With a registered capacity of four students, Hope School, Preston sits at the far end of the independent school spectrum, closer to a bespoke therapeutic setting than a conventional secondary. It is designed for young people aged 11 to 18 who have experienced significant disruption, often linked to social, emotional and mental health trauma, and who need education rebuilt carefully from first principles.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (16 and 17 September 2025) judged the school Good overall, with Good grades across education, behaviour, personal development, and leadership; safeguarding was effective.
Expect the offer to be highly individual. The upside is intensity: relationships form quickly, teaching can be tightly matched to need, and routines can be shaped around a small cohort. The trade off is that breadth and peer-group scale look very different from a mainstream secondary, and families should be confident that a small setting is what their child needs.
The strongest thread running through the available evidence is relational consistency. Students are welcomed in a way that helps them settle quickly, and staff prioritise helping them feel valued and listened to.
Because numbers are tiny, the daily experience tends to be defined by adult availability and predictable systems rather than large-scale events or busy corridors. When a school is set up to admit up to four students, the “feel” is inevitably more personal: adults can notice small changes in mood, concentration, or readiness to learn, then adapt the day accordingly.
Behaviour is described as calm and orderly, with disruption to learning rare. That matters for students whose previous schooling has been interrupted, because calm routines make it easier to rebuild attendance, trust, and academic habits. The language used around personal development also points to a reflective approach, helping students make sense of emotions, understand consequences, and practise better choices over time.
Faith is not part of the school’s identity, and the intake is mixed.
Published national performance measures are not available for this school provided, and it is not ranked for GCSE or A-level outcomes. That is not unusual for very small independent settings, where cohorts are too small for stable headline metrics.
What can be said with confidence is about the qualification direction of travel described in the most recent inspection evidence: students are supported to achieve a range of qualifications, including Functional Skills and GCSEs, and attitudes to learning are described as positive and motivated.
For parents, the practical implication is to focus less on league-table style signals and more on fit: re-engagement, attendance recovery, and step-by-step progress in literacy, numeracy, and personal development. A useful way to test suitability is to ask what a typical programme looks like for a student arriving with gaps, anxiety about schooling, or a history of missed education, and how quickly the school expects to move from stabilisation into exam or accreditation pathways.
The curriculum is described as designed around student need, with an example of a sports coaching pathway aligned to future aspirations. In a setting of this size, “curriculum” often functions as a set of personalised timetables that still aim to preserve breadth, while making intelligent compromises about what is realistic and motivating.
Reading support is highlighted as a practical strength. Students are encouraged to read widely and often; tasks are carefully matched to next steps, including phonics where necessary, and students are reported to make strong progress from their starting points. For learners with interrupted schooling, that emphasis on fluency and confidence can be pivotal, because it unlocks access to the wider curriculum and to qualifications.
Teaching quality appears strongest when questioning and assessment are used to diagnose understanding in real time. In most subjects, questioning deepens understanding; where practice is less consistent, misconceptions can linger longer than they should.
The best “fit” questions here are therefore specific:
How does the school assess gaps on entry, especially after long absences from education?
Which qualifications are most commonly targeted (Functional Skills, GCSEs, vocational awards), and how are decisions made?
What does the sports coaching pathway involve in practice, and how does it sit alongside core learning?
In a setting designed for re-engagement, the most meaningful “next step” outcomes are usually individual: return to a larger school or specialist provision; progression into post-16 training; Functional Skills completion; GCSE entry; improved attendance and readiness for learning; strengthened behaviour habits and self-regulation. The school’s stated work around careers guidance and building independence, including practical life skills such as healthy eating and cooking, aligns with that kind of stepwise transition.
Families considering post-16 should ask directly how Year 12 and Year 13 are structured for such a small cohort, what accreditation routes are most realistic, and how transitions are planned if a student is ready to move into college or another provider.
This is not a catchment-led admissions model. The school is registered to admit up to four pupils and is described as catering for students who have experienced social, emotional or mental health trauma; most pupils have an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP), but an EHCP is not required for admission.
In practice, placements for settings like this often involve referral and commissioning routes rather than standard Year 7 applications. Families should expect a process that centres on suitability: needs assessment, risk assessment, and whether the school can safely meet the student’s profile, including any therapeutic or safeguarding considerations.
If you are trying to understand availability, it is sensible to ask about: current capacity, what “readiness” looks like for a start date, whether a phased timetable is used at the beginning, and how the school works with the local authority and other professionals.
