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 can feel either limited or tightly focused. Here, the scale is used deliberately: clear routines, high adult visibility, and a curriculum that keeps the basics central while making space for specialist strands like instrumental music and LAMDA. The day is structured around English and maths each morning, with foundation subjects and enrichment in the afternoon, and wraparound care that runs from breakfast through to a 6.00pm final pick-up.
Leadership is presented as a family-led model. Mrs Caroline Kidao is listed as Head Teacher for the 2025–2026 academic year, supported by an Executive Head role held by Jacqueline Lawson.
For parents, the main headline is outcomes at 11. The school positions itself as academically ambitious without “hot-housing”, and it publishes detailed destination-school history, including scholarship counts over time.
The school’s own language leans hard into “family”, and that plays out in the details that matter to parents of younger pupils: predictable routines, close staff oversight, and systems that encourage children to speak up. The timetable is explicit about line-up points, assemblies, and multiple breaks for younger pupils, which typically signals a setting that values calm transitions and clear expectations.
The physical footprint is unusual for a prep in this age range because it operates across multiple buildings rather than one large block. The January 2023 inspection notes three sections (Early Years Foundation Stage, Infants, Juniors), and the school’s history page describes its site evolving from earlier nursery use in one of the properties.
In Early Years, settling is treated as a priority. The school explicitly encourages parents to stay as long as needed during the settling phase, and it highlights an “early years learning garden” as a key part of the draw. For many families, that combination tends to reduce the shock of the first handover, especially for three-year-olds starting Nursery rather than Reception.
The pupil voice structure is also unusually formal for a small primary setting. Each year group elects a representative to School Council, meetings follow an agenda and minutes, and pupils report back to classes. The same page frames Eco activity as a genuine strand of school life rather than a one-off event.
The January 2023 Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection judged both pupils’ academic achievement and personal development to be excellent, and confirmed that required standards were met.
The report’s detail is worth translating into what parents will actually notice day-to-day. Mathematics is treated as a signature strength, described as confident calculation and problem-solving across subjects, with pupils also characterised as articulate and strong in literacy. The inspection also flags a developmental target: building pupils’ initiative and independence in directing their own learning.
A second lens on “results” for an independent prep is senior-school success. The school publishes its own fact pattern: it states that 100% of pupils received offers to their first-choice schools, and that 68 scholarships were won from 2010 to 2024, with 35% of pupils winning scholarships across that period.
Those are school-published figures, so they should be read as the school’s stated track record rather than a national comparator, but they do give a clear sense of intent and positioning.
The daily structure is unusually transparent, and it reveals the teaching priorities. Mornings are built around English and maths, with phonics called out explicitly in the early part of the day. Afternoons are where the curriculum broadens, including science, guided reading, and technology, plus a long list of foundation subjects.
That model generally suits pupils who benefit from repetition and routine: core skills first, then application later. It can also be helpful for families who want a strong reading pathway early, because the school explicitly links early reading to wider curriculum access, and frames phonics as the engine of that progress.
STEM is presented as applied problem-solving rather than abstract content, with a stated connection to the STEM Learning network for lesson plans and training.
In practice, for an ages 3–11 school, the meaningful question is less “how advanced” and more “how often and how hands-on”; the school’s wording stresses model-building and simulation as typical approaches.
Outdoor learning is positioned as a curriculum strand rather than a bolt-on. The school describes taking EYFS and Key Stage 1 pupils to “the Old Copse” in Sonning Common, with activities that include den building, leaf printing, and bug hunting, and it notes membership of the Woodland Trust and work towards Green Tree Awards.
For a prep that ends at 11, destinations are the core output. The school’s destination page is unusually granular and includes named senior schools with year-by-year placements and scholarships over a long period.
If you want the short, parent-useful version, two things stand out.
First, there is a clear pattern of progression into a mix of independent and selective state secondaries around Reading. Examples that appear repeatedly in the published destination history include Queen Anne’s School, The Abbey School Reading, Leighton Park School, Reading School, Kendrick School, The Oratory School, Pangbourne College, and Shiplake College.
That range matters because it suggests the school is not tied to a single destination brand; it is trying to keep options open, including 11-plus style routes as well as independent senior entry.
Second, performing arts appears to be a deliberate lever for scholarships. The extracurricular page sets out a structured LAMDA offering, including public speaking and musical theatre grades for older pupils, and the destination page references drama and performing-arts scholarships as part of the school’s track record.
Admissions are handled directly by the school rather than through local authority coordination. Registration requires a form plus a non-refundable registration fee of £75 to join the waiting list, and offers are accepted with a £750 deposit.
For Reception, the school states that offers are made in the autumn term prior to the September intake. For other year groups, it says children can join at any time through the school year, which can be useful for families relocating mid-year, but it also implies that availability depends on the small cohort sizes.
Open mornings are published with specific dates for the 2025–2026 cycle, including 24 January 2026, 30 January 2026, 6 March 2026, and 7 March 2026. These events are explicitly framed as most relevant for Nursery and Reception entry.
