A small independent primary in Hyson Green, serving pupils aged 5 to 11, Fig Tree Primary School positions itself as both academically focused and explicitly values-led, with daily Qur’an recitation and Islamic studies integrated into the timetable. The school describes its origins as a community-led project, opening in 2000 in response to local demand.
The latest inspection judgement is Good, with the school meeting the independent school standards. For parents, that headline matters because it signals a baseline of quality and compliance, but the day-to-day fit will come down to three things: a close-knit scale, a curriculum that blends the National Curriculum with Islamic content, and a structured school day that ends at 3:00pm, with an after-school option referenced in the prospectus.
This is a small setting by design, and that tends to shape relationships. In the most recent inspection narrative, pupils are described as enjoying school, feeling cared for, and learning in an environment with calm expectations and positive attitudes to education.
The school’s public-facing materials place strong emphasis on identity, ethics, and belonging. The curriculum page sets out a timetable enhanced by daily Qur’an recitation, Islamic studies, and Arabic, alongside the National Curriculum, with personal, social, health and economic education and relationships and sex education framed through an Islamic narrative while also presenting a balanced programme.
Leadership information is presented in two places that parents will notice. The staff list names Mr Q Hussain as Acting Headteacher, alongside a Year 5/6 teaching role. The most recent inspection report lists Nabeela Hussain as headteacher at the time of that inspection. What matters for families is practical clarity during enquiry and transition, so it is worth checking who will be the main point of contact for new starters and how the leadership team is structured for the 2026 intake.
The school does, however, publish its own Key Stage 2 SATs percentages on the curriculum page, including a 2024 column for reading, spelling, punctuation and grammar, and maths. These are presented as high percentages compared with the national figures shown alongside them. As with any school-published SATs presentation, the useful question for parents is less about the headline number and more about what sits behind it: how consistent the approach is across year groups, and what targeted support looks like for pupils who start behind or need more challenge.
The most recent inspection evidence points to a broadly ambitious curriculum, strong sequencing in maths, a prioritisation of reading supported by a structured phonics programme, and teachers using subject knowledge to present information clearly. It also highlights a practical improvement priority: using assessment more consistently to identify and address knowledge gaps before moving on, including in phonics accuracy checks.
The published curriculum framing is explicit: the National Curriculum provides the spine, with adaptations to make cross-curricular links through Islamic stories, Qur’anic verses and hadith. That approach will suit families who want coherence between home and school values, and who prefer religious literacy to be treated as part of everyday learning rather than as a bolt-on subject.
From a practical teaching and learning perspective, three features stand out from the combination of published materials and inspection narrative:
Reading is described as a whole-school priority, with a focus on reading for pleasure via a book club, library use, and themed events. The inspection also frames early reading through a structured phonics programme with closely matched books, which matters because phonics fidelity is often the difference between children who decode fluently by the end of Key Stage 1 and those who remain hesitant readers.
Maths is singled out in the inspection narrative as well sequenced, building prior learning into increasingly challenging problem-solving and reasoning. For parents, the implication is that pupils who enjoy pattern, structure and stepwise challenge may thrive, and those who struggle benefit most when assessment is used tightly to prevent small misunderstandings compounding over time, which is also the identified area to tighten further.
The prospectus “Typical Day” page gives a concrete sense of how the day is structured, including Qur’an and salah appearing as named components of the day alongside English, maths, guided reading, handwriting, PSHE, science and art. This is not incidental. It is a deliberate integration that will feel natural to some families and mismatched to others.
In practice, families considering Year 5 or Year 6 entry should ask three specific transition questions early:
How the school supports the secondary application process for local families, including timelines and document guidance
What pastoral support looks like for pupils who are anxious about transition
Whether there are established relationships with particular secondaries (even informal ones), for example through shared events or visits
Where the school does provide concrete detail is in its wider personal development framing, emphasising character, confidence, and communication skills as outcomes of a strong British Muslim identity. That matters because transition success is rarely only academic; it is also about organisation, resilience, and social confidence.
