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.
The main school serves pupils up to Year 6, with a separate pre-school site close by for younger children, and wraparound care that extends the day for families who need it.
Leadership is stable, with the current principal, Mrs Emma Steinmann-Gilbert, appointed in September 2015. The school was founded in 1951, later moving to its current Watts Avenue site in 1961, and it has been owned by Education Development Trust since 1999.
Parents will care most about three things here. Second, the curriculum is deliberately broad for a prep, with languages and computing running early and consistently. Third, the leaving destinations skew selective, including a long list of Kent and Medway grammars alongside a handful of independent seniors.
The “prep” label can mean very different things in practice. Here it reads as structured routines, frequent specialist teaching, and a school culture that treats Year 6 as a launch pad for a range of competitive next steps. In the most recent Independent Schools Inspectorate inspection, the school is described as operating with an inclusive ethos and a co-operative learning context that shapes planning and classroom expectations.
A distinctive feature is that community life is formalised in a house system, not just a casual “teams” approach. Pupils are placed into Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald, or Topaz; house points are totalled weekly, and the winning house at the end of each half-term earns a Tag Day. Year 6 pupils take on captain roles, which gives older pupils visible responsibility without leaning on prefect-style hierarchy that can feel premature at prep age.
In early years, the tone is deliberately homely. The pre-school page frames the setting as “a home away from home” and places a strong emphasis on regular local walks and trips around the city’s parks, museums and historic sites. That detail matters because it signals a learning model that uses the local area as an extension of the classroom, rather than confining everything to one site.
The headline story is that Key Stage 2 subject outcomes are well above England figures in the school’s published tables. In May 2025, the school reports 95% reaching the expected standard in reading compared with 75% in England. For spelling, punctuation and grammar it reports 100% compared with 73% in England; for maths, 93% compared with 74% in England.
The same pattern shows up in the most recent published year before that. In May 2024, the school reports 95% reading (England 74%), 100% spelling, punctuation and grammar (England 72%), and 95% maths (England 73%). This consistency is important: a single strong cohort can happen anywhere, but repeating the pattern across consecutive published years suggests the underlying teaching model is working.
There is also a “prep-specific” academic story that sits behind the numbers. In the November 2025 inspection report, teaching is described as carefully prepared, with skilful questioning that develops pupils’ thinking, and as a result pupils make good progress. It also flags one practical improvement point, ensuring teaching assistants are deployed consistently well in every lesson, especially when specialist teachers are leading. That kind of recommendation is typical of a school already aiming for fine margins.
Teaching is organised around a mix of class teachers and specialist staff, with specialism increasing as pupils move through the juniors. The junior school page is explicit that pupils are taught by specialist teaching staff, and that by Year 6 children are used to a senior-school style timetable.
Languages are a genuine curriculum pillar rather than a light-touch enrichment add-on. French begins in Pre-Reception, with Spanish introduced from Year 3, and pupils are taught by subject specialists in both languages. In a prep context, that matters because it changes the learning trajectory; children arrive at Year 7 with both confidence and a sense that language learning is a normal part of school life.
Computing is similarly embedded. Year 1 to Year 6 pupils have access to their own 1 to 1 devices, with laptops used across the curriculum; Reception uses class sets of iPads, and pre-school uses LearnPad tablets. Cameras, animation kits and programmable robots are referenced as teaching tools, which points to a practical, making-and-testing approach rather than screen-only “ICT”.
Maths teaching is described as systematic and confidence-focused. The maths page emphasises securing number bonds and times tables, using concrete and visual representations, guided practice, collaboration, then individual fluency work. That sequence should feel familiar to parents who like structured mastery-style teaching, while still leaving space for the extension work that selective secondary preparation often requires.
For a prep, destinations are one of the clearest signals of academic direction and admissions culture. The school is clear that, despite being non-selective, leavers regularly move into Medway and Kent grammar schools, alongside independent senior schools, including scholarships (without publishing exact scholarship counts).
