Evergreen is an exceptionally small independent school in Ipstones, Staffordshire, registered for pupils aged 7 to 16 with capacity for 8 and a roll of 7 at the most recent inspection snapshot.
This is not a conventional all through school in the mainstream sense. Evergreen operates as a specialist setting for pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities, many with education, health and care plans (EHCPs) and histories of disrupted schooling. The core purpose is stabilisation, re engagement with learning, and rebuilding day to day readiness for education, with reintegration to mainstream a stated aim across the Roaches School network.
The most recent full inspection (September 2025) judged the school Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes judged Outstanding, and confirmed that the independent school standards were met.
The defining feature here is scale. With only a handful of pupils, relationships become the organising principle of the school day. The latest inspection describes strong, nurturing relationships, pupils feeling safe and secure, and a calm culture that helps confidence, independence and self esteem to develop.
Behaviour is the clearest headline strength. Behaviour and attitudes were judged Outstanding at the September 2025 inspection, with routines and boundaries described as clear and predictable. Staff consistency matters particularly in settings supporting social, emotional and mental health needs, because predictability reduces triggers and helps pupils stay regulated and ready to learn.
The school sits within the Roaches School network. The network language on mission and aims is explicit about a supportive, family atmosphere and the goal of reintegration to mainstream education where possible.
Leadership context is important when reading the latest inspection. The report notes that the acting headteacher had been in post for eight days at the time of the September 2025 inspection. That usually signals transition, and parents commissioning authorities will want to understand leadership stability, day to day continuity, and who holds key safeguarding responsibilities at present.
Evergreen does not publish standard public exam and ranking metrics in the way most parents expect, and contains no performance figures for primary assessments or GCSE measures. That is consistent with the school’s profile and size, plus the fact that pupils often arrive with significant gaps in prior learning and uneven attendance histories.
What you can use instead is the way the curriculum and progress are described in formal evaluations. The September 2025 inspection reports high expectations for pupils’ learning and a thoughtfully designed curriculum intended to close gaps and prepare pupils for next steps in education and adult life. Early reading is a concrete example, with regular phonics sessions, matched reading books, and routine checks to identify who needs extra practice.
Teaching here is built around precision and responsiveness, because pupils are not starting from a typical baseline. The curriculum is described as broad, balanced and ambitious, with careful attention to the gaps pupils need to close to succeed academically.
A useful, specific takeaway from the September 2025 report is also the main improvement point. In a small number of subjects, the curriculum was judged less well developed, particularly around identifying the language structures and subject specific vocabulary pupils need. The implication is practical: families and commissioning teams should ask how subject vocabulary is planned and taught, especially for pupils with speech and language needs, and what has changed since autumn 2025.
This section looks different for a school of this type. Evergreen’s role is often to provide a stable placement for pupils who have missed significant chunks of education and who need additional support to re enter learning routines safely and successfully.
For some pupils, the long term goal is reintegration to mainstream education. That aim is stated clearly in the Roaches School network mission. The practical question for families and placing authorities is how reintegration is assessed and staged, including what support is offered to the receiving school and how attendance, behaviour, and learning readiness are tracked during transition.
For others, the next step may be another specialist placement, alternative provision route, or post 16 pathway determined through EHCP planning. Evergreen itself notes that it does not intend to admit key stage 4 pupils, which is important for families of pupils approaching GCSE age.
Admissions at Evergreen are not a typical parent led application cycle with a single annual deadline. The school profile in the September 2025 inspection report describes pupils with EHCPs and looked after children placed from multiple local authorities, which strongly indicates placements are usually commissioned, with entry points triggered by needs and placement availability rather than a single September intake.
If you are exploring Evergreen, the useful steps are these:
Confirm the referral route for your situation, for many families this will be via the local authority SEND team and EHCP process, or via a corporate parent route for looked after children.
Ask what an initial assessment looks like, how long the transition period typically runs, and what evidence is used to judge readiness for a placement.
Clarify curriculum coverage by age and stage, particularly given the statement that the school does not intend to admit key stage 4 pupils.