For families comparing local options, FindMySchool’s tools can help you shortlist nearby mainstream and specialist alternatives, then focus conversations on which environment is most likely to sustain attendance and progress over time.
Pastoral work is integral rather than an add-on. The evidence points to staff supporting students to reflect on conduct, process emotions, and make positive choices, with personal development treated as a core strand of the curriculum.
Safeguarding is judged effective, and the proprietor is described as having an up-to-date safeguarding policy and a culture that places pupils’ interests first. For families considering any very small setting, safeguarding practice and oversight are particularly important because the student experience is more concentrated: relationships, boundaries, and professional curiosity need to be consistently strong.
A useful parent check is how the setting handles reintegration after absence, what happens on difficult days, how incidents are recorded and reviewed, and how communication with home is managed.
With a cohort this small, extracurricular tends to be shaped around student interests rather than a fixed menu. The clearest example available is that the school has facilitated interest in golf, alongside other sports, both within the curriculum and as part of extracurricular opportunities.
The educational value in this kind of provision is not “variety for its own sake”. It is engagement. When a student has disengaged from education, a well-chosen activity can provide structure, success experiences, and a reason to attend. The sports coaching pathway is a good example of using vocational interest to pull academic work along with it.
Ask what enrichment looks like across a term, how often students access sport or community activities, and how risk is assessed when students are learning to manage behaviour and relationships.
Hope School, Preston is an independent day school. The most recent published figure in official inspection documentation lists annual fees for day pupils at £39,000.
For many families, the relevant question is not “can we pay fees?” but “how is a placement funded?” In settings serving students with significant trauma or special educational needs, placements are often funded or part-funded through local authority commissioning, sometimes linked to EHCP processes or alternative arrangements. Families should clarify the funding route early, including what is included, what additional costs may arise, and whether any transport or therapeutic support is commissioned separately.
No bursary or scholarship information is published in the sources used here.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
The school is located in the Lea, Preston area (Lancashire) and operates as a very small, specialist secondary and post-16 setting.
School-day timings, wraparound arrangements, and transport expectations are not consistently published in the sources referenced for this review. For a placement like this, it is worth asking directly about start and finish times, whether part-time timetables are used initially, and how travel is arranged for commissioned placements.
Scale and peer group. With a capacity of four, social experience will be highly concentrated. This can suit students who find large environments overwhelming, but it can feel restrictive for those who need a broader peer group to thrive.
Curriculum consistency across subjects. The September 2025 inspection identified that, in a small number of subjects, curriculum clarity and checks on learning were not as sharp as they should be, which can allow misconceptions to persist. The direction of travel matters here, so ask what has changed since that point.
Not a standard admissions journey. This is not a “apply in Year 6 for Year 7” type setting. Families may need to work through referral routes and multi-agency planning, which can take time.
Data-light by nature. Families who rely heavily on published exam measures will find fewer headline signals here. The right focus is individual progress, attendance recovery, and readiness for next steps.
Hope School, Preston is best understood as a highly specialist micro-setting for students who need education rebuilt around safety, consistency, and re-engagement. The latest inspection picture is broadly positive, with Good judgements across key areas and effective safeguarding.
Who it suits: students who have struggled in larger environments, often linked to social, emotional or mental health trauma, and who benefit from intensive adult support, calm routines, and a personalised pathway that can include Functional Skills, GCSEs, and vocationally themed learning.
The challenge is fit: the scale is a strength for the right student, and a limitation for others.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (16 and 17 September 2025) judged the school Good overall, with Good grades for education quality, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. Safeguarding was effective.
Official inspection documentation lists annual fees for day pupils at £39,000. Families should also ask about funding routes, as placements in very small specialist settings are often commissioned by local authorities, sometimes linked to EHCP processes.
The school is described as catering for pupils who have experienced social, emotional or mental health trauma, and it is registered to admit up to four pupils. Most pupils have an EHCP, but it is not a requirement for admission.
Admissions are not catchment-based. Families should expect suitability-led discussions and, in many cases, referral or commissioning routes. Ask what information the school needs to consider a placement, whether there is a phased start, and how multi-agency plans are coordinated.
Students are supported to achieve a range of qualifications, with Functional Skills and GCSEs referenced in official inspection evidence. The curriculum may also include pathways aligned to interest and aspiration, such as sports coaching.
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