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.
A prep that mixes traditional “big school” ambition with a distinctly pre-teen brief: keep children young for longer, while still preparing them for competitive senior school routes. The setting helps, a Grade I listed mansion on the Woodhall Park Estate, and the structure follows suit, Nursery through Year 8, plus a flexi-boarding option designed to build independence without forcing full boarding too early. The current headmaster, Chris Gillam, presents the school as academically purposeful but not narrowly exam-led; the latest inspection evidence supports a culture that rewards effort and recognises individual strengths.
The sense of identity starts with place. The school describes itself as one of the older prep schools in the country, founded in 1796, and located on the Woodhall estate since 1934, which is not just a marketing line; it shapes daily life, from the balance of indoor specialist spaces to the amount of outdoor learning built into the week.
The values vocabulary is unusually explicit and consistently repeated across the site and formal documents: integrity, industry, resilience, respect, acceptance. When a school is this direct about its behavioural “language”, it often signals a clear social contract between staff, pupils and families. The February 2025 inspection summary reinforces that pupils can articulate these values, and that behaviour is typically strong, which matters in a large prep (capacity 560) where consistency is harder to sustain.
Early years has its own identity rather than feeling like a bolt-on. The school separates Pre-Nursery and Nursery language and describes dedicated rooms and outdoor zones, including the Blueberry room for rising threes, plus named outdoor areas such as the Three Bears forest school space. That specificity tends to correlate with smoother settling, because routines and spaces are designed around the age group rather than borrowed from older pupils.
For an independent prep, headline performance is For an independent prep, headline performance is rarely best assessed through public exam tables, The best current proxy is progression strength and external evaluation of teaching and curriculum design.
The latest inspection (February 2025) highlights a broad curriculum that reaches beyond age-related expectations, backed by structured assessment and ambitious teaching. It also identifies a “significant strength” around recognising and celebrating individual success, with the implication that high expectations are paired with visible, frequent reinforcement of progress, not just end-point outcomes.
A second concrete indicator is scholarship outcomes at senior school transition. The school states that in 2024/25, 52% of Year 8 pupils achieved one or more scholarships across academic, sport, art, music and drama. For parents, the useful reading is not that every child is “on scholarship track”, but that the top end is coached with enough structure and credibility that senior schools will validate it.
The curriculum positioning is “broad with depth”, with an emphasis on frequent switching between disciplines across a day or week. Inspection evidence points to a well-structured school day that gives pupils access to a wide subject range and regular opportunities to practise and refine individual strengths. In practice, that tends to suit children who learn best through variety, and it can also reduce the “single-subject identity” problem that sometimes appears in sport-heavy preps.
From Year 3 upwards, the school describes regular specialist subject teaching, and the inspection material specifically references weekly teaching of physics, biology and chemistry in the upper school. For a prep, that matters because it narrows the gap to senior school science expectations and allows earlier identification of genuine interest and aptitude.
In the early years, the approach stays play-led while still building routines. The Nursery information is unusually detailed about daily structure and learning zones, including outdoor role play, construction areas, and nature-based learning; the practical implication is that children who need movement and tactile learning are not being forced into long desk-based sessions too early.
This is a school that measures success partly by choice. The published destination list spans highly selective day schools, boarding schools and strong regional independents, suggesting families are not funnelled into a single “feeder” outcome. Examples include Eton College, Harrow School, Westminster School, Haileybury, Oundle School, Uppingham School, Millfield School, and Felsted School.
The process is structured early. The school says the headmaster meets families in Year 5 to discuss senior school aspirations and that there is a dedicated Future Schools function guiding the journey. For families, the implication is that decisions are expected to be active rather than last-minute, and that the school is used to handling different pathways (11+ and 13+; day and boarding; scholarship and non-scholarship routes).
Entry is described as non-selective at the earliest points, with a clear emphasis on fit and smooth settling. Children can join from the term they turn three, and Nursery admissions are framed around meeting families rather than testing. From Year 1 upwards, the school uses taster mornings and informal English and maths assessments, positioned as checks that a child can access the curriculum rather than a competitive filter.
The registration mechanics are explicit: a £120 registration fee, then a £1,200 deposit payable when a place is accepted, refundable when the child leaves. The practical point here is that families should treat the deposit as tied-up cashflow for multiple years, especially if applying with siblings.
For families targeting September 2026 entry, the school has published open morning dates, including 24 February 2026 and 8 May 2026. If you are trying to time a move, shortlist, or senior school planning, these dates provide an anchor for seeing the school in-session rather than on a weekend showcase.
Parents comparing options can use the FindMySchool Map Search to sense-check travel time realities and day-to-day feasibility, then keep notes in Saved Schools while visiting alternatives.
Pastoral systems are described as layered rather than single-point: Deputy Head Pastoral leadership, Heads of Section, form teachers, plus peer support through a buddy system. The school also references multiple routes for pupils to raise worries, including worry boxes and a student hub contact route, which tends to work well for children who are reluctant to speak up directly.
Support staffing is more specified than many preps publish. The school describes access to a school counsellor, play therapists, and an ARTiculate facilitator, plus two nurture dogs (Eric and Luna) used within wellbeing activity. For boarders, the school states Matron is available overnight if pupils feel unwell, and it also describes a full-time healthcare team that includes a paediatric nurse and an occupational therapist during the school day.
Safeguarding systems are also described as procedural and well-embedded, including pre-employment checks and staff training, and the most recent inspection summary supports that safeguarding arrangements are effectively implemented.