A practical tip for families comparing options: FindMySchool’s tools are most useful here for shortlisting and ranking metrics are not available for this setting.
Wellbeing is not a bolt on here, it is the core operating model. The September 2025 inspection describes pupils trusting that staff are available when worried, feeling safe and secure, and developing confidence and independence over time.
Behaviour support is framed as proactive and consistent. The report describes agreed staff strategies to meet social, emotional and mental health needs, alongside clear routines and boundaries that pupils respond to positively. That matters because progress is often unlocked by pupils becoming calm, regulated, and able to focus, before academic acceleration is realistic.
Safeguarding was judged effective in the September 2025 inspection.
Enrichment is used as a lever for engagement, aspiration, and reintegration readiness. The September 2025 report gives several concrete examples of experiences and activities used to broaden horizons and build confidence, including dance classes, instrumental lessons, and outdoor education sessions.
There is also an explicit emphasis on learning about difference and community. The report references visits to a local church and a Buddhist retreat as part of developing pupils’ understanding of people’s lives that differ from their own, plus engagement with a local community library. These details are useful for parents, because they show personal development is delivered through lived experiences rather than abstract assemblies.
Evergreen is an independent school. The most recent published inspection information lists annual fees (day pupils) of £53,200.
For many pupils in specialist independent settings, fees are met through local authority commissioning as part of an EHCP package, or through looked after child placement funding routes. Evergreen does not publicly set out bursary or scholarship arrangements on the Roaches School network pages, so if you are exploring self funded routes you will need to request a current schedule and what is included.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
Evergreen is based at Greenhills Farm in Ipstones, and operates within a very small roll and capacity model.
Because publicly available information on timings, transport arrangements, and wraparound care is limited for this setting, families and commissioning teams should confirm start and finish times, transport responsibilities, and holiday patterns directly with the provider.
Key stage 4 coverage. The September 2025 inspection report states the school has not and does not intend to admit key stage 4 pupils. Families of pupils approaching GCSE age should clarify how the school plans for transition and accreditation pathways.
Leadership transition. The acting headteacher had been in post for eight days at the time of the September 2025 inspection. Ask who currently leads day to day, and how continuity is maintained for pupils who rely on stable routines.
Curriculum vocabulary development. The main improvement point in September 2025 related to subject specific vocabulary and language structures in a small number of subjects. Request an update on what has changed since the inspection and how impact is tracked for pupils with speech and language needs.
Ultra small peer group. A roll of 7 can be transformative for some pupils, especially those overwhelmed by large mainstream environments. It can also feel socially narrow for others, so it is worth exploring how the school builds social opportunities and prepares pupils for wider settings.
Evergreen is best understood as a highly specialist, micro scale independent setting within the Roaches School network, designed for pupils with significant additional needs and disrupted educational histories. The latest inspection confirms a Good overall judgement with Outstanding behaviour and a calm, predictable culture that helps pupils feel safe and ready to learn.
Who it suits: pupils who need intensive relational support, clear routines, and a very small environment to re engage with education, particularly where commissioning routes and EHCP planning are already in play. The main question for most families is not whether the provision is caring, but whether the school’s age stage coverage and transition planning match the child’s medium term pathway.
The latest full inspection (September 2025) judged Evergreen Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes judged Outstanding. Safeguarding was reported as effective, and the independent school standards were met.
Evergreen is an independent school. The most recent published inspection information lists annual fees (day pupils) of £53,200.
Placements are typically commissioned and linked to pupils’ needs, often involving EHCP routes and, in some cases, looked after children placements. Evergreen does not operate like a standard once a year application cycle, so families should clarify referral steps and assessment timelines for their situation.
The September 2025 inspection report states the school has not and does not intend to admit key stage 4 pupils. If GCSE age provision is needed, it is important to clarify transition and accreditation planning.
The latest inspection describes strong, nurturing staff relationships, predictable routines and boundaries, and very effective behaviour support, reflected in an Outstanding judgement for Behaviour and attitudes.
Get in touch with the school directly
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