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.
A small prep where the setting does a lot of the talking. Worthy Park House, the school’s home, sits in generous grounds above the Itchen Valley, and the school has leaned into outdoor learning as a daily norm, not a marketing line. The school is part of the wider King Edward VI (KES) family of schools, and since September 2025 that relationship has been formalised through a merger, with a defined progression route to KES Senior School for pupils who meet the required standard.
Leadership is stable and visible. Mr Adam King has been headmaster since September 2022, and the school has recently expanded capacity to 330.
There is a particular kind of confidence that comes from being a small school in a large landscape. Here, outdoor space is positioned as a learning environment, not just a play break between lessons. The website puts forest school and woodland learning front and centre, with weekly sessions described as a core part of the experience across the early years.
The physical context is unusually distinctive for a prep. Worthy Park House (built in 1820 and designed by Sir Robert Smirke) anchors the estate, and the site’s history is presented as part of the school’s identity. In 2023 the school added an amphitheatre overlooking the South Downs, used for performances and events. That combination, formal architecture plus newer outdoor performance space, gives the place a “country-house prep” feel, without implying that daily life is overly formal.
Community rituals are clearly part of the rhythm. The school describes regular parent-facing moments, including assemblies and events that bring families in, as well as match teas after sport fixtures. These details matter to parents because they signal how visible the school is, and how easy it is to stay connected to day-to-day life once your child is settled.
On pastoral tone, the school’s own language emphasises belonging and open communication, and it backs that up with named systems rather than generic reassurance. A buddy structure pairs Year 6 pupils with younger pupils, and there are specific lunchtime groups such as Friendship Fridays and Matey Mondays, run by the school counsellor. A school dog, Monty (a Pets As Therapy dog), is used as part of confidence-building and wellbeing work, always supervised.
As an independent prep, the most meaningful “results” for most families are the two transition outcomes that matter at 11: the quality of preparation, and where pupils go next.
One data point the school publishes is scholarship success. In March 2025 it reported 23 scholarships in a single Year 6 cohort, including 10 for academic awards, across academic, sport, performing arts, and art. That is a strong indicator of preparation for selective senior-school entry, and it also suggests the school is structured to support children with different strengths, not just the purely academic profile.
Formal external evaluation also supports the “preparation for next step” picture, although parents should read it in the right context. The latest ISI inspection activity was a material change inspection dated March 2024 (linked to the school’s proposal to increase capacity), and the relevant standards were met, including safeguarding.
Teaching is presented as broad and specialist-led. You see that in the way the school describes subject-specific spaces and routines, for example the Design and Technology workshop and the emphasis on discussion, enquiry, and making.
Digital learning is integrated in a practical way rather than as a headline promise. Fees information notes that a Chromebook is provided for pupils in Years 4 to 6, and that helps clarify what “digital learning” means in day-to-day terms for older pupils.
In the early years, the school describes learning through purposeful play with a mix of child-initiated and adult-directed activity, flowing indoors and outdoors. For families weighing nursery and Reception readiness, that matters because it signals an approach that prioritises language, social development, and habits for learning, with a clear expectation that children will transition into Reception the following year.
For a prep, destinations are the most parent-relevant outcome, and here the school is unusually explicit about one route.
The partnership with the King Edward VI family includes the Head’s Recommendation Pathway, described as providing a guaranteed place in Year 7 at KES Senior School for pupils who meet the appropriate standard and would thrive there. That is a meaningful reduction in uncertainty for families who see KES as the preferred destination, and it also gives pupils a defined target to work towards in the later prep years.
Alongside that pathway, the school frames its Year 5 and Year 6 “Pathway Programme” as preparation for competitive senior-school entrance assessments, specifically referencing English, mathematics, science, and verbal and non-verbal reasoning.
The scholarship post adds colour on how transition preparation is handled culturally. The AIM Higher Programme is described as a set of experiences after entrance examinations, including a climb up Helvellyn, workshops with performing arts companies, a whole-school production of a West End musical (The Lion King, in that year), and a week-long residential. The value is not the headline activities themselves, it is the way the school uses challenge, performance, and time away from home to build confidence before the move to senior school.
Admissions are direct to the school rather than local authority coordinated. The process described on the school site follows a clear sequence: visit, registration, familiarisation day, then offer. Familiarisation days are described as running regularly through the year, with assessment based on academic ability, wider interests, character, behaviour, and readiness to thrive.
A specific cost is published for registration: £120, described as non-returnable.
For 2026 entry, the school advertises an open day on Friday 8 May 2026 at 10am. If families cannot make that date, the school indicates that 1:1 visits can be arranged.
Bursaries are positioned as a route to access from Year 3 upwards, and the school states that applications must be submitted by 1 February for a bursary requested for the following academic year. That timing is important, it is earlier than many parents expect, and it means families should plan well ahead if financial assistance is a key part of affordability.
Pastoral structures are described with more detail than many schools publish, which makes it easier for parents to judge fit.
There is a named pastoral care team, plus a counsellor (also described as an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant), and the school explicitly offers one-to-one counselling support for children identified as needing social or emotional help, with parent permission. There is also a buddy system in which Year 6 pupils support younger pupils, and peer support is presented as a taught skill for low-level playground situations, with adults supervising.
Medical care is not treated as a footnote. The matron is described as a qualified nurse and deputy designated safeguarding lead, with a visible role in training staff in first aid, and in day-to-day support for pupils. That clarity will reassure families managing allergies, asthma, or more complex care needs, even if the school remains an academically mainstream setting.
The extracurricular offer has three identifiable pillars: outdoor learning, sport, and performing arts, with leadership and sustainability threaded through.
Forest school is described as a weekly experience supporting independence and confidence, and the wider pupil leadership model includes a School Council and a Green Team. The School Council is described as meeting weekly, feeding ideas into school life, and running fundraising initiatives. The Green Team is described as leading an annual environmental review and action plan, with the school referencing Eco-Schools Distinction. The school also references an RHS-accredited gardening club and pupil-grown produce supporting sustainability initiatives.
In team games, older pupils choose between football or netball in the autumn and hockey or rugby in the spring, with cricket for all pupils in the summer. Clubs listed include football, tennis, gymnastics and fencing for younger pupils, and options such as karate, street dance, and yoga as pupils move into prep. Match teas, and welcoming parents and grandparents to fixtures, hint at a culture where sport is social as well as competitive.
The amphitheatre provides an outdoor performance setting, and the school’s scholarship and transition narrative repeatedly returns to performance as a confidence lever. The AIM Higher Programme references a full school production of a West End musical, and the school also offers LAMDA lessons as an optional extra, which signals that speech and drama sits as a structured pathway rather than a casual club.
This is an independent school with published termly fees (three terms per academic year). From September 2025 the fees are stated as inclusive of VAT.
For the 2025 to 2026 fee year, the school lists the following per-term fees:
Reception to Year 2: £5,035 per term
Year 3: £7,303 per term
Years 4 to 6: £8,005 per term
Published fee inclusions are unusually specific: school lunch, personal accident and dental insurance, and a Chromebook for pupils in Years 4 to 6. The school also flags common extras, including after-school co-curricular activities, individual music tuition, learning support lessons, LAMDA, residential trips, plus an opt-in pupil absence insurance scheme.
Bursaries are available and positioned for Year 3 entry and above, with an application deadline of 1 February for support in the following academic year. Scholarships are referenced through the school’s published scholarship outcomes, but the school does not publish a standardised percentage discount, so families should expect awards to vary by senior school and category.
Nursery fee details are provided via the school directly and should be checked on the official channels, as early years pricing and funded-hour eligibility can vary.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per term
The school publishes a structured day with clear timings. Registration is at 8.25am, and the day ends at 4.10pm. After-school clubs run 4.10pm to 5.10pm, with a late minibus departure at 5.20pm. The school also describes an early morning arrival window and a first minibus pick-up at 7.25am, which effectively functions as wraparound for many families.
Transport is unusually prominent for a prep. The school describes a free minibus service covering a wide area, run by MiDAS-accredited staff, with three runs per day, morning, after school, and after clubs.
Fees and extras can add up. Lunch, insurance, and a device (Years 4 to 6) are included, but activities, music tuition, learning support, LAMDA and trips are charged on top.
Bursary timing is early. The published 1 February deadline means families relying on financial assistance need to plan well ahead, particularly for Year 3 entry where bursary support is positioned.
A long day is available, but it is still a long day. The standard finish is 4.10pm, with clubs to 5.10pm and late transport at 5.20pm. That suits many working families, but some younger children may find five days of extended hours tiring.
Transition is part of the proposition. The KES pathway offers clarity for families aiming for that destination, but families who want a different senior-school route should look closely at how the school supports varied 11+ preparation.
This is a prep where setting, outdoor learning, and structured pastoral systems are central, and where senior-school transition is treated as a designed journey rather than a single exam moment. The published scholarship outcomes, plus the explicit KES progression route, will appeal to families who want both ambition and a child-centred early years approach. Best suited to families who value outdoor learning, clear daily routines, and a defined pathway to senior school, and who are comfortable with the independent-school fee model including extras.
For families looking at prep schools, the strongest indicators here are transition outcomes and wellbeing systems. The school reports 23 scholarships in its Year 6 cohort in 2025, across academic, sport, performing arts, and art, which points to effective preparation for competitive senior-school entry. The school also publishes detailed pastoral structures, including a counsellor-led lunchtime programme and a buddy system that links older pupils with younger children.
For 2025 to 2026, the school lists termly fees of £5,035 per term for Reception to Year 2, £7,303 per term for Year 3, and £8,005 per term for Years 4 to 6. Fees are stated as inclusive of VAT from September 2025. Nursery fee information should be checked directly with the school.
Admissions are direct to the school. Families are encouraged to visit and then register, followed by a familiarisation day that the school describes as relaxed and supportive. The school says it assesses a child’s academic ability, interests, character, behaviour, and overall readiness to thrive. Registration carries a published £120 fee.
The school advertises an open day on Friday 8 May 2026 at 10am. Families who cannot attend that date can arrange a visit separately.
The school publishes a day that runs from registration at 8.25am to an end time of 4.10pm, with clubs until 5.10pm and a late minibus departure at 5.20pm. It also describes a free minibus service operating morning, after school, and after clubs.
The school describes a Head’s Recommendation Pathway that can provide a guaranteed Year 7 place at KES Senior School for pupils who meet the appropriate standard and would thrive there. It also reports scholarships awarded by a range of senior schools, which suggests destinations extend beyond a single route.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.