A small independent prep set in an 1850s Victorian, Grade II listed building, with a reputation that leans heavily on what happens at age 11. Founded in 1976, the school serves children from age 3 to 11, and keeps numbers deliberately low against a registered capacity of 71.
The current headteacher is Stephen Usher, who is also listed as the Designated Safeguarding Lead on the school’s staff pages and 2025/26 policy documents.
The latest inspection, an October 2024 Ofsted independent school standards inspection, judged the school Good overall, with Good across the key areas, and confirmed that the independent school standards were met.
Small-school intimacy is the defining feature here. Official commentary describes pupils forming close bonds across age groups, with a polite tone and a sense of safety that comes from everyone knowing everyone else.
The setting matters. The school’s own history notes that it occupies an 1850s building with original features, and that the site includes the Jubilee Garden, referenced in the 2024 inspection narrative as part of daily routine.
Values are presented explicitly and repeatedly. The school lists Self Belief, Growth, Belonging, Perseverance, and Unity as its core values, and uses these to frame expectations around confidence, resilience, and peer responsibility. Its motto is Where Successful Futures Begin, which signals a clear emphasis on preparation for the next stage rather than a purely “in the moment” early years experience.
What parents can verify instead is how learning is described in formal external review, and how the school accounts for progression at 11.
Early reading is treated as a priority in the most recent inspection narrative: children begin learning to read quickly, staff deliver the phonics programme consistently, and reading books are matched carefully to stage.
In curriculum terms, the school presents a structured offer that blends traditional primary coverage with a strong “performance” element in speaking, music, and preparation for selective senior schools. A practical implication for families is that children who enjoy performing, presenting, and competing tend to find lots of opportunity to practise those muscles early, while children who prefer a quieter or less structured approach may need reassurance about pace and expectations.
The school’s description of classroom practice focuses on individual attention, including stated weekly individual time with the form teacher. That will appeal to families who want problems spotted early and addressed without waiting for end-of-term reports.
Specialist inputs are more specific than many small preps manage. Speech and drama teaching is described as weekly, with pupils entered for London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA) examinations, and there is clear emphasis on building public speaking and interview readiness over time.
Sport and swimming are also presented as structured rather than ad hoc. Coaching for physical education is described as delivered via Stockport County community outreach, and Years 3 to 6 have swimming lessons at Stockport’s Grand Central Pool on Friday afternoons throughout the year.
For a school of this size, “destination thinking” is central. The school publicly lists recent acceptances to senior schools including Stockport Grammar School, Cheadle Hulme School, St Bede's College, Manchester High School for Girls, and Alderley Edge School for Girls. It also references Withington in the same list.
In a February 2025 notice, the school states that all Year 6 children received multiple offers from schools of choice, including local grammar schools, and that some pupils were awarded academic scholarships linked to performance in written exams. Treat that as a statement of the school’s own record rather than an independently audited statistic, but it is still useful as an indicator of what the school is optimised for: selective transition outcomes, interviews, and confidence under pressure.
Admissions are positioned as relationship-led rather than calendar-led. The school states that it welcomes children into all year groups and offers regular personal tours, plus taster sessions by arrangement.
For parents targeting 2026 entry points, the practical takeaway is that you should expect a rolling conversation rather than a single deadline. Open events are described as typically taking place early September (with the most recently advertised one framed around September 2025), so the pattern appears to be early autumn visibility, then individual tours and follow-up.
The school is described in official documentation as non-selective, and the registered capacity is 71, which matters because even modest demand can tighten availability when the roll is intentionally small.
Parents comparing options can use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to track a shortlist and keep admissions notes, then use Map Search to sanity-check travel time and day-to-day logistics before committing.
The pastoral model leans on scale and routine. A buddy system pairs new starters with older pupils, and the school explicitly frames this as a confidence-building approach to settling in.
Safeguarding is described as effective in the latest inspection reporting, and the school’s published rules emphasise attendance reporting, punctual collection, and clear boundaries around behaviour and safety.