The pastoral model leans on two things: frequent adult contact and clear systems. Wraparound care is highly specified, including breakfast club routines and after-school supervision, with indoor play options (Lego, board games, puzzles) and outdoor time when weather permits.
The school also describes a “Wellbeing Link” role and uses structured pupil responsibilities such as Playground Friends, where older children are trained to notice pupils who are alone and help them join in. Inspectors also recorded that bullying was minimal and that pupils felt supported by adults.
Health and wellbeing is treated as a programme rather than an occasional theme. The school states it holds a Healthy Schools Award, described as an external audit spanning physical education, relationships and health education, healthy cooking and eating, and social and emotional mental health.
The club list is one of the most concrete on the site, and it reads like a small school that is trying to give “big school” breadth. The school says it runs around 20 clubs per week, and it publishes examples that range from Chess Club and Maths Club through to Bikeability, Coding, Latin, Gardening, and “Dare to Debate”.
If you are choosing a prep partly for confidence and communication, the combination of debating-style clubs and a formal pupil council structure is a coherent package.
Music is unusually developed for an ages 3–11 setting. The school states that almost half of pupils play an instrument, that Year 2 pupils learn recorder in class, and that instrumentalists perform in multiple formats, including concerts and festival participation.
Instrumental lessons listed include piano, flute, clarinet, guitar, violin, voice, and theory.
The performing arts offer is anchored in LAMDA examinations, with pupils able to start from age four and older pupils able to take public speaking and musical theatre pathways.
Sport is positioned as broad participation plus competition through the house system. Houses are named after local rivers, and inter-house events include cross country, a swimming gala, and a STEM challenge alongside the more typical sports-day programme.
This is an independent school, so tuition fees apply. The school’s website currently publishes fees for the 2024–2025 academic year rather than 2025–2026. For 2024–2025, it lists £2,500 per term for Reception, £3,850 per term for Years 1–2, and £4,000 per term for Years 3–6.
Nursery is offered on a session basis and the school describes fees being prorated; specific Nursery pricing should be taken from the school’s own fees pages and current documents rather than third-party summaries.
Financial help is not treated as an afterthought. Scholarships are offered in academic, sport, music, drama, and art, with stated ranges including 15%–50% for academic scholarships, 10%–30% for sport, 10% for art, and 5% for drama, alongside non-fee formats such as music lessons being paid for.
Means-tested bursaries are also described, including the possibility of up to 100% fee support in exceptional circumstances.
Fees data coming soon.
The school day has a clear staggered finish: Reception at 3.20pm, Years 1–2 at 3.25pm, and Years 3–6 at 3.30pm, with clubs and aftercare registering from 3.30pm and final pick-up at 6.00pm.
Breakfast club runs from 8.00am, gates open at 8.40am, and registration is at 9.00am.
For Early Years and Key Stage 1, outdoor learning includes Forest School trips to woodland in Sonning Common.
Fee-year transparency. fee figures for 2024–2025; families planning for later entry should confirm the current fee schedule and any VAT treatment directly with the school before budgeting.
Small cohorts cut both ways. A capacity of 98 suggests low class sizes, but it also means availability can change quickly; mid-year entry is possible in principle, but places may depend on the specific year group.
Independence is a stated development point. The January 2023 inspection praises achievement and personal development but recommends strengthening pupils’ initiative and independence in learning; some children will thrive with this as a clear next step, others may need more time to grow into it.
Destination focus can raise the tempo in Years 5–6. The school publishes extensive scholarship and senior-school destination history; families who want a quieter, less exam-oriented finish to primary should probe how preparation is balanced with breadth.
This is a deliberately structured, family-run prep where routine and adult visibility are central, and where the final two years are clearly designed to open senior-school options. It suits families who want early literacy and strong mathematics, plenty of clubs, and a pathway that includes scholarships and selective routes as realistic possibilities. The main question to resolve early is fit: whether your child will enjoy the pace and performance culture that often comes with a destination-focused Year 5–6 experience.
The most recent independent inspection (January 2023) judged pupils’ academic achievement and personal development to be excellent, and it also confirmed that required standards were met. Families should still look for fit, especially around how confidently a child handles structured routines and expectations.
The school publishes fee figures for the 2024–2025 academic year on its website, with different rates by year group. For future entry, confirm the current fee schedule directly with the school, including any VAT position and what is included versus charged as an extra.
Yes. The school describes scholarships in academic, sport, music, drama, and art, plus means-tested bursaries, including the possibility of very high levels of support in exceptional circumstances. Scholarship eligibility is described as focused on Years 3–6, with awards based on evidence and assessment.
Admissions are direct. Registration involves a form and a registration fee to join the waiting list, with a deposit required to accept an offer. The school states that Reception offers are made in the autumn term ahead of the September start, while other year groups may have in-year entry if places exist.
The day runs from breakfast club at 8.00am through to a 6.00pm final pick-up. Home times are staggered by age, with Reception earlier than Years 1–6. Breakfast club and after-school care are both described in detail, which is useful for working families.
Get in touch with the school directly
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