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.
Small schools live or die by culture, and here the headline is relationships. With provision from age 2 through to age 11, Clarendon Cottage is built around continuity, wraparound care, and a deliberately close-knit feel, shaped by its origins as The Cottage Nursery (opened in 1989) and the later growth into a preparatory school (opened in September 1991).
The June 2023 Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection judged pupils’ academic and other achievements as good, and personal development as excellent, while confirming the school met the required standards.
The school’s story matters because it explains the operating model. It began as a childcare solution for a local family, expanded into a school when parents wanted to stay beyond nursery age, and moved into Ivy Bank House in 1994 after purchase from the local authority. That is not a marketing line, it is the structural reason the school talks so much about “family” as a practical organising principle rather than a vague value statement.
For pupils, the implication is clear. Small cohorts mean staff can know children well, and mixed-age interactions become normal rather than exceptional. External evaluation supports that picture: pupils mix easily across age groups and show care and consideration for each other, with friendships and behaviour identified as a strength.
The community structure is reinforced through responsibility. Roles such as playground buddy, prefect, monitor, and participation in the school council are presented as part of daily life, not an optional add-on. Recognition is tied into a house system, merit certificates, and badges, with assemblies used to celebrate achievements and share community issues through drama and music.
As an independent preparatory school, there are no directly comparable Key Stage 2 performance figures presented here, and the school is not positioned through published league-table style outcomes. In practice, the strongest evidence comes from curriculum-level indicators and inspection findings.
Academic and other achievements were judged good in June 2023. The detail is useful rather than generic: pupils are described as articulate with strong communication skills and problem-solving applied across subjects; attitudes to learning are extremely positive.
The inspection also flags a meaningful limitation: progress can be restricted where teaching does not challenge pupils to take initiative or think independently. That matters because it identifies the difference between a well-managed small school and a genuinely stretching one. For confident, able pupils, challenge is often less about worksheets and more about open-ended tasks, argument, and self-direction. This is the development edge identified externally.
The school’s own messaging leans heavily into preparation for secondary entry, including grammar and Trafford selection routes. It states a 100% pass rate for entrance exams into independent, grammar, and secondary schools for academic year 2022 to 2023, while also noting that families can request fuller examination results from the school office. Treat that as a directional indicator rather than a full outcomes results, but it is still a clear signal of intent and tracking.
The school describes itself as blending a modern and creative curriculum with traditional values and practice, with explicit emphasis on conduct, courtesy, honesty, respect, and a firm academic foundation. The important part for parents is what that looks like in the classroom.
From the June 2023 inspection evidence, literacy is treated as a whole-school priority, not just an English-lesson feature. Early years phonics and language development are referenced, and older pupils are described as using high-level vocabulary, suggesting strong modelling of speech and writing. Mathematics is framed as consistently strong, including applying knowledge in other subjects, which is usually a sign of careful sequencing and regular retrieval rather than topic-by-topic coverage.
The improvement recommendation is also a practical teaching brief: increase open-ended and self-directed learning tasks so pupils develop initiative and independence. This is a common inflection point in small schools. Tight routines and close support can be a strength, but they can also reduce the frequency of productive struggle, choice, and self-initiated thinking. Parents of highly independent learners should ask how the school has responded since 2023, for example through more pupil-led projects, enquiry tasks, or structured debate and presentation work.
This is a through-prep, so the key destination decision arrives at 11. The school is explicit that it aims to prepare children for secondary school examinations as well as mainstream transition, and it references children passing entry exams for top grammar schools and the Trafford 11-plus, then moving on to the secondary school of their choosing.
The best way to interpret that is for fit. Families considering selective routes usually want structured practice, confidence in formal assessment, and a culture where academic effort is normal. A small setting can help here because staff can spot gaps early and adjust quickly. On the other hand, those aiming for a non-selective comprehensive may prioritise broader peer-group experience and transition resilience, which is also achievable in a small school if pupils are given leadership opportunities, collaborative tasks, and regular external fixtures and trips.
Because destination school lists and quantified leaver outcomes are not set out publicly on the pages reviewed, parents should treat secondary transition as a conversation topic at visit: typical destinations in recent years, the level of entry-test support, and how the school handles pupils targeting different routes within the same cohort.
Admissions are direct to the school and deliberately flexible. The admissions policy states that children may be admitted at any age between a rising 3 and the upper age range, and for the prep school, families can apply at any time for entry into any year up to age 11. The usual pattern is a visit by appointment and an informal assessment of a child’s current progress.
Internal progression from nursery into the prep phase is prioritised. For the move into Prep 2, children already in the nursery are given priority, then remaining places are offered externally. Open evenings are typically held in November, and the school advises families on the application procedure in the autumn term preceding entry.
Deposits and acceptance mechanics are clearly stated for prep entry. A place deposit of £250 is referenced as the acceptance step, redeemable against the first term’s fees, and not refundable if the place is not taken.
The pastoral model is implicitly built into the school’s size and routines. The staff structure includes an Early Years Lead who is also SENCO, which matters in a small setting because early identification and day-to-day communication often sit with the same familiar adults.
