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.
This is a small independent prep where academic ambition is explicit, especially from Key Stage 2 onwards, but it sits alongside a deliberately traditional focus on manners, kindness and confidence. The latest formal inspection found that the Standards are met across leadership, education, wellbeing, social development and safeguarding, with pupils described as feeling very safe and well supported.
The setting has its own story. The school occupies Leonard House at 16 Leigh Road, a building erected in 1880, originally as a private house, later used for other purposes before becoming the school’s long-term home. That heritage gives the school a slightly different feel from many modern preps, with character rooted in an older residential building rather than a purpose-built primary campus.
Leadership is stable. Mr Peter Spencer-Lane is the headteacher, and he took up the post in June 2019.
The school’s own history page leans heavily into continuity and tradition, including a stated motto, Je tiens bien (I hold fast), and a clear emphasis on values and conduct. That matters because, at prep level, culture shows up in the small, repeated moments, how children speak to adults, how older pupils interact with younger ones, and whether expectations are consistent in classrooms and corridors.
External review evidence supports the “small school, close oversight” picture. In the most recent inspection, leaders are described as using detailed self-evaluation and maintaining a caring, supportive culture with pupil safety at the centre. Pupils are also described as respectful and considerate, with a clear understanding of bullying and how to seek help.
A useful practical nuance is that the school is not purely “exam focused” in tone, even though outcomes matter. The same inspection also highlights pupils’ respect for diversity and their confidence in discussing protected characteristics in age-appropriate ways. For many families, that combination, high expectations plus a warm social atmosphere, is the real point of difference.
The school positions 11+ preparation as a core strength, and publishes a multi-year record of pass rates. It states an average pass rate of 79% since 2015 (excluding 2021), and reports 89% for October 2025. Those figures are significant because they imply a consistent rhythm of extension, practice and selection advice through Years 5 and 6, which tends to shape the whole upper school experience.
The inspection report adds colour on what learning looks like. Early years provision is described as effective, with almost all children achieving a good level of development by the end of Reception. As pupils move through the school, the curriculum is described as meeting requirements across learning areas, with pupils arriving keen to learn and responding well to high teacher expectations.
A detail that matters for parents is consistency. The same report flags that a few lessons lack clear objectives, and that marking and feedback are not applied consistently against the school’s own policy. This is not unusual in small schools with mixed staffing models and specialist inputs, but it does change what to ask about during a visit: how leaders standardise lesson planning and feedback without losing the benefits of small classes.
Teaching is described as structured in most lessons, with questioning used effectively to identify misconceptions and push understanding. In practical terms, that suggests a classroom culture where pupils are expected to explain answers rather than simply produce them, and where teachers diagnose gaps quickly.
The inspection includes concrete examples of learning behaviours. Pupils are described as using subject vocabulary accurately, including through practical work such as a dissection activity in science and paired discussion about parts of flowers. In maths, older pupils are described as being expected to explain reasoning and show methods, which aligns well with selective test preparation but also builds more durable confidence in problem solving.
For families with children who need additional support, the inspection notes that pupils with special educational needs and disabilities are identified sensitively, supported effectively, and make consistently good progress against their targets, including through use of a learning support area referred to as the nurture room.
For a prep school, “destinations” is the product. The inspection report states that pupils usually move on to their chosen senior schools, and that by the end of Year 6 a majority successfully gain entrance to local selective senior schools.
The school’s own published 11+ data is unusually detailed for a prep, and it frames the pupil journey clearly. Preparation is said to start in Year 3, intensifying in Year 5 with focused lessons, extended homework and testing for candidates, plus optional after-school 11+ clubs for maths and English.
The implication for parents is straightforward: this is likely to suit children who respond well to structured practice and frequent feedback cycles, especially in Years 5 and 6. Children who are bright but less motivated by competitive testing may still do well, but families should ask how the school balances selective preparation with breadth and joy of learning for pupils not sitting the 11+.
Admissions are presented as flexible and, importantly for mid-year movers, the school says it welcomes applications for children to start at any point during the academic year, subject to space. The published process is deliberately simple and includes enquiry, visit, registration, a taster day, acceptance, then a transition and welcome programme.
There are also clear cost markers tied to admissions. The school states a £50 registration fee at the point of formal interest, and a £250 deposit to confirm a place once offered. Waiting lists may operate in some year groups, so “rolling admissions” does not necessarily mean “always available”.
For families planning ahead, the school advertises open days on Wednesday 25 February 2026 and Thursday 26 February 2026. If you are reading this later in the year, it is sensible to treat open days as seasonal, often clustered in late autumn and late winter, and confirm the next date directly with the school.
As a cross-check for families comparing multiple options, the coordinating local authority for the area is Southend-on-Sea City Council, but independent school applications are typically direct rather than through the state portal.
Pastoral systems show up most clearly in safeguarding culture and day-to-day behaviour norms. The latest inspection describes the school’s culture as caring and supportive, with pupil safety at the centre, and highlights staff understanding of safeguarding responsibilities, including how concerns are reported and followed up.