One thing that stands out is the way the school describes transitions: it is very explicit about collection timing and how After School Club is used when parents are delayed, which can be reassuring for working families who value predictability.
For a small school, the co-curricular menu is unusually named and specific.
Art Club runs weekly, led by a local artist who comes into school at lunchtime on Thursdays.
A French conversation club and a chess tournament are listed among termly activities.
Choir is positioned as a key strand, including participation in local festivals and performances in the community.
A Wednesday after-school sports club is described as offering tuition across sports and games.
Gardening is not just a poster-word; the Jubilee Garden is referenced as part of everyday school life.
A 2025/26 curriculum policy document also references enrichment structures such as a Debating Club and a Book Circle at points in the year, alongside School Council, positioning oracy and structured discussion as ongoing habits rather than one-off events.
For the 2025/26 academic year, the school’s published fees are £11,160 for Years 1 and 2, and £11,400 for Years 3 to 6 (stated as including swimming lesson costs). The school also describes payment by standing order across 10 monthly instalments as an option.
For children aged 3 and 4, the school states that a free place is available via the government scheme, equivalent to 30 hours per week; specific early years fee amounts should be checked directly with the school.
Beyond tuition, After School Club pricing is shown as £9 per session on the admissions and fees page, and there will also be typical extras such as uniform, trips, and optional peripatetic lessons (for example, instrumental tuition).
The website content reviewed does not publish a clear bursary percentage or means-tested support framework, so families for whom affordability depends on assistance should ask directly what is available and how it is assessed.
Fees data coming soon.
The school day finish time is clearly stated as 15:05. Early morning drop-off starts from 08:00 and is described as free of charge, while After School Club typically runs until 17:30 and includes a snack plus activities such as arts and crafts, board games, and outdoor play.
For travel, Heaton Mersey sits close to rail links into Manchester; many families will find Heaton Chapel railway station a practical reference point for public transport planning.
Tiny cohort sizes. The close-knit feel is a strength, but it can also mean fewer peer-group options within an age group, and a narrower range of facilities than larger preps.
Selective transition focus. Senior-school preparation, including confidence in exams and interviews, is a core theme. That suits some children brilliantly; others may prefer a less transition-driven primary experience.
Systems still being tightened. Inspectors also identified areas to strengthen, including more consistent proprietor oversight of ongoing standards compliance, earlier identification of special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), and clearer sequencing in some subject curricula.
Fees are meaningful, and aid clarity matters. Published fees are mid-range for an independent prep, but the site does not set out bursary rules in a parent-ready way, so you may need a direct conversation early.
This is a small, relationship-led prep that concentrates on confidence, individual attention, and a strong transition story at 11, including selective senior-school routes. It suits families who want a tightly managed environment, clear routines, and a school that actively prepares children for competitive next-step admissions. The main trade-off is scale, both in cohort breadth and in on-site facilities, plus the need to clarify affordability support if financial assistance is important.
The most recent official inspection (October 2024) judged the school Good overall, with Good across education quality, behaviour, personal development, leadership, and early years. It is a small school, and the published material places significant emphasis on preparation for senior-school entry at 11.
For 2025/26, published fees are £11,160 per year for Years 1 to 2, and £11,400 per year for Years 3 to 6, with swimming costs included in those figures.
Yes. The school takes children from age 3. It states that children aged 3 and 4 are entitled to a free place via the government scheme equivalent to 30 hours per week; families should confirm the practical detail directly with the school.
The school lists recent destinations including Stockport Grammar, Cheadle Hulme, St Bede’s, Manchester High School for Girls, and Alderley Edge School for Girls, and also references Withington. It also states that Year 6 pupils receive offers from local grammar schools, with some scholarship awards reported.
Early drop-off starts from 08:00 and is described as free. After School Club typically runs from 15:05 to 17:30, with a snack and structured activities.
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