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Edenhurst Preparatory School is a co-educational independent day school in Westlands, Newcastle-under-Lyme, taking children from nursery age through to Year 6. Its modern offer is designed around working-family logistics as much as learning, with wraparound care published as 7:30am to 6:00pm and a holiday club provision for school-age children.
Leadership is clear and recent. Emma Mousley took up the headteacher role in January 2023, following Michael Hibbert’s tenure from 2018.
The most recent inspection evidence is also very current, and it matters. In September 2025, ISI reported that safeguarding standards were met, and that education standards were met, but some standards relating to leadership and wellbeing were not met, with specific actions required around the consistent implementation of policies and aspects of medical and site safety.
For families comparing independent primaries, Edenhurst is best understood as a broad, specialist-taught prep that puts enrichment, character education, outdoor learning, and practical independence alongside the basics. That positioning comes through consistently across its published curriculum and enrichment model, including Latin, modern languages, and an entrepreneurship strand referenced in the latest inspection findings.
Edenhurst frames itself as inclusive and academically non-selective, with entry depending primarily on space and a successful taster day rather than testing. That tends to create a mixed-ability peer group within an independent setting, which can be a good fit for children who thrive on encouragement and structure without the pressure of selective entry.
A distinctive thread is character education as an explicit pillar rather than a poster on the wall. Formal materials describe it as embedded across curriculum and school culture, and the September 2025 inspection summary explicitly references character education as part of a curriculum that extends beyond required areas.
The environmental and citizenship angle is unusually concrete for a primary setting. Eco work is supported by tangible infrastructure, including a greenhouse, pond, and allotment, alongside regular litter picks and biodiversity projects. For children who learn best through doing, this kind of practical ecology programme can turn abstract “sustainability” into real habits and responsibility.
As a primary school, Edenhurst does not publish comparable state-school Key Stage 2 performance figures in the same way, and the does not include KS2 results or rankings for this school. The better evidence base here is curriculum breadth, staffing model, and inspection findings.
The September 2025 inspection findings indicate a diverse curriculum, including modern foreign languages, Latin, entrepreneurship, and character education, supported by a similarly wide programme of clubs and optional activities. That combination suggests a learning culture aimed at confidence, range, and preparation for the jump to senior school selection processes later on.
Edenhurst’s published model leans into specialist teaching across the prep and pre-prep, with subject specialists referenced for areas such as languages, music, art, and physical education, and science introduced from the earlier years in the pre-prep sequence. The practical implication for families is that children can encounter specialist expertise earlier than many primary settings, which often shows up as stronger subject vocabulary and better early identification of strengths.
Outdoor learning is positioned as a meaningful part of the early years and pre-prep experience, with forest-school style activities referenced for Reception through Form 2, and structured “Camp Edenhurst” bushcraft and campcraft for prep pupils on school grounds. This matters because it broadens the definition of achievement beyond paper outcomes, and it can particularly suit children who focus better after movement and hands-on tasks.
For a prep school, the real “destination” question is senior school transition. Edenhurst states that it supports Year 6 pupils in securing offers for the senior schools of their choosing, including scholarships, and its prospectus references structured preparation for 11-plus style entry routes.
The practical implication is that the school is likely to suit families who want active guidance through the senior school choice process rather than leaving it entirely to parents. The trade-off is that this can create an environment where senior school conversations arrive earlier than in some primary settings, especially for children in the upper prep years.
Admissions are positioned as flexible and family-friendly. The school welcomes tours throughout the year, and the admissions pages describe a straightforward process: registration, an offer (or waiting list if full), then settling-in arrangements for nursery, and a taster day pathway for school entry.
A notable operational detail is internal progression. The admissions criteria state that children already attending the nursery are offered a guaranteed place in Reception, which can be a strong incentive for families seeking continuity from age three months onwards.
Financial administration is also transparent at the admissions stage. The published process includes a non-refundable £75 registration fee, and for Reception entry a £500 deposit is described as refundable on leaving, subject to any outstanding fees.
Parents weighing competitiveness should treat Edenhurst differently from oversubscribed state primaries, because selection is not via local authority distance criteria. Places are tied to availability, fit with the school’s ethos, and completing the admissions steps, so the main constraint tends to be cohort capacity rather than catchment.
The most important recent pastoral evidence is mixed, and parents should read it carefully. The September 2025 ISI report states that safeguarding standards were met, and also notes an embedded safeguarding culture with staff training and clear responsibilities.
At the same time, the same inspection records that standards relating to leadership and management were not met, and that standards relating to pupils’ physical and mental health and emotional wellbeing were not met, with required actions around consistent policy implementation and practical safety and medical access arrangements.
