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.
In Woodford Green, this is the local prep many families describe by its look before they describe its results, the distinctive scarlet uniform has earned it the long-running nickname “The Red School”. It is a co-educational, independent day school for ages 3 to 11, with nursery provision feeding into Reception and the junior years.
The most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) inspection in May 2023 judged pupils’ achievement and personal development to be excellent, and confirmed that all the required standards were met. That combination matters to parents, it signals both strong educational outcomes and a well-run compliance culture.
This is a prep that positions itself as academically ambitious without presenting as an exam conveyor belt. The inspection evidence points to articulate writing and speaking, consistently positive learning attitudes, and confident pupils who are prepared for competitive entry at 11+.
The school’s identity is built around a clear, traditional prep rhythm: Early Years Foundation Stage, then a structured progression through Years 1 to 6, with pupils moving towards senior school entry at the end of Year 6. What stands out in the published evidence is not a single “signature” programme, but the consistency of expectations across age groups, including high standards for communication and presentation.
The May 2023 inspection describes pupils as highly articulate, confident speakers and writers, with a strong willingness to concentrate and take intellectual risks. For families, that usually translates into classrooms where talk is purposeful, where vocabulary is developed deliberately, and where pupils are encouraged to explain thinking rather than just produce answers.
Pastoral culture also comes through in concrete ways. The inspection evidence highlights warm, mutually supportive relationships and a strong culture of care and kindness across the community. This is important in a 3 to 11 setting, especially for parents weighing early entry at 3+ or the transition into Year 3 at 7+, because it speaks to how quickly children settle and how well the school holds behaviour boundaries without constant escalation.
The school’s governance context is clearly documented, it is a registered charity overseen by a board of governors. Parents who care about stability often like this structure, because it tends to keep decision-making focused on long-term provision rather than short-term returns.
As an independent preparatory school, the most meaningful “results” for most families are senior school readiness and outcomes, rather than state test tables. The strongest published indicator here is the inspection judgement on achievement.
The May 2023 educational quality inspection concluded that pupils make excellent progress over time, and that performance in entrance examinations to senior schools with competitive entry requirements is excellent. That is a high bar, and it implies the curriculum is not just broad, but paced and sequenced to support the specific skills senior schools test for, including writing quality, problem-solving and interview confidence where relevant.
There is also a useful, specific detail in the inspection evidence about recognition and awards: most recently at the time of inspection, around a third of pupils gained awards for academic success and also for strengths in music, sport and art. For parents, that suggests two things. First, the school is actively preparing children to present competitively across multiple domains. Second, it is likely to have a culture where scholarship and award pathways are openly discussed and supported, rather than left to individual families to discover.
A small but important caveat also appears in the inspection recommendations: the school was advised to ensure pupils’ learning and development is equally rapid in all lessons. For parents, this is worth reading as a consistency point. Even strong schools can have variability between teachers or subjects, and the recommendation signals that leaders should be paying attention to pacing and lesson organisation everywhere, not just in core areas.
Teaching quality is best understood through what it produces day to day. In this case, the published evidence points to strong written and spoken communication, sustained concentration, and pupils who can reason clearly and explain method.
In literacy, pupils are described as highly articulate and confident across contexts, which typically comes from repeated structured opportunities to speak formally, present work, and receive precise feedback on writing. If your child enjoys language, drama, or public speaking, that emphasis can be a major positive.
In mathematics, the inspection evidence goes beyond generic praise and gives glimpses of what learning looks like. Pupils are described as thriving on challenge, using tally charts and pictograms when younger, then moving into fractions, percentages and reasoning as they get older. The report also references national mathematics challenges and pupils reaching finals, which indicates extension work for the most able.
The inspection also references effective support systems for pupils with additional needs, including early identification and targeted strategies, with pupils identified with SEND making similar progress to peers. Parents considering the school for a child who needs learning support should still ask detailed questions about current staffing and interventions, but the published evidence suggests a coherent approach rather than ad hoc adjustments.
For Early Years, the inspection clarifies the school’s naming conventions, Foundation 1 maps to Nursery and Foundation 2 maps to Reception. That matters if you are comparing settings, because the educational expectations and day structure often shift significantly between those two years.
For a prep school, the key question is the quality of transition at 11+. The May 2023 inspection evidence is explicit that pupils’ performance in entrance examinations to senior schools with competitive entry requirements is excellent. That supports a view of the school as one that prepares pupils for selective senior pathways, including academically demanding independents and selective state options where families pursue them.
If you are a family aiming for a particular senior school, the right due diligence here is practical rather than philosophical. Ask how the school structures Year 5 and Year 6 preparation, how it supports different senior school routes, and how it manages the balance between confidence-building and pressure. The inspection evidence suggests pupils feel well prepared and ready to move on by Year 6, which is a strong starting point.
Entry points are described as 3+ and 7+, with occasional places at other ages when space allows. For families moving into the area, that “space dependent” language matters, it usually means mid-year places can exist, but planning for them is risky.
The school also notes that completing a registration form does not guarantee a place. In practice, that is the standard prep-school reality in popular London catchments, early engagement and attending an open event tends to be the sensible path.
For Year 3 entry (7+), the school states that pupils are required to sit a 7+ assessment. Parents should ask for a current breakdown of what is assessed and how results are used alongside references and school reports.
