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.
For families balancing work patterns with early years through Year 6, this is a prep that leans into practicality. The day can be structured well beyond standard school hours, and the wider year is designed for continuity, with provision running across 46 weeks and extended-day options built into the fee model for older pupils.
Leadership is clearly front and centre on the school’s own messaging, with Mr Simon Driver named as Headmaster. A start date is not published on the school website or in the latest inspection documentation available online, so it is best treated as a current leadership fact rather than a tenure claim.
The external quality picture is straightforward: the latest Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection in March 2023 judged educational quality as excellent, and confirmed that regulatory standards were met.
A defining feature is the way the school talks about learning as something children do actively rather than passively. That shows up in the emphasis on practical learning across subjects and specialist spaces that are presented as everyday tools, not occasional treats. The message is consistent: pupils apply knowledge to real situations, and staff expect children to articulate ideas confidently, from early years through to Year 6.
The setting is also unusually explicit about wellbeing as a daily system. A dedicated Wellbeing Room is presented as a place where children can decompress and talk through concerns with the Deputy Head (Pastoral) and PSHE lead. For parents weighing “busy but caring” environments, that level of structure around pastoral support matters, it makes help feel accessible rather than reactive.
Because this is an all year operation for many families, the atmosphere is shaped by routine. There is a clear operational rhythm to the week and the year, including holiday playschemes and wraparound options, which tends to suit households looking for predictability and childcare continuity as much as education.
This is an independent prep, so the usual state primary measures are not the best lens here, and the most meaningful “results” are senior school destinations and 11+ readiness.
The school explicitly positions itself as a route into academically selective senior schools, both independent and grammar. It publishes a named list of example grammar destinations, including Sir Henry Floyd Grammar School, Aylesbury High School, Aylesbury Grammar School, Royal Latin School, Henrietta Barnett School, and Queen Elizabeth's School, Barnet.
For a concrete data point, the school reports that for children who sat the 11+ examination in September 2025, over 80% reached the required standard. That is a school-published figure, so it is best interpreted as an indicator of preparation culture rather than a like-for-like comparison with other schools.
It also publishes a snapshot of senior school offers for 2024/2025, with examples including Bedford Girls' School, Bedford Modern School, Bedford School, Northampton High School, Wellingborough School, and Sedbergh School.
Specialist teaching is the core promise, and it is backed by the way the school describes facilities and curriculum priorities. The school frames STEM as integral to daily learning, with an explicit emphasis on applying concepts to real life situations rather than treating science and technology as “extra”.
Facilities described across the site and inspection documentation point to a practical, workshop-like approach. The school references a dedicated science laboratory, and also describes a full computing and technology suite equipped with iPads and laptops. In music, the offer goes beyond singing and recorder, with practice rooms, a large performance room, and a music technology studio using networked computers for composition and recording.
A useful indicator of classroom culture comes from the inspection examples, which show pupils working collaboratively, speaking confidently in public, and engaging with subject-specific work like French, where attention to accent and grammatical detail is highlighted. That matters because it suggests teaching is not only content coverage; it is skills and habits, including presentation, teamwork, and precision.
For a prep, this is the section parents read most closely, because it defines the endgame.
The school’s public narrative is consistent: pupils transfer to academically selective senior schools at the end of Year 6, with pathways into both grammar and independent options. It reinforces this through its published list of destination examples (above), and by reporting 11+ performance as a headline.
If your child is targeting selective schools, the implication is a peer group where that ambition is normalised, and where preparation is built into the culture rather than left entirely to families. If your child is not heading for a selective route, it is still worth asking how the school differentiates for breadth and balance, and what “success” looks like for children with different senior school aims.
Entry is described as flexible, with provision spanning from babies in the nursery through to Year 6. The school invites families to start with a prospectus request and a visit, then proceed via registration.
For children joining part way through primary, there is an explicit note that entrance assessments apply for pupils currently in Years 2, 3, 4 and 5 who wish to enter. The school does not publish assessment content on the admissions page itself, so families should expect a tailored process, and should ask directly about what is assessed, how results are used, and what a successful profile looks like at each entry point.
Open mornings are clearly scheduled well into 2026, with dates published for January, February, March, and May 2026. For 2026 entry planning, that matters because it gives families a real window to observe teaching and routines during a working day, not just a marketing event.
A practical note: because this is an independent school, admissions are not governed by local authority timetables in the way state primaries are, so families should assume places can fill at different points in the year, particularly in nursery and early years. The safest approach is early enquiry plus a clear discussion about availability for your required start term.
Pastoral support is described as structured rather than informal. The wellbeing approach includes staff training, a pupil Wellbeing Ambassador role, and the use of a dedicated Wellbeing Room for conversation and decompression. The school explicitly links wellbeing to learning readiness, which fits a model where long days are common and children need predictable emotional support systems.
The March 2023 inspection also confirmed that safeguarding and welfare requirements were met and monitored by leaders committed to children’s safety, which provides an external check on the systems parents cannot easily see day-to-day.
