early about waiting list expectations and likely availability.
The primary day is published as 08:45 to 15:15, with lunch from 12:00 to 13:15. Families needing earlier drop-off should ask about wraparound arrangements and current capacity.
Expect individualised learning, mixed-age dynamics, and a strong emphasis on independence and self-directed work cycles. It can suit children who enjoy choosing tasks, persisting, and taking responsibility for routines, and it may feel less comfortable for children who prefer frequent whole-class teaching and tight adult-led structure.
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