A compact secondary for girls aged 11 to 16, this is a school where scale shapes daily life. Numbers are close to the published capacity of 100, so year groups are typically small enough for staff to know students well and notice patterns quickly.
The most recent full inspection found an orderly culture and clear shared expectations, with students encouraged to take responsibility through roles such as prefects and a school council. Safeguarding was confirmed as effective.
Academically, the GCSE outcomes data used by FindMySchool places the school within the top quarter of schools in England for GCSE performance, with a Croydon local rank of 9. (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data.)
The prevailing feel is structured and purposeful. Expectations around conduct are explicit, and the most recent inspection describes behaviour in lessons and around the site as orderly, with students courteous to staff and each other. Students are given visible responsibilities, from school council activity through to prefects supporting younger readers, which tends to reinforce a culture where older students are expected to set the tone.
Values education is a prominent strand, and it shows up as more than a poster exercise. External evaluation highlights a strong sense of shared values, including respect and tolerance, and suggests that students feel comfortable approaching trusted adults when something is wrong. That combination, clear behavioural norms plus accessible adult support, is often what parents mean when they ask whether a school feels “safe” day to day.
Leadership has had a high-profile role in recent years because the school has been through periods of regulatory scrutiny. The current public-facing headteacher information varies across official and school-published documents, but the name most consistently presented by the school in its communications is Mr Gareth Thomas. Families who place high weight on leadership stability should confirm the current senior team directly, particularly if they are joining mid-year.
This is an 11 to 16 provision, so the headline outcomes focus on GCSE.
For GCSE performance, the school is ranked 681st in England and 9th in Croydon, placing it above England average overall and within the top 25% of schools in England. (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data.)
The most recent GCSE metrics available show:
Attainment 8 score: 60.1
EBacc average point score: 5.56
Percentage achieving grades 5 or above in EBacc: 30.4
The EBacc average point score of 5.56 sits above the England benchmark shown (4.08), which indicates comparatively strong performance in the core EBacc suite for those entered.
A practical implication for families is that the academic model appears to support students into credible GCSE profiles, particularly when the curriculum is taken seriously in Key Stage 3 and used to build towards Key Stage 4. That matches the inspection evidence describing a broad Years 7 to 9 curriculum intended to prepare students well for GCSE routes.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Teaching is described in the latest inspection as clear in presentation, with staff making deliberate links to prior learning and using formal testing to check what students have learned. That matters in a small school because consistency can be easier to establish across departments, and students receive fewer mixed messages about what “good work” looks like.
The improvement priorities are also clear. Checking understanding during lessons is not yet consistent enough, and this can leave misconceptions unchallenged. In addition, while special educational needs and disabilities are identified and supported, staff training and classroom adaptation are not fully embedded, so teaching is not routinely adjusted well for all learners. For parents, the key question is practical: does your child need frequent in-lesson checks, re-teaching, or task adaptation to stay confident? If yes, it is worth probing how that happens in the subjects your child finds hardest.
Reading is treated as a priority. Students are described as keen readers, with additional support for weaker readers and structured opportunities for younger students to read aloud with prefects. The library offer was also noted as an area being expanded to increase reading-for-pleasure options.
With no sixth form, the main transition point is after Year 11. The inspection evidence points to a strengthened careers programme, including exposure from Year 7 through assemblies, visiting speakers and careers fairs. It also references a Year 10 work experience week, plus links that add a practical dimension, including a leadership programme at a local football club and connections with the armed forces.
The implication is that post-16 planning is likely to be guided rather than left to chance. Families should still do their own work early, especially around GCSE subject choices that affect sixth form and college routes, and around any competitive pathways (for example, health-related courses) that benefit from specific science and maths combinations.
Because this review is restricted to verified sources, it does not list destination sixth forms or colleges by name unless the school publishes them formally. If specific post-16 destinations matter to your decision, ask for the most recent leavers’ pathways summary during the admissions process.
Admissions are direct to the school rather than via Local Authority coordination, and the process is deliberately selective in the sense that applicants are assessed and interviewed.
The published admissions guidance sets out:
An age-based year placement rule (age on 1 September), with flexibility at the headteacher’s discretion following assessment and interview.
A stated policy of not admitting into Years 10 and 11 as a norm, with limited discretion for Year 10 only.
Entrance assessments by year group: Years 7 to 8 sit English and Maths papers (one hour each), and Years 9 to 10 add Science plus Arabic (with Arabic listed as 45 minutes).
An interview stage, with applicants asked to bring a piece of work they are proud of and be prepared to discuss it.
Offers are described as being made after the entrance examination and interview, with notification as soon as reasonably possible. The practical takeaway is that families should treat this as a multi-step process and plan for both academic readiness and interview confidence.
Open evenings are used as an access point for families. The latest published open evening date is Tuesday 15 October 2024 (with no prior booking required), which suggests an autumn pattern. For September 2026 entry, families should expect open events to typically run in October, but confirm the current schedule on the school site.
For families comparing options, FindMySchool’s Map Search tool is useful here because independent schools can draw from a wide area, and travel time can be the deciding factor on a day-to-day basis.
Pastoral support is anchored in relationships and predictable routines. The latest inspection describes students as comfortable speaking to trusted adults, and safeguarding arrangements as effective. That combination, high expectations plus approachable staff, tends to work well for students who want structure without constant friction.