Pupil voice appears in small but telling ways. The same report describes pupils as understanding different forms of bullying and using “bullying ambassadors” to support peers and younger pupils at playtime. That suggests pastoral work is not confined to adults, older pupils are expected to model the tone.
Wellbeing is also linked to routines and activity. Pupils are described as understanding the benefits of positive mental health and physical fitness, with older pupils enjoying outdoor play and sports. For parents, the right question is not “do they do wellbeing”, but “how do they spot a quiet child struggling”, and the inspection evidence suggests communication systems between pastoral and safeguarding leads are a real focus.
The extracurricular offer is shaped by a small-school model: clubs are described as running after school and at lunchtimes, sometimes led by teachers and sometimes by outside specialists. The school gives examples of popular options including baking, drama and choir, plus chess, netball, board games, film club and cross country.
Two programmes stand out because they are more structured than a standard club rota:
The 11+ clubs: specialist after-school clubs for Year 5 in maths and English are referenced alongside the broader 11+ pathway.
JASS: the Junior Award Scheme for Schools is presented as an accredited award programme built around activity, community, interests and outdoor adventure, with an emphasis on reflection and building character traits and skills.
Sport is presented as both curriculum and club activity, with the school listing a range of after-school options across the year, including football, tag rugby, golf, netball, karate, cricket, dodgeball, dance, gymnastics and swimming.
Fees are published on a per-term basis (three terms per year). For 2025 to 2026, the main school fees are £3534 per term for Reception, £3822 per term for Years 1 and 2, and £4098 per term for Years 3 to 6, with fees stated as inclusive of VAT.
Some costs sit outside tuition. The school publishes separate termly charges for lunches and healthy snacks, and separate swimming tuition charges by year group. It also lists paid wraparound sessions and after-school clubs as optional extras.
Nursery provision is available, but specific early years fee figures are best taken from the school’s own current pricing pages, and eligible families should also consider government-funded hours for early years.
On financial support, the school’s website content referenced here focuses on published pricing and the admissions process rather than a detailed bursary or scholarship policy. Families who need fee assistance should raise this early in the admissions conversation, alongside questions about payment schedules and any support for exceptional circumstances.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Wraparound care is clearly signposted. The school publishes breakfast club as 8.00am to 8.45am, and tea-time club as 3.30pm to 5.00pm, with the possibility of extensions at certain times. After-school clubs are described as running 3.30pm to 4.30pm.
For local context, the school describes itself as within easy reach of Chalkwell Park and nearby Southend and Westcliff, which is helpful for families balancing school run logistics with transport links. The school also publishes a mini bus service with pricing by area, which may be relevant for working parents managing staggered starts.
11+ intensity in the upper years. The school’s published pathway suggests preparation becomes focused from Year 5, with extended homework and optional subject clubs for candidates. This can suit some children brilliantly; others may prefer a less exam-oriented prep culture.
Consistency of feedback. The latest inspection highlights that marking and feedback are not applied consistently against the school’s policy, and a small number of lessons lack clear objectives. Ask how this is being addressed and what “good practice” looks like across classes.
Extras can materially change the annual cost. Lunch, snacks, swimming tuition, clubs and wraparound care are priced separately in published schedules, so families should total the likely add-ons for their child’s routine.
Places may be tight in specific year groups. The admissions process notes that waiting lists may operate, so timing and flexibility can matter, especially for in-year entry.
A traditional-feeling prep with a clear academic point of view, particularly for families aiming at local selective senior schools. Inspection evidence supports a caring, safe culture and purposeful learning, while also pointing to the importance of consistent lesson objectives and feedback.
Who it suits: families who want small-school familiarity, strong 11+ preparation, and clear behavioural expectations, especially from Years 3 to 6. The main decision is whether the selective pathway and associated workload feel right for your child.
The most recent inspection found that the Standards are met across leadership, education, wellbeing, social development and safeguarding, and it describes pupils as feeling very safe. The school also publishes multi-year 11+ pass rate data which suggests a consistent selective pathway for pupils who choose it.
For 2025 to 2026, main school fees are published per term: £3534 for Reception, £3822 for Years 1 and 2, and £4098 for Years 3 to 6. The school also lists separate charges for lunch, snacks, swimming tuition and optional wraparound sessions.
Yes. The school offers nursery provision as part of its age range up to Year 6. For nursery fee details, check the school’s current published pricing, and eligible families should also consider government-funded early years hours.
The school describes applications as flexible and says children can start at points during the academic year, subject to space. It publishes a step-by-step process including visit, registration, a taster day and then acceptance, plus open days scheduled for late February 2026.
The school says preparation starts in Year 3 and becomes more focused in Year 5, with targeted work in mathematics, English and non-verbal reasoning. It also references optional after-school 11+ clubs for maths and English for Year 5.
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