The co-curricular offering is not just “lots of clubs”, it is structured breadth with named pathways in sport, music, creative arts and STEM. The clubs list includes specific options that signal real resourcing: LEGO Spike Prime Robotics, animation, LAMDA, Bax Choir and Bax Consort Choir, Junior Duke, pottery, bushcraft, and multiple ensemble routes from Junior Strings through Symphony Orchestra.
Music is an obvious pillar, with unusually detailed published provision. The school states that 80% of pupils take up a musical instrument, supported by a Music Block with eight practice rooms, two teaching and rehearsal rooms, and an inventory that includes 14 pianos, three of them grand. For a child who gains confidence through performing, that infrastructure matters because rehearsal can be frequent without disrupting core lessons.
Sport is treated as both participation and pathway. The school states pupils receive at least 3.5 hours weekly across Physical Education, swimming or games, with extensive facilities including an indoor pool, sports hall, netball courts, cricket nets, a fitness suite and an all-weather astro court. It also publishes national competition outcomes for 2024 and 2025 across netball, swimming, athletics, cricket and football. The implication is that sport can be a serious strength for the motivated child, but there is also an alternative Wednesday programme for older pupils who do not want regular fixtures.
Outdoor learning begins young. Forest School is positioned as weekly for Nursery to Year 3, using named woodland space (Stumble Trip Woods) and practical activities such as tool use, habitat work and campfire routines. In early years, that can be the difference between “outdoor play” and structured resilience-building that transfers back into classroom learning.
For 2025/26, published termly tuition fees are £7,002 for Reception to Year 2, £9,066 for Years 3 to 4, £9,126 for Years 5 to 6, and £9,414 for Years 7 to 8. The school also publishes separate pricing for wraparound sessions and flexi-boarding nights.
Nursery fees are published by the school, but because early years patterns vary by sessions and funding circumstances, families should use the school’s fee page for the current structure and what is included.
Financial support is clearly separated into means-tested bursaries and scholarships. The school states bursaries can discount fees by up to 100%, subject to annual review and financial assessment. Scholarships are offered in five categories (Academic, Art, Music, Drama, Sport) for entry into Year 7 enrichment pathways, but the school states scholarships do not reduce fees; instead, programme costs and equipment are funded for scholars.
Fees data coming soon.
Boarding here is explicitly designed as flexible and gradual. The school offers flexi boarding from the Lent term of Year 3, from one to four nights a week, plus occasional nights, with a published maximum of 52 children per night across the two boarding houses. Girls board in River House on the estate and boys board in the main mansion, which keeps the experience close to the centre of school life rather than separate and remote.
A useful practical feature is the free trial night offer, which lowers the stakes for children who are curious but hesitant. For families considering senior boarding later, this “boarding as rehearsal” model can build self-management and confidence without forcing a full-boarding decision at 7 or 8.
The school publishes day timings by section. Pre-Prep typically runs from 8.45am registration to 4.00pm; Lower School typically closes at 4.15pm; Prep School typically closes at 4.45pm, with optional extensions through breakfast club and after-school provision.
Wraparound is structured: breakfast from 7.30am; after-school care options extend to 5.30pm for younger pupils, 6.30pm for tea, and 8.00pm for older prep pupils via Day Pupil Plus. Holiday camps are offered through an external provider operating on site in school holidays, with published timings and optional extended day.
Senior-school pressure in the final years. With a strong scholarship culture at the point of transition, Years 7 and 8 can feel more purposeful than some families expect from a prep. That suits motivated children, but it may feel intense for those who prefer a gentler runway to senior school.
Careers education is a developing area. The February 2025 inspection summary notes limited efficacy in careers education, which is less critical at this age than at senior school, but still relevant for families who value structured “future-facing” provision in Years 7 and 8.
Extra costs can add up. The school publishes fees for wraparound sessions and boarding nights, and it also states that music lessons are invoiced separately by visiting teachers. Families budgeting should model a realistic “all-in” cost, not just tuition.
Flexi boarding starts early. Boarding from Year 3 can be ideal preparation for later senior boarding, but it still requires a child who can manage evening routines away from home, even if only occasionally.
This is a high-energy, high-opportunity prep that takes both the early years and the Year 7 to 8 runway seriously, supported by a setting and facilities that make outdoor learning, sport and music feel like core curriculum rather than add-ons. It suits families who want breadth without sacrificing ambition, and who like the idea of flexi boarding as a confidence-builder rather than a full boarding commitment. Competition for places is likely to be felt most in the earlier years, so early engagement with the admissions cycle matters.
For families seeking an independent prep with strong breadth, it has credible indicators, including a February 2025 inspection that found the required standards were met and identified a significant strength linked to recognising and developing individual pupils’ successes. Parents should still test “fit” carefully, especially if they want a quieter, less busy co-curricular calendar.
Fees are published per term and vary by year group. For 2025/26, Reception to Year 2 is £7,002 per term; Years 3 to 4 is £9,066; Years 5 to 6 is £9,126; Years 7 to 8 is £9,414. Wraparound sessions and flexi boarding nights are priced separately, and music tuition is billed by visiting teachers.
The school describes itself as non-selective. From Year 1 onwards, children attend a taster morning with informal English and maths checks aimed at confirming they can access the curriculum, rather than ranking candidates competitively.
Boarding is flexi, offered from the Lent term of Year 3. Pupils can stay one to four nights a week, plus occasional single nights, with girls boarding in River House and boys in the main mansion, and capacity published as up to 52 children per night.
The school publishes a wide destination list that includes selective London day schools, major boarding schools and strong regional independents. For families, the key question is not just “where”, but which pathway best matches the child’s profile, and how early the school begins that planning conversation.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.