Admissions are presented as direct to the school. The admissions page states that admission for September 2026 is now open, with enrolment routed through the school’s online system. It also notes a registration fee and that the school reserves the right to see a child’s birth certificate.
Current year-group availability for the 2026 entry point you care about
The steps from registration to offer (forms, meeting, any assessment, references)
The deadline for accepting a place once offered
If you are comparing options locally, using FindMySchool’s Saved Schools shortlist tools can help keep admissions steps and paperwork aligned across multiple schools, particularly where deadlines are not standardised.
The inspection narrative describes pupils as respectful and considerate, behaviour as calm and purposeful, and safeguarding arrangements as effective. It also flags that the school engages with families to support strong attendance.
From a parent’s point of view, the most useful pastoral questions to ask a small primary are not generic. They are operational:
Who is the designated safeguarding lead day-to-day, and what happens if that person is absent
How concerns are logged and followed up, including parent communication
How the school supports pupils who need extra emotional regulation support, especially at transition points
The school states that after-school clubs run daily and lists specific options including Quran Madrassa, Football Club, STEM Club, Nasheed Club, Arts and Crafts Club, Gardening Club, and Robotics Club. That breadth is useful because it gives families multiple “routes in” for children with different motivations, performance, practical making, sport, or faith learning.
A practical implication of this club menu is that the school is trying to offer both enrichment and structured supervision after the formal day. If you are balancing work patterns with school hours, it is worth checking how clubs are scheduled by age group and whether they operate consistently across terms, since newsletters indicate that club offers can vary by half term and sometimes include year-group limits or small charges for specific activities.
As an independent school, this is a fee-paying setting. The most recent published inspection report lists annual day fees of £2,400 at the time of inspection (November 2024).
Nursery pricing is not included here. Where early years provision is relevant, use the nursery and school admissions teams to confirm costs and funded-hours eligibility.
Fees data coming soon.
The prospectus sets out a clear daily rhythm: doors open at 8:20am, children are expected in for 8:30am, and the school day finishes at 3:00pm, with an after-school option described up to 3:30pm.
A 2025/26 term dates calendar is published for families. Travel and drop-off logistics are likely to be a meaningful factor given the Hyson Green location; families should confirm current arrival and departure procedures and any parking expectations through the school’s up-to-date parent communications.
Faith-led approach is central. Islamic studies, Arabic, and daily religious practice are built into the timetable. This will be an advantage for many families, but it is not a neutral feature.
Fee transparency for 2025/26 is not complete online. The inspection report provides an annual fee figure for 2024, and the school references updated fee agreements via parent communications. For budgeting, you will need a current written fee schedule.
Assessment use is a known improvement area. Inspection evidence highlights the need for more consistent use of assessment to close gaps before moving on, including in phonics accuracy.
Fig Tree Primary School offers a small, structured independent primary experience with a strongly integrated faith dimension and a broad curriculum spine aligned to the National Curriculum. It is best suited to families who actively want Islamic values and learning woven through the school day, and who prefer a close-knit setting with clearly defined routines. The key practical hurdle is due diligence: confirm the current leadership contact, obtain the full 2025/26 fee schedule in writing, and clarify admissions steps and timelines early.
The most recent inspection judgement is Good, and the school meets the independent school standards. Published inspection evidence describes a calm culture, strong expectations for behaviour, and a curriculum that supports good progress, with a clear next step around using assessment more consistently to address gaps.
The most recent inspection report lists annual day fees of £2,400 at the time of the November 2024 inspection. For 2025/26 entry planning, request the current fee schedule directly from the school, including what is included and how payments are structured.
The prospectus describes doors opening at 8:20am, an 8:30am start for learning, and a 3:00pm finish, with an after-school option referenced until 3:30pm. For wraparound planning, confirm which clubs operate by year group and whether places are limited each term.
The school lists a range of after-school clubs including Quran Madrassa, STEM Club, Nasheed Club, Arts and Crafts Club, Gardening Club and Robotics Club, alongside sports options. Availability can vary by term, and some newsletters indicate specific club schedules and occasional charges for particular activities.
Get in touch with the school directly
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