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Staines Preparatory School is a co-educational independent day prep in Staines-upon-Thames, taking children from age 2 through to Year 6. It is a comparatively large prep by local standards (capacity 374) and operates as a charitable trust with governor oversight.
The headline here is a school that tries to combine two things that do not always coexist in a town-centre prep: an accessible, non-selective admissions stance, and facilities more typical of a larger senior school. The Founders Building includes a full-size multi-purpose sports hall that doubles as an auditorium with tiered seating plus specialist lighting and audio; there is also a dedicated science room, music room and an ADT suite, alongside home economics teaching space and expansive outdoor provision.
Leadership is stable and visible, with Mrs Hannah Miles listed as Headteacher on the school’s staff and contact pages and on the government’s official records.
The school’s identity is framed around a practical set of values branded as The Staines Prep Way, with a seven-point list that includes listening, sharing, forgiveness, kindness, respect, honesty, and being your best. In day-to-day terms, this gives staff and pupils a shared vocabulary to refer to behaviour, relationships, and effort without leaning on rewards and sanctions alone.
Pastoral structures are explicit rather than implied. The school describes a dedicated Welfare Office team for day-to-day wellbeing needs, and it runs the Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA) programme with an ELSA Room as a defined space for individual emotional support.
Early Years is a major part of the school, not a token add-on. Nursery routines and Reception schedules are published in detail, including structured phonics in key worker groups, small-group mathematics input, and significant child-initiated indoor and outdoor play time. For families who care about clear structure as well as play-based learning, it is helpful that the school shows how the day is actually organised rather than simply stating an approach.
A small but meaningful signal of culture is the house system. The four houses are Attenborough, Dahl, Ennis-Hill and Seacole, and the school explains that pupils requested a change from older house names so that role models felt more representative and inclusive. That is a specific example of pupil voice being treated as decision-influencing, not purely symbolic.
What can be evidenced is the external assessment picture from the latest inspection framework and the school’s own description of its learning culture. The June 2024 ISI inspection reported that Standards were met across leadership and management, quality of education, pupils’ physical and mental health and emotional wellbeing, pupils’ social and economic education, and safeguarding.
Within that, the report highlights early reading foundations and progression, describing high-quality teaching about sounds and good progress with decoding and writing skills in early years, then continued development of reading fluency and oracy as pupils move through the school.
A second useful strand is the school’s emphasis on learning support. The inspection describes learning support as a significant strength, referencing extensive training for learning support assistants and a positive impact on engagement, progress and behaviour for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities. If you are comparing preps partly on how well they handle a wide ability range, this is a material data point.
The practical shape of learning looks like a blend of structured core instruction with specialist spaces and age-appropriate enrichment. Early years publishes a day rhythm that includes phonics routines, group numeracy, and sustained child-initiated play. That structure tends to suit children who like predictable routines, while still giving space for exploratory learning.
Further up the school, the facilities help explain how a prep can offer senior-school style subject specialist teaching. The school states that the Founders Building includes dedicated science, music and ADT space, plus a home economics classroom, and there are multiple classrooms within the same complex. The implication is not simply “nice kit”, it is timetable flexibility, more practical work, and a broader curriculum without relying on temporary setups in general classrooms.
Outdoor learning is formalised through Forest School. Sessions run in a dedicated on-site forest area called The Sanctuary, taught by staff trained through the Forest School Development Programme, and the curriculum includes topics such as habitats and weather plus practical skills like building and lighting fires, climbing trees and tool use (with appropriate supervision and risk education). For some children, this is where confidence and self-management show up most clearly.
As a prep ending in Year 6, destinations matter because they show both ambition and breadth of fit. Staines Prep publishes a multi-year list of Year 6 leavers’ destinations, expressed as places accepted with places offered in brackets.
In the most recent column shown (2024–25), examples include Sir William Perkins’s School (10 accepted), Halliford School (7 accepted) and Hampton School (3 accepted), alongside smaller numbers to a range of other independent schools.
The published list also includes grammar school acceptances across multiple years, for example in the 2024–25 column there are single-place acceptances shown to schools such as Tiffin School, Tiffin Girls’ School and St Olave’s Grammar School, plus others.
Scholarships add a second layer: the school lists scholarship offers over the last three years, including academic, music, sport, art, drama, and chess scholarships at a range of senior schools (some marked as not accepted by families).
The balanced takeaway is that this is not a one-track “one senior school” feeder. It looks more like a prep that supports both selective grammar pathways and independent senior applications, which tends to suit families who want optionality until Year 5 or Year 6 rather than committing early.
Admissions are managed directly by the school rather than through the local authority. The published admissions process is straightforward: families are encouraged to attend an open morning or book a personal tour; registration then follows with paperwork and a registration fee; offers are made after registration and a visit, and a deposit is used to secure a place.
For September 2026 and beyond, the clearest date-based information is around visits and scholarships rather than a single closing date for entry. The school states the next whole-school Open Morning is Friday 13 March 2026 (9.30am to 11.30am).
There is also a defined scholarship route for Year 3 entry, with academic, music and sports scholarships available and a stated deadline of Friday 27 February 2026 for Year 3 scholarship entry, alongside a published outline of assessment stages and expectations. The scholarship award is described as up to 10% of annual school fees.
If you are shortlisting, the FindMySchool Saved Schools feature is a practical way to track visit dates, deadlines, and notes from tours across multiple local options.
The school’s pastoral model is unusually detailed for a prep website. The Welfare Office is described as a dedicated team supporting wellbeing during the school day, including medication administration and support for dietary needs, and it is presented as a routine part of operations rather than a crisis-only service.