External evidence emphasises personal development as a standout strength, including kindness, cultural respect, and collaborative behaviour from the earliest ages. The school council is positioned as part of pupil voice and responsibility, and the 2023 recommendations specifically encourage strengthening pupils’ ability to make their views known through the council, including initiating charity and community projects. For parents, that is a useful question to ask: what has changed in council structure since 2023, and what opportunities now exist for pupil-led initiatives?
Safeguarding documentation is published, and the school describes designated safeguarding roles within its policies, although parents should always focus on current practice: staff training cadence, logging systems, and how concerns are handled in a small community where everyone knows each other.
A small school can either have limited breadth, or it can compensate through smart use of local facilities and a strong culture of participation. Clarendon Cottage points firmly toward the second approach, especially in sport and the creative arts.
Creative arts and performance are woven into the calendar. The school states that each class undertakes two drama productions per year (performed at Christmas and Easter), delivers a class assembly each half term, and offers a drama club that stages an annual production. For pupils, that provides repeated low-stakes performance practice, which often translates into confidence in speaking, presenting, and collaborating.
Sport and fixtures make explicit use of community resources. The school references transport to a local recreation centre, the Soccer Dome, Monton Sports Club, and Eccles College, with competitive participation across football, netball, athletics, swimming, and cross country. The implication is practical: pupils can access facilities a small school cannot realistically house on-site, but families should understand scheduling and transport logistics, especially for after-school commitments.
Music and tuition appears to be supported through specialist staff. The staff list includes peripatetic music teachers, alongside sports coaching provision for juniors. That matters because instrumental learning in small schools is often the first thing to become ad hoc; listing dedicated specialist roles suggests a more structured offer, even if the full programme detail sits behind parent-facing documents.
Clarendon Cottage is an independent school, so tuition fees apply. The school’s fees page currently publishes figures for academic year 2023 to 2024, stating tuition fees of £2,075, plus lunch at £3.95 per day and school trips at £35 per term, with wraparound care and holiday club costs listed as additional. It also notes that fees are usually paid by monthly standing order over 10 months.
The same page sets out an acceptance deposit of £250, redeemable against the first term’s fees but not refundable if the place is not taken.
A specific 2025 to 2026 fee schedule is not presented on the pages reviewed, and the school states fees are reviewed annually. Families planning for 2026 entry should ask for the current schedule and a clear list of typical extras.
Fees data coming soon.
The published school day is 9:00am to 3:50pm for infants and 9:00am to 4:00pm for juniors, with Early Birds from 7:30am and an after-school club until 6:00pm in term time. A holiday club is also referenced, running from 7:30am to 6:00pm during school holidays, with stated closure exceptions on the information page.
For families juggling commuting and childcare, this is a tangible operational advantage, particularly for a small setting where wraparound care is part of the core offer rather than a bolt-on. If you are comparing options locally, FindMySchool’s Saved Schools shortlist can help keep wraparound times, term dates, and practical constraints visible alongside your academic priorities.
Fee visibility for future years. The school publishes a 2023 to 2024 fee schedule and notes annual review, but a 2025 to 2026 schedule is not clearly presented on the same pages. Families should request the current schedule early, including typical extras and wraparound costs.
Stretch and independence. External evaluation highlights very positive attitudes to learning, but also recommends more open-ended and self-directed tasks so pupils develop initiative and independence. This is worth probing if your child is highly able or thrives on autonomy.
Small-cohort trade-offs. The close-knit feel can be a real strength, but it can also mean fewer same-age peers and a narrower friendship pool at times. Parents should ask how classes are structured, including grouping across year bands, and how leadership opportunities are distributed.
Use of external facilities. Sport makes good use of local venues and clubs, which increases variety, but it can create transport and scheduling complexity. Clarify what happens during late finishes, fixtures, and clubs, especially for working families.
Clarendon Cottage Preparatory School is built for families who want a small, relationship-led prep with wraparound care and a clear focus on readiness for secondary transition, including selective routes where appropriate. Personal development is a clear strength, and academic achievement is externally validated as good, with excellence noted in how pupils develop socially and morally.
Who it suits: families prioritising continuity from nursery through age 11, a calm community feel, and structured preparation for the next stage. The main question to resolve is fit for your child’s learning style, particularly how the school stretches independence and self-direction as pupils move into the junior years.
External evaluation supports a strong overall picture. The June 2023 inspection judged academic achievement as good and personal development as excellent, with particular strengths in literacy, mathematics, and pupils’ positive attitudes to learning.
The school publishes a fee schedule for academic year 2023 to 2024, including tuition, lunch, and trips, and notes that fees are reviewed annually. For 2026 planning, request the current schedule directly from the school so you can budget accurately for tuition and typical extras.
Applications can be made for entry across the age range, with nursery-to-prep progression prioritised for existing nursery children when moving into Prep 2. The admissions policy describes visits by appointment and an informal assessment of a child’s current progress, with open evenings typically held in November.
Yes. The published information includes Early Birds from 7:30am and after-school club until 6:00pm in term time, plus a holiday club offer during school holidays, with specified closure exceptions.
The school positions itself as preparation for a range of secondary routes, including selective entry, and references pupils passing grammar and Trafford selection routes. If you are deciding between selective and non-selective pathways, ask the school for recent typical destinations and the type of support offered for different routes.
Get in touch with the school directly
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