Open events are signposted through the admissions pathway, but specific dated deadlines for 2026 entry are not published on the admissions page itself. As a result, families should treat the process as rolling and confirm exact dates directly with the school.
A note on registration fees: the admissions page references a £75 registration fee, while the live online registration page shows a non-returnable registration fee of £120. If you are budgeting precisely, you should verify which figure currently applies before submitting payment.
Parents comparing options can also use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check travel times at peak hours, particularly if wraparound arrangements and after-school clubs will be part of the weekly routine.
The strongest published evidence here is the inspection description of relationships and community culture, warm, mutually supportive relationships, and a strong culture of care and kindness. In a prep setting, that is often the difference between a child who sees school as secure and one who sees it as high-stakes.
There is also evidence of structured pupil voice and responsibility. The inspection report references pupil ambassadors and buddies, School Council, and teams focused on wellbeing and environmental issues, alongside charity and fundraising initiatives. For parents, this is a sign that confidence and leadership are developed through roles rather than purely through assemblies and slogans.
Safeguarding and compliance culture is also indirectly evidenced through the focused compliance outcome, all relevant standards were met and no further action was required as a result of the inspection.
The school’s extracurricular picture is clearest through two lenses: the inspection description of breadth and the detail visible in the school’s published club information.
Inspection evidence points to a very wide programme, including languages, creative activities, sport, music, fencing and chess, with high levels of participation and strong outcomes for the size and age range. It also highlights particular success in competitions for hockey, cross country, football and dance, alongside ensembles, choirs and bands, and mentions whole-school art installations, including an “obliteration corner” in the style of Yayoi Kusama. That gives a useful sense of balance, sport is strong, but creative arts are not treated as optional extras.
From the current club listings, you can see specific examples of what children can do week to week:
Chess club, with an explicit plan to enter competitions and arrange fixtures.
Cross Country Club for Years 3 to 6.
Computer Xplorers, covering coding, robotics, game making, app design, animation, Lego engineering, web design and VR headsets.
Speech and Drama geared towards LAMDA preparation, offered across multiple year groups.
These specifics matter because they signal what the school actually prioritises in enrichment. A child who thrives on performance and communication can build confidence through Speech and Drama. A child with a STEM bent can access structured computing and robotics activity rather than generic “ICT club”.
Fees are published on a termly basis, and the Independent Schools Council listing for the school reports day fees per term in the range £4,633 to £4,740, excluding VAT. This kind of range usually reflects different year groups, so parents should confirm the exact figure for their child’s entry year.
The same listing indicates that scholarships and bursaries are available, including bursaries for new entrants and hardship awards for existing pupils. The sensible next question for families is practical: what proportion of pupils receive means-tested support, how awards are assessed, and whether support can combine with scholarships where relevant.
One-off admissions costs should also be clarified. The online registration page shows a £120 non-returnable registration fee, and families offered a place are asked to pay an acceptance deposit by the stated deadline.
Nursery fee specifics should be checked directly with the school, and eligible families should also review how government-funded early years hours might apply.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The admissions information is clear on entry points, but the publicly accessible pages do not set out a full weekly schedule for the school day, or a definitive published summary of wraparound provision such as breakfast club, after-school care, or holiday care. Families who need certainty should ask directly about start and finish times, supervision windows, and how late collection is handled on club days.
For transport, most families will be doing a mix of walking, short drives, and public transport depending on where they live in Woodford Green and surrounding areas. If you are commuting into central London, it is worth checking the practicality of morning drop-off against your train or Tube pattern before committing to a place.
Fee clarity and VAT position. Published sources describe fees excluding VAT and show a range rather than a single figure. If your budgeting is tight, confirm the precise termly amount for your child’s year group and what is included.
Admissions dates are not fully pinned down online. The admissions pages set out the steps, but do not provide a complete calendar of deadlines for 2026 entry. Families will need to confirm dates directly.
Pace consistency. The most recent inspection recommended ensuring progress is equally rapid across all lessons. Ask how leaders monitor consistency across subjects and year groups.
A competitive senior school culture. Evidence points to strong outcomes for competitive senior school entry. That can suit confident, ambitious learners; some children may prefer a less exam-focused environment.
Woodford Green Preparatory School reads as a confident, traditional London prep with breadth and genuine stretch. The evidence base is strong, excellent educational quality judgements, standards met, and specific indicators of high-level outcomes such as competitive senior school entry performance and a wide, structured enrichment programme.
Who it suits: families who want a 3 to 11 co-educational prep that takes academic progress seriously, values confident communication, and offers a deep extracurricular menu alongside senior school preparation.
The most recent ISI inspection (May 2023) judged pupils’ achievement and personal development to be excellent, and confirmed the school met all required standards.
Published sources report day fees per term in the range £4,633 to £4,740, excluding VAT. Families should confirm the exact fee for the relevant year group and what is included.
The school describes the main entry points as 3+ and 7+, with occasional admissions at other ages when spaces are available.
Yes. The school states that children joining in Year 3 are required to sit a 7+ assessment.
Published examples include chess, cross country, computing and robotics-focused activity through Computer Xplorers, and Speech and Drama geared towards LAMDA.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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