What this means in practice is not that pastoral care is weak, but that operational consistency and aspects of site and medical systems needed tightening at the time of inspection. Families considering the school should ask directly how these actions have been addressed since September 2025, and what monitoring is now in place.
Edenhurst’s enrichment offer is detailed and unusually structured for this age range. Activity Days are described as taking place twice each term, giving pupils concentrated time to explore specific activities.
Clubs named across the school’s published materials include School Council, Eco Council, Drama Club, Dance Club, Chess, Quiz Club, and Cooking Club. In the younger years, options referenced include judo and ballet, which is helpful for families whose children prefer individual disciplines to team sport.
Outdoor and cultural enrichment also features strongly. The school describes trips spanning museums, galleries, theatres, field study centres, farms, and zoos, and it references a ski trip and broader European cultural experiences for older prep pupils.
Facilities and environmental features that stand out include an on-site AstroTurf pitch, plus the eco infrastructure already noted, such as the greenhouse, pond, and allotment.
Edenhurst publishes a 2025 to 2026 fee structure with clear termly figures.
For tuition only (excluding VAT), termly fees are £3,240 for Reception, £3,305 for Year 1 and Year 2, and £4,049 for Year 3 to Year 6.
The school also publishes “package” term totals that combine wraparound care and lunch. Using the figures shown as including VAT, term totals are £4,254 for Reception, £4,339 for Year 1 and Year 2, and £5,294 for Year 3 to Year 6.
Edenhurst also publishes ad hoc care rates, for example breakfast club and after-school care pricing, which is useful for families who need flexibility rather than a full package.
Financial support is signposted as available through scholarships and bursaries in the school’s sector listings, but the school’s own public pages should be your first reference point for the current detail and eligibility.
Nursery fee amounts are published separately by the school and vary by entitlement and pattern of attendance, so families should use the nursery fees page for the current schedule and funding information.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
Wraparound is a core part of the offer. Published hours indicate provision from 7:30am until 6:00pm, and the school also promotes holiday provision for children aged 4 to 11.
Term dates for 2025 to 2026 are published, which helps families planning around independent school calendars and holiday club needs.
For travel, the most reliable approach is to ask about current parking and drop-off procedures and any transport options, as these can change year to year. The school has published formal guidance about on-site vehicle movement and designated areas, which suggests it anticipates regular car-based drop-off and collection.
Inspection actions from 2025. The latest inspection indicates that some standards were not met, including elements of leadership consistency and parts of the wellbeing and facilities requirements. Ask what has changed since September 2025, how it is audited, and what timelines were set for completion.
Costs beyond the headline fee. The school is clear about what is included in different fee packages, but independent schooling often brings extras such as trips, clubs run by external providers, and optional lessons. It is worth requesting a full schedule for your child’s year group.
Senior school planning arrives early. As a prep, the school explicitly supports 11-plus style transition routes and scholarship pathways. That suits some families well, but others may prefer a quieter primary experience until Year 6.
Nursery to Reception continuity. A guaranteed Reception place for nursery children is a benefit if you want stability, but it can also make it easier to drift into the next stage without reassessing fit. Plan a deliberate review point in the final nursery year.
Edenhurst is a logistics-aware independent prep with a broad curriculum and enrichment model, rooted in specialist teaching, outdoor learning, and character education, and with wraparound care built into its published structure. It will suit families who want continuity from nursery through Year 6, and who value breadth and practical independence alongside core learning. The key diligence point is the September 2025 inspection actions, which prospective parents should explore carefully and update against the school’s current practice before committing.
Edenhurst offers a broad, specialist-taught curriculum alongside structured enrichment, including outdoor learning and character education. The most recent inspection evidence is September 2025, which reported that safeguarding standards were met, and education standards were met, but some standards relating to leadership and aspects of wellbeing were not met, with specific required actions.
For 2025 to 2026, published tuition-only termly fees (excluding VAT) are £3,240 for Reception, £3,305 for Year 1 and Year 2, and £4,049 for Year 3 to Year 6. The school also publishes package totals that include wraparound care and lunch, shown termly.
Yes. Published information describes wraparound care from 7:30am to 6:00pm, plus a holiday club offer for children aged 4 to 11. The school also publishes ad hoc care rates, including breakfast club and after-school care options.
Admissions are described as year-round, subject to space. Nursery entry involves registration and settling-in sessions. For Reception and older entry, the school describes a taster day route and confirms places via an offer and deposit. Nursery children are offered a guaranteed place in Reception, which is helpful for families seeking continuity.
The school describes Activity Days twice each term, plus clubs such as Eco Council, School Council, Drama Club, Dance Club, Chess, Quiz Club, and Cooking Club. Outdoor learning features strongly, including bushcraft-style “Camp Edenhurst” activities for older pupils, and eco projects supported by facilities such as a greenhouse, pond, and allotment.
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