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· 4+ Readiness Classes · Saturday 9am · Barnet

4+ readiness classes in Barnet — building real confidence.

Small-group sessions every Saturday morning in Barnet, building the confidence, communication and core skills your child needs for 4+ independent school entry — in a warm, playful environment they will love.

★★★★★ Trusted by 200+ North London families

2026 schedule

Choose your term

Four termly packages a year. Saturday mornings, 9:00 to 10:00am, in person in Barnet. Roughly fortnightly Saturdays, three to five sessions per term. Max 8 children per group, taught by a qualified early years specialist. From £105 per term, all materials included.

Spring · Completed

Spring Term 2026

Foundations: confident communication, calm listening, fine motor coordination, the social skills assessment day rewards.

Saturdays · 9–10am

£140/ term

4 sessions

Summer · In progress

Summer Term 2026

Building on foundations: deeper number, early literacy, and the quiet independence assessors look for when your child walks in alone.

Saturdays · 9–10am

£175/ term

5 sessions

Autumn · Now booking

Autumn Term 2026

The pre-assessment term. We move from foundations into assessment-ready habits: longer listening tasks, structured table work, the calm independence selective schools look for.

Saturdays · 9–10am

✦ 12 September is our 4+ Mock Assessment day.

Book a mock the morning before Autumn Term starts and your child arrives at session one with a CLIMB-scored report in hand. Book a mock →

£105/ term

3 sessions

Christmas · Now booking

Christmas Term 2026

The final term before January assessments. Polished, assessment-ready preparation in a familiar small group your child knows by name.

Saturdays · 9–10am

£140/ term

4 sessions

The curriculum

What we cover in every session

Every Saturday session is built around the CLIMB framework — the five pillars of 4+ readiness we developed over 20+ years preparing children for entry to London's top independent schools. CLIMB is also how every Diagnostic and Mock Assessment report scores your child, so what we teach maps directly onto what we measure.

🗣️

C · Communication & Language

The pillar assessors notice first, and the one that signals school-ready most clearly. Children practise expressing themselves in full sentences, describing what they see, asking and answering questions, and engaging in conversation with a teacher who is not their parent.

Storytelling

Group talk

Vocabulary

Description

👂

L · Listening & Following Instructions

Can your child hear a two-step instruction and carry it out without reminders? Sustain focus during a story or task for five to ten minutes? Listening is built quietly, in small moments, through games and structured story-time, calibrated to age-appropriate attention spans.

Two-step instructions

Story focus

Active listening

Memory games

💪

I · Independence & Social Confidence

Every session runs with independent drop-off from week one. Children learn to separate calmly, settle with unfamiliar adults, take turns, share, and work alongside peers they have just met. This is the pillar most parents under-prepare for, and the one assessors weight most heavily.

Drop-off

Turn-taking

Sharing

Self-regulation

✏️

M · Motor Skills & Mark-Making

Pencil control, drawing a recognisable person, scissor work, threading, puzzles, construction with LEGO and Duplo. Schools assess this directly. Activities feel like play but build the fine-motor foundation that Reception teachers expect children to walk in with.

Pencil control

Cutting

Drawing

Building

Threading

B · Brightness

The curiosity, engagement and warmth that makes one child stand out in a room of equally capable peers. The child who asks 'what is that for?' before being invited to. Brightness cannot be drilled, only nurtured, through open-ended exploration tasks and unhurried teacher questioning.

Curiosity

Engagement

Open-ended play

Imagination

A common misconception: children need to count to 100, recite phonics, or read simple words. They do not. What 4+ assessors notice is whether your child can sit in a group, follow a two-step instruction, use full sentences, and engage warmly with an unfamiliar adult. CLIMB is built around what schools actually observe.

- Watch · 90 seconds

What do our 4+ Readiness Classes actually look like?

See how we build confidence, communication and core skills in our small-group Saturday sessions in Barnet — warm, playful and purposeful.

- Our biggest differentiator

Why the group setting changes everything

One-to-one tutoring can build academic skills. But it cannot build the skills that 4+ assessors are actually watching most closely — social confidence, group behaviour, and the ability to separate calmly and perform in front of strangers.