The school’s published list of common destinations includes:
Sir Joseph Williamson's Mathematical School
Rochester Grammar School
Holcombe Grammar School
Chatham Grammar School
Rainham Mark Grammar School
Fort Pitt Grammar School
Invicta Grammar School
The Judd School
St Olave's Grammar School
Gravesend Grammar School
Dartford Grammar School
Sevenoaks School
Gad's Hill School
King's School Rochester
Cobham Hall
Rochester Independent College
Implication for families: the school can suit two different routes. Some children are aiming squarely at grammar tests and need calm, consistent preparation. Others are building a broad profile for independent senior entry, where interview confidence and co-curricular participation can matter alongside academics. Either way, Year 6 is not treated as a gentle run-out.
Admissions are direct and non-selective in principle, but places are limited and the school is explicit that waiting lists operate where year groups are full. The practical first step is registration, including a £90 non-refundable registration fee.
Reception entry has an internal pipeline. The school states that the vast majority of pre-school children transfer into Reception, and that those already in the pre-school have priority for Reception places. For children not in the pre-school, the Reception admissions process begins each January.
The admissions policy adds useful operational detail. The school usually accepts up to 44 pupils at 4+, and it uses waiting lists with priority based on siblings, current attendance at the pre-school, then date of registration. It also sets out the typical internal timetable, with meetings held in the preceding year’s autumn term for siblings and pre-school children, and in the spring term for other children; non-pre-school applicants may be asked to attend a stay-and-play session.
For in-year entry, the process looks more like a light-touch “fit check” than an exam. Applicants may spend a day with the class to support settling and suitability; infants complete an informal assessment of reading, writing and number skills, while juniors sit a more formal English and maths assessment. The school also notes that if an offer is made for main school places, acceptance paperwork is time-bounded, with acceptance forms expected back within seven days alongside an acceptance deposit (the amount is not published on the admissions page).
Parents who are navigating tight timelines should use Saved Schools to keep a clear shortlist, then add reminders for open mornings, registration and assessment touchpoints.
Pastoral systems in small schools can be either informal and warm, or structured and consistent. Here, the best evidence points to the latter. The November 2025 inspection describes staff supervision as vigilant, with suitable arrangements for first aid and medical needs, and safeguarding procedures that are aligned with guidance and widely understood by staff.
Behaviour is reinforced through two overlapping mechanisms. One is the house system, which incentivises effort and participation in a visible way and gives Year 6 pupils leadership responsibilities. The other is a behaviour policy that the inspection report describes as clearly understood by staff and pupils, with consistent implementation across the school. The implication is a calm learning climate, which is particularly valuable for pupils who are preparing for selective entry without wanting a pressurised, exam-heavy atmosphere.
A nuanced point, and one worth asking about directly, is how teaching assistants are deployed in specialist lessons. The inspection report notes that in a few cases teachers do not communicate planning to teaching assistants or deploy them suitably, limiting progress for some pupils in those lessons. For parents of children who benefit from structured in-class support, it is sensible to ask how that recommendation has been implemented since November 2025.
Co-curricular provision is not just a “nice to have” in a prep with ambitious destinations. It is part of how pupils build confidence, stretch their social skills, and demonstrate range when applying to competitive senior schools.
The club list on the curriculum pages is unusually specific for a school of this size. Examples include Tap, Robotics, Art, Athletics, Choir, Gardening and Cooking. These are not interchangeable clubs; they indicate multiple pathways for different personalities. Robotics and computing resources support practical problem-solving. Tap and choir serve performance confidence. Gardening and cooking suit pupils who do best with hands-on, tangible outcomes.
Outdoor learning is also more structured than the average “we sometimes go outside” model. Forest School is described as a long-term approach delivered by a fully trained Forest School leader, with Reception sessions taking place weekly in a small woodland area at Cobham Hall School, with pupils travelling by minibus. The educational implication is repeated, seasonal exposure rather than a one-off “forest day”, which tends to build independence and sensible risk judgement over time.
Sport is framed with a balance of participation and competitive fixtures. The PE curriculum references athletics, tag rugby, gymnastics, basketball, hockey and swimming, with specialist teaching in both infants and juniors, and competition through local Medway fixtures and the Medway Mini Youth Games Series, plus internal house competitions.