Two areas deserve attention because they influence student wellbeing indirectly. First, attendance systems were not seen as sharply focused enough to identify issues early, and actions to address weak attendance were not always taken quickly. Secondly, the inconsistency in in-lesson checking and adaptation can affect confidence for students who need more frequent feedback loops. For parents, these are practical conversations to have: how does the school notice early disengagement, and what happens next?
Extracurricular life is unusually specific for a small secondary. The most recent inspection references an enrichment programme that introduces students to sporting activities that are less common in many schools, including fencing, jiu-jitsu, archery and golf. That breadth can be particularly valuable for students who are not motivated by mainstream team sports but still benefit from disciplined physical activity.
Academic and cultural understanding is reinforced through outings and themed enrichment. Published examples include visits to museums and art galleries, the Houses of Parliament, and structured initiatives such as UK Maths Challenge participation, STEM competitions and Bronze Crest Awards. The implication is that enrichment is being used to widen experiences and connect classroom learning to real contexts, which can support motivation and more mature writing and discussion skills.
The school also signals a strong interest in oracy and performance-based learning through themed days and events listed in its enrichment materials, including Arabic Day, Shakespeare Fest, Poetry by Heart, National Theatre Live productions, and Shakespeare Live. In the arts and culture strand, it is also notable to see Djembe drumming and Capoeira mentioned as activities, which suggests variety beyond the standard clubs list.
As an independent school, tuition fees apply.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year, the school’s published fee figure is £5,468 per year, with payment options that include annual, termly, and monthly arrangements. The same published information sets out sibling discounts (10% for a second child, rising to 20% for a fourth child or more, where children are in the same school).
Families should also budget for additional costs. The admissions and fees guidance indicates that extras can include educational visits, lunches, and learning resources, and it flags that some activities sit outside the core fee.
The admissions material also references an application or registration charge and a deposit structure. The published admissions process notes a non-refundable registration fee of £60, and the wider admissions guidance refers to an £800 deposit used to secure a place, with specific notice conditions around refundability.
Bursary and scholarship arrangements are not clearly published in the sources reviewed for this report. Families who need fee support should ask directly what is available, how awards are assessed, and whether support can be combined with sibling discounts.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
The school operates from the Cherry Orchard Road area of Croydon, and its published contact location references East Croydon. For most families, the practical question will be the commute, particularly at winter start and finish times. If you are considering public transport routes, build in time for changes and crowded peak services.
Published information confirms shared facilities within the broader Al-Khair secondary provision, including use of a sports hall; earlier inspection material also refers to a science laboratory shared across the boys’ and girls’ schools at different times.
The school day start and finish times are not consistently published in the accessible pages reviewed for this report. Families should confirm daily timings, supervised study expectations, and any after-school arrangements directly during the admissions process.
Teaching adaptation is not yet consistent. Lesson checks on understanding and classroom strategies to address misconceptions were described as variable, and teaching is not routinely adapted well for all learners who need additional support. This may matter most for students who rely on frequent feedback and structured scaffolding.
Attendance improvement is a stated priority. The inspection evidence indicates the school had not ensured students attended as regularly as they should, and earlier intervention systems needed tightening. Families should ask how attendance concerns are spotted early and what support looks like in practice.
Entry is a process, not a formality. Assessment papers and an interview are built into admissions, and late-year entry is limited, particularly into Years 10 and 11. This suits families who want clear selection criteria, but it reduces flexibility for mid-course movers.
Small scale cuts both ways. Capacity is around 100, and published roll figures sit close to that. Some students thrive in smaller peer groups; others prefer a wider social mix and larger curriculum set choices.
This is a tightly-sized independent girls’ secondary with a strong emphasis on values, orderly routines, and enrichment that goes beyond the obvious. The academic picture, based on FindMySchool’s GCSE performance ranking, places it within the top quarter of schools in England, and the latest inspection supports the view of a safe and structured environment.
It suits students who respond well to clear expectations, benefit from small-school familiarity, and enjoy enrichment that mixes sport, culture, and project work. Families should weigh the school’s improvement priorities around attendance and classroom adaptation carefully, especially if their child needs consistently tailored teaching to stay confident.
The most recent full inspection rated the school Good overall and confirmed that the independent school standards were met. The environment is described as orderly, with students generally working hard and taking on responsibilities such as prefect and school council roles. Academic performance, on the FindMySchool GCSE ranking based on official data, places the school within the top quarter of schools in England.
Published admissions and fees information lists an annual fee of £5,468 for the 2025 to 2026 academic year, with payment options across the year. The same information highlights sibling discounts for multiple children in the school. Families should also budget for extras such as visits, lunches, and some activities.
Applications are made directly to the school. The admissions policy describes entrance assessment papers and an interview, with candidates asked to discuss a piece of work they are proud of. The school also notes that there is no automatic transfer from its primary provision into Year 7, so Year 6 families must apply through the same route as external applicants.
The admissions guidance states that the school does not normally admit into Years 10 and 11. It notes that places may be offered in Year 10 at the headteacher’s discretion, but Year 11 entry is not part of the standard intake pattern.
Inspection evidence points to an enrichment programme that includes activities such as fencing, jiu-jitsu, archery and golf, alongside educational visits that include museums, art galleries, and Parliament. The school’s enrichment information also references initiatives such as UK Maths Challenge, STEM competitions, and themed days including Arabic Day and Shakespeare-related events.
Get in touch with the school directly
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