This is a school that treats enrichment as part of the curriculum strategy, particularly for older pupils. Trips and visitors are described as planned by subject leads and aligned to learning themes, with termly curriculum-related activity by year group.
Residentials are presented as a major pillar, ranging from local weekends away for younger children through to skiing in Europe, sports tours in Dubai and Malta, plus language and activity holidays in France. For families, the implication is that confidence-building and independence are actively trained, but also that planning for add-on costs is realistic.
On the academic enrichment side, the inspection examples reference success in the Primary Maths Challenge, with some pupils achieving in the top band nationally, plus extension into the Junior Maths Challenge aimed at senior school level. That tells you something about stretch culture, and it may suit children who enjoy academic competitions rather than only classroom learning.
Facilities reinforce the breadth: a music technology studio for composing and recording, plus sports infrastructure that includes an astroturf pitch, badminton courts, and an indoor sports hall.
For 2025/2026, fee information is published by department and includes termly figures.
Preparatory Department (Years 3 to 6, age 8 to 11): £6,820 per term for term-time provision, or £7,722 per term for all year provision.
Pre-Preparatory Department (Classes 5 to 7, Reception to Year 2): £6,064 per term for term-time provision, or £6,800 per term for all year provision.
Pre-Preparatory Department (Classes 3 to 4) offers multiple attendance patterns, with full-time term-time provision listed at £5,416 per term, alongside part-time options.
The school also states that scholarships and bursary information can be provided on request, and that bursaries are means-tested with annual review, with scholarships offered across STEM, sport, art, music, and academic subjects for children entering Year 3 and above.
Nursery fees are published separately, but it is not appropriate to list specific nursery fee amounts here. For early years funding, the school describes funded childcare eligibility and the structure of funded hours for eligible families.
Fees data coming soon.
Hours and wraparound are a genuine differentiator. The school states it is open 46 weeks of the year from 7.30am to 6.30pm, and for prep-age children there is an option of an 8.00am start and a 6.00pm finish included in the fees.
The fee documentation also sets out typical school-day timings by department, with the Preparatory Department day listed as 8.30am to 4.00pm, and the Pre-Preparatory Department day listed as 9.00am to 3.30pm.
On location, the school describes itself as on the south west side of Milton Keynes. It does not publish detailed public transport guidance on the location page, so families should confirm typical drop-off routes, parking expectations, and any bus or coach arrangements directly.
When comparing options locally, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for visualising commute patterns and identifying realistic backup schools. For families actively shortlisting, the Saved Schools feature can keep open-day notes, fee comparisons, and entry points organised in one place.
Selective trajectory. The school’s published messaging strongly emphasises grammar and independent senior school progression, including 11+ outcomes. That can be motivating for some children, but families seeking a less selective culture should probe how the school defines success beyond entrance tests.
Long days cut both ways. Extensive hours and holiday options are highly practical, but they also make it important to understand how the school manages energy, homework expectations, and downtime, especially for younger children.
Trips can be a major part of the experience. Residentials and tours are presented as a key strand, including overseas elements for older pupils. Ask early what is optional, what is typical, and what costs sit outside tuition.
Fee complexity. Fees vary by department and by term-time versus all-year patterns, with multiple attendance models in early years and pre-prep. That flexibility is helpful, but families should ensure they understand exactly what pattern they are committing to, and what is included.
This is a pragmatic, specialist-teaching prep that clearly targets selective senior school destinations and builds around the reality that many families need long-day, multi-week-year provision. It suits children who respond well to structured expectations, enjoy hands-on learning, and may thrive in a culture where academic competitions and senior school preparation are normal.
It is best suited to families who value continuity from early years through Year 6, want published evidence of selective senior school pathways, and are comfortable having the 11+ as an explicit reference point in school life.
It has a strong external quality signal from the latest Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection in March 2023, which judged educational quality as excellent and confirmed regulatory standards were met. The school also publishes selective senior school destination examples and reports that over 80% of pupils sitting the 11+ in September 2025 reached the required standard, indicating a clear preparation culture.
Fees vary by department and by term-time versus all-year attendance. For 2025/2026, the Preparatory Department (Years 3 to 6) is £6,820 per term for term-time provision or £7,722 per term for all-year provision. Reception to Year 2 is £6,064 per term (term-time) or £6,800 per term (all-year), and younger pre-prep options include multiple attendance patterns.
Yes, early years provision is part of the wider group, and the school describes care from baby age through to Year 6. Nursery fee details are published separately by the school, and eligible families can access government-funded childcare hours subject to the school’s terms and attendance patterns.
Admissions are managed directly by the school rather than the local authority. Open mornings are published for early 2026, and registration forms are available for the nursery, pre-prep, and prep. For entry into the main school beyond the earliest years, the school notes that entrance assessments apply for pupils in Years 2 to 5 seeking to join.
The school describes progression into both independent and grammar schools. It publishes examples of grammar destinations such as Sir Henry Floyd, Aylesbury Grammar, Royal Latin, Henrietta Barnett, and Queen Elizabeth’s School, and it also lists examples of independent offers in 2024/2025 including Bedford School, Bedford Modern, Northampton High, Wellingborough, and Sedbergh.
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