The ELSA programme is another key pillar. The school explains the role of Emotional Literacy Support Assistants and their training origin, and the ELSA Room is presented as a purposeful space for individual support and reflection. For children who are generally coping but periodically need structured emotional scaffolding, this kind of provision can be the difference between “fine” and “settled”.
Safeguarding and supervision are strongly evidenced in the latest inspection. The safeguarding section describes governance oversight, recruitment checks, regular staff training with weekly updates, and pupil online safety education, including a mechanism for pupils to share worries.
The co-curricular programme is notable for two reasons: it is explicitly age-tiered, and it includes a mix of mainstream and “prep-specific” options that signal breadth. Reception clubs listed include Construction Club and Creative Club alongside ballet and sport. In Years 1 and 2, the list includes Lower School Singers, Make & Create Club, Social Chess, judo and tennis.
Upper School (Years 3–6) is where the menu becomes more distinctive. Examples include Chamber Choir, Concert Band, Debating Club (Year 6 only), Drama & Improvisation, STEAM Club, MN Film Academy, and invitational chess and gymnastics options. For families who value opportunities that feel a step beyond the standard “football and crafts” model, those named programmes matter.
Facilities underpin this, rather than the other way round. A full-size sports hall plus floodlit and non-floodlit all-weather pitches, football pitches, cricket nets, a horizontal climbing wall, and a dedicated yurt outdoor classroom all expand what can happen after 3.30pm without compromising supervision or space.
Forest School provides a second “beyond classroom” track that runs within the curriculum rather than only after school. Using The Sanctuary woodland area and trained staff, the programme includes nature study and practical skills, with an explicit emphasis on risk education and responsibility.
Staines Preparatory School publishes 2025–26 termly tuition fees for Reception to Year 6 (inclusive of VAT). Reception is £4,722 per term, Years 1 and 2 are £5,235 per term, and Years 3 to 6 are £6,138 per term.
The school also publishes a compulsory lunch charge for 2025–26 of £302 per term for all pupils, plus a registration fee of £120 for Reception to Year 6 and a £900 deposit payable on acceptance of a confirmed place.
Means-tested bursaries are available, with applications reviewed annually; the school directs families to speak with the Bursar for planning and application details.
Scholarships are a second lever. For Year 3 entry, academic, music and sports scholarships are available, and the published award value is up to 10% of annual school fees, with renewal assessed annually.
Nursery fees are published by the school, but specific early years fee figures are best checked on the school’s own fees page alongside funding eligibility. Early Years Entitlement funding (up to 15 hours per week, term time only) is accepted for Nursery and Reception up to and including the term a child turns five, subject to the stated conditions.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
School day timings are published in granular detail, with different finish times by phase. Nursery sessions run 8.30am to 12.30pm (morning) and 12.30pm to 4.00pm (afternoon). Reception ends at 3.20pm; Year 1 ends at 3.25pm; Year 2 ends at 3.30pm; Years 3 to 6 end at 4.00pm.
Wraparound care is clearly defined. Early Birds Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am, and Afternoon Owls Club runs from 3.30pm to 6.00pm, with published pricing bands and a note that ad hoc sessions incur a surcharge.
Transport is supported via a school minibus service with zone-based daily pricing published for return journeys and the ability to tailor routes to family needs.
Town-centre site with big-site expectations. The outdoor provision is larger than many parents expect for the location, but drop-off and pick-up logistics will still matter, particularly if your child finishes at 4.00pm in Years 3–6 and you are combining that with work travel.
A clear values framework can feel structured. The Staines Prep Way is intentionally explicit and is referenced across school communications. Families who prefer a looser, less codified approach to behaviour and ethos may find it more formal than expected.
Scholarships come with expectations. The Year 3 scholarship route sets out behavioural, academic and participation expectations and involves staged assessments and interviews; for the right child this is motivating, but it is not a “badge only” scheme.
Relationship education depth is an identified development point. The June 2024 inspection notes that the oldest pupils’ understanding of healthy relationships is not developed in as much depth as possible. For some parents, that is a prompt to ask how PSHE and relationships education is being strengthened in upper years.
Staines Preparatory School suits families who want an independent prep experience without academic selectivity at the door, and who value strong pastoral architecture backed by visible systems (Welfare Office, ELSA, structured routines). It also suits children who thrive when their day includes practical specialist learning spaces and a wide co-curricular menu, including STEM and performance opportunities.
The challenge is not quality, it is fit. If you want a very small prep with minimal structure and fewer moving parts, this may feel like a lot. For families who like clarity, breadth and facilities that widen what a prep can offer, it is a compelling option.
The latest inspection (June 2024) reported that the school met the Independent School Standards across the key areas inspected, including education quality and safeguarding. The school also publishes extensive detail on its curriculum structure, pastoral systems, and destinations to a wide range of senior schools, which helps parents evaluate fit beyond exam statistics.
For 2025–26, termly tuition fees (inclusive of VAT) are published as £4,722 for Reception, £5,235 for Years 1–2, and £6,138 for Years 3–6. The school also publishes a compulsory lunch charge of £302 per term and a £900 acceptance deposit for a confirmed place. Means-tested bursaries are available via the Bursar.
Admissions are direct to the school. The published process encourages families to visit (open morning or personal tour), then register and submit the required documents; offers follow after registration and a visit, and a deposit secures the place. Pupils joining from Year 1 and above are assessed to support appropriate class placement.
The school states that the next whole-school Open Morning takes place on Friday 13 March 2026, running from 9.30am to 11.30am, with booking via the Open Morning Booking Form.
The school publishes destinations by year, with recent acceptances including Sir William Perkins’s School, Halliford School and Hampton School, plus a broad range of other independent and grammar options. The published data is shown as places accepted, with places offered in brackets.
Get in touch with the school directly
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