Creative arts are presented as a standing feature of school life. Performing arts are positioned as frequent, with plays, concerts, assemblies and end-of-term services, while music includes weekly class lessons and optional one-to-one tuition in piano, guitar and voice.
Trips and experiences add breadth, especially from Year 3 onwards, when residential opportunities begin, alongside visiting theatre groups and expert speakers. In practice, this helps children connect classroom topics to real contexts, and for some it becomes the source of writing material and interview discussion later.
This is an independent school, so fees are central to the decision.
Published fee information for 2026 indicates day fees per term in the range £969 to £4,742 excluding VAT, and the school is listed as having no scholarships or bursaries through that directory.
Other known costs include a £90 non-refundable registration fee at the point of application. An acceptance deposit is also referenced for main school offers, but the amount is not published on the admissions materials available online.
Practical implication: because there is no published bursary or scholarship pathway in the fee listing above, families should budget on the assumption of full fees, then confirm directly whether any discretionary assistance is available for specific circumstances.
Fees data coming soon.
The school runs on two nearby sites, with the early years setting based on St Margaret’s Street, about 250 metres from the main school.
Wraparound care is clearly defined. Breakfast Club runs 7.30am to 8.30am in term time, and after-school care runs 4.30pm to 5.30pm once clubs finish; both must be pre-booked and are charged in addition to termly fees (specific amounts are not published on the wraparound page). The holiday club dates are also published for 2025 to 26, which can matter for working families planning childcare coverage.
For transport, the school states that the nearest mainline station is Rochester railway station, around a 10 minute walk away. Office hours are listed as 8.30am to 4.30pm, Monday to Friday.
Selective destinations shape Year 6. A large proportion of pupils are aiming at grammar school entry, and the destination list is heavily selective. That focus suits some children brilliantly; others may prefer a less test-oriented peer culture.
Early years progression is a genuine advantage. Pre-school children have priority for Reception, and the “pipeline” into Reception is explicit. If you want a Reception place starting in September, joining earlier can materially change the admissions picture.
Teaching assistant deployment is a watch-point. The latest inspection recommends ensuring teaching assistants are consistently deployed effectively, particularly in some specialist lessons. Families whose child benefits from in-class support should ask how this has been tightened since November 2025.
Fees transparency is not as clear as it could be. The school’s own fees page explains the rationale for fees but does not show a schedule, so you may need to request the current breakdown directly before shortlisting.
This is a focused, high-attaining independent prep where strong Key Stage 2 outcomes sit alongside a curriculum that starts languages early, uses specialist teaching through the juniors, and leans into ambitious secondary destinations. It suits families who want a structured academic core without sacrificing clubs, sport and outdoor learning, and who are realistic about the competitive pathways many pupils take at 11. Entry is not framed as selective, but places are finite and the pre-school to Reception route can be strategically important.
The available published evidence points to a strong school. In May 2025, the school reports 95% reaching the expected standard in reading, 100% in spelling, punctuation and grammar, and 93% in maths, each higher than the England figures shown alongside. The November 2025 inspection confirms the school met Standards across leadership, education, wellbeing, social development and safeguarding.
A published fee listing for 2026 shows day fees per term ranging from £969 to £4,742 excluding VAT. The admissions materials also reference a £90 non-refundable registration fee, and an acceptance deposit for main school offers, although the deposit amount is not published online.
Pre-school children have priority for Reception places, and the school states that most pre-school children transfer into Reception. For children not in the pre-school, the Reception admissions process begins each January, and the admissions policy describes meetings in the preceding year’s autumn term for siblings and pre-school children, and spring term for other applicants.
The school lists its next open morning as Tuesday 21 April, from 9.00am to 11.00am. It also offers private tours during term time.
The school publishes a long destination list that leans strongly selective, including multiple Kent and Medway grammar schools, plus independent destinations such as Sevenoaks School, King’s School Rochester and Cobham Hall, and Rochester Independent College for post-16.
Get in touch with the school directly
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