Penarth Group School is a small independent day provision in South Reddish, Stockport, serving students aged 11 to 18 with Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs). The setting is deliberately small, with a registered roll of 15 students at the time of the most recent material change inspection, and a planned capacity of 27.
The school’s purpose is clear, re-engagement for young people who have struggled to sustain mainstream placement, with a triangulated model built around education, wellbeing, social re-engagement, and personal development.
For parents, the key headline is that this is not a conventional independent secondary with published league-table outcomes, it is a specialist placement model where fit, safeguarding confidence, and a credible plan back into learning matter more than volume of exam data. Ofsted judged overall effectiveness as Good at the latest routine inspection, with Personal Development graded Outstanding.
This is a deliberately low-roll environment. The school is designed for students with additional needs, and the most recent official inspection notes that all pupils on roll had SEND, with EHCPs.
Day-to-day culture is framed around relationships and re-establishing trust in school routines. Students are expected to opt into the placement by agreeing three conditions: they want to attend regularly, they want to learn and make academic progress, and they will behave with respect towards other students, staff, and the school environment. That clarity is useful for families who have lived through repeated breakdowns in placement.
Leadership continuity looks settled. The current headteacher is Mrs Keri Tams, who states she took up the role in April 2022.
FindMySchool performance metrics and rankings are not available for this setting and the school is not ranked for GCSE or A-level outcomes here. That makes it important to interpret “results” through a different lens: attendance recovery, readiness to learn, and appropriately chosen qualifications.
The latest routine inspection describes students gaining nationally recognised qualifications, including GCSEs and Functional Skills, alongside a curriculum structured to meet additional learning needs.
The curriculum intent is broad and ambitious, with leaders mapping learning in a logical sequence and revisiting prior knowledge to help students retain key concepts. Teaching is described as supported by secure subject knowledge and careful checking for understanding, which matters in small settings where gaps can be significant and confidence fragile.
There is also a practical, individualised element to the offer. The admissions information highlights the ability to specialise the curriculum to the needs of the individual, which is typically what parents and commissioning local authorities are looking for when mainstream has not worked.
Destination figures are not published for leavers from this school, and the school website pages reviewed do not provide a quantified university, apprenticeship, or employment breakdown.
What can be said with confidence is that the school’s stated intent is preparation for “next steps” through a curriculum geared to age and ability, plus a strong emphasis on personal development and re-engagement. In practice, parents should probe how transition is handled for different profiles, for example, reintegration into mainstream or specialist college routes, and what support is offered for applications, interviews, and supported transitions.
Admissions operate through referral rather than a single annual deadline. The school welcomes referrals from local authorities, schools, and parents, and notes that funding is discussed with the current school or local authority.
The process is staged and suitability-led: initial discussions, a visit to understand the environment, review of documentation, and a face-to-face meeting with parent or carer and the young person before any offer. If a place is offered, an integration meeting follows to plan arrangements.
Because this is an EHCP-led model, families should treat “open day” language as a prompt to arrange a visit, rather than assuming there is a fixed calendar of open events.
Wellbeing is positioned as central rather than an add-on, with timetabled wellbeing sessions and access to therapeutic support where required. The school also uses key worker-style support, assigning each student a member of staff for guidance at critical points.
Safeguarding is a core non-negotiable for any alternative placement. The routine inspection confirms safeguarding arrangements were effective at the time of inspection.
Extracurricular provision is structured, short, and frequent, which suits many students who need predictable routines and manageable commitments.
The school publishes a club programme for the 2025 to 2026 academic year, including Boxing Club, Multi-Sports Club, Coding Club, Photography Club, and booster-style academic support such as Maths Booster, Literacy Booster, and Art GCSE coursework support. Breakfast club and after-school clubs are described as free of charge, with termly booking.
The most recent routine inspection also references a wider enrichment mix, including hairdressing club, book club, and wellness club, which aligns with the school’s stated balance between academic re-engagement and personal development.
Penarth Group School is an independent day school. The most recent Ofsted material change inspection (September 2025) lists annual fees for day pupils as £61,200.
In practice, placements are commonly commissioned. The school’s admissions information states that funding is discussed with the local authority or the student’s current school, and the most recent material change inspection records that pupils on roll had EHCPs and were paid for by a local authority.
The website pages reviewed did not publish bursary or scholarship arrangements, so parents considering a self-funded placement should ask for a written schedule of what is included and what is charged separately.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
The website publishes operational timings for clubs: Breakfast Club runs 9.00am to 9.15am on weekdays, and after-school clubs run 3.00pm to 3.30pm on Mondays and Wednesdays during term time.
Core start and finish times for the main teaching day are not clearly stated on the School Day page (it appears as an image-led page), so parents should confirm daily timings, transport expectations, and handover arrangements directly with the school.
For travel, the school is in South Reddish, Stockport; practical access is typically by local road routes, and families should confirm on-site parking and safe drop-off arrangements during a visit.
Very small roll. The low student numbers can be a strength for personalised support, but it also means a narrower peer group and fewer friendship options at any one time.
Referral and suitability model. Admission is not a standard annual intake; it is based on referral, documentation, and a fit assessment, which can take time to coordinate with local authority processes.
Curriculum still being refined in places. The most recent routine inspection notes that in a small number of subjects, curriculum sequencing was still being improved, which could affect consistency across all areas.
Cost and commissioning reality. The published annual fee figure is high, and most placements appear to be linked to EHCP commissioning; parents should clarify funding routes early.
Penarth Group School suits families seeking a specialist, small-scale secondary placement for a young person with an EHCP who needs re-engagement, structured wellbeing support, and a carefully adapted curriculum. The latest routine inspection outcomes, Good overall with Outstanding personal development, support the case for a school that takes student development seriously.
Who it suits: students who benefit from a small, predictable setting with clear expectations and strong adult support, especially after difficult experiences in mainstream.
The latest routine inspection judged the school Good overall, with Personal Development graded Outstanding. The report also confirms effective safeguarding at the time of inspection.
The most recent Ofsted material change inspection (September 2025) lists annual fees for day pupils as £61,200. Many placements are funded through local authority commissioning linked to an EHCP, so families should confirm funding routes during the referral process.
Admissions are referral-led rather than a single deadline. Referrals can come from local authorities, schools, or parents, followed by suitability discussions, a visit, document review, and a meeting with the family and student before any offer.
The school describes provision for students with Social, Emotional and Mental Health needs, communication difficulties, and mild learning difficulties, and states that all students have an EHCP.
Published clubs for the 2025 to 2026 year include Boxing Club, Multi-Sports Club, Coding Club, Photography Club, and academic boosters such as Maths Booster and Literacy Booster. The routine inspection also references enrichment including hairdressing club, book club, and wellness club.
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