"A child who has only ever worked one-to-one walks into a group assessment and meets something they have never practised. Our children walk in and think — I've done this before."

— Reena Damani, Founder & 4+ Specialist

🚪

Drop-off confidence — from day one

Every session begins with an independent drop-off. No parent in the room. This is exactly what happens on real assessment day. The first drop-off can be hard — but by session three, most children walk in without a backward glance. This transformation is one of the most powerful things we offer.

👦

Comfortable working alongside peers

4+ assessments are fundamentally group experiences. Children who have only ever worked one-to-one can struggle alongside unfamiliar peers — unsure how to share, take turns, or cooperate. Our children have done this every Saturday. They are completely at ease.

🖐️

Contributing, responding, engaging

Assessors watch whether children raise their hand, respond to questions, and engage with adults they have never met. In our group sessions, children practise exactly this — week after week, in a safe environment where it feels natural rather than nerve-wracking.

🔍

Small enough for every child to be seen

Maximum 8 children means our teacher sees every child, every session. No child gets lost. No child gets away with not engaging. This combination — genuinely small groups with an expert teacher — is what makes the progress so consistent and measurable.

What to bring

🎒

Nothing academic

We supply all materials. No workbooks, no homework to prepare.

💧

Water bottle

Labelled with your child’s name, please.

😊

A calm goodbye

Keep it short and confident. Children follow your lead — every time.

🚗

Arrive at 9am

Sessions start promptly. A settled arrival makes a real difference.

Also consider: 4+ Mock Assessments

Test everything your child is building in class, in a realistic mock setting. Written report within 48 hours.

- Every Saturday

A typical readiness class

One hour. Eight children. One expert teacher. Every minute planned — and every activity designed to feel like the best kind of morning.

9:00 AM
Arrival & independent drop-off

Children arrive and are greeted by name. Parents say goodbye at the door. Children are settled warmly into the group. This moment is practised every week until it becomes completely natural. Builds Independence.

🔑 The most important two minutes of the session

9:05 AM
Circle time & group conversation

The group gathers for a short, engaging starter, a story, a question, a vocabulary game. Children practise sustained listening, waiting their turn, and contributing confidently to a group discussion. Builds Communication and Listening.

09:20 AM
Mark-making & pencil work

Pencil control, drawing prompts, structured cutting and threading tasks, and letter-shape activities embedded as play. Fine-motor habits built in naturally throughout the session. Builds Motor skills.

09:40 AM
Short movement break

A brief, structured transition, not passive free play. Children practise following two-step instructions and moving calmly between activities. Assessors observe this closely on real assessment days. Builds Listening and Independence.

09:45 AM
Collaborative task

Sorting games, pattern challenges, puzzles, problem-solving with a partner. Delivered as small-group activities so children practise working alongside peers, not just independently. Builds Communication and Independence.

09:55 AM
Open-ended exploration

Drawing, building, crafting or imaginative play. Open-ended by design, children are encouraged to make their own choices and explain their thinking. This is exactly the type of activity assessors use to observe Brightness: curiosity, engagement, and warmth.

10:00 AM
Collection

Children are collected by their named parent or guardian. The teacher notes any observations against the five CLIMB pillars for the week's progress notes, sent to parents by end of day Saturday.

📝 Weekly CLIMB-anchored notes sent to parents same day

Success rate 2025/26 cohort
0 % +
Max children per class
0

Sat

9am · weekly term-time

Schools we prepare for
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Years of 4+ expertise
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Between sessions

Tips for home reinforcement

Short, playful activities you can weave into everyday life — no desk, no workbooks, no pressure. These are the things that compound the progress made in class.

📖

Read together every day

10 minutes of shared reading — pause and ask "what do you think happens next?" Builds listening, prediction and language skills. Use the pictures too, not just the words.

🔢

Count everything

Stairs, grapes, socks. Count up, count down, count in 2s. Make it a game. Number confidence is one of the clearest differentiators at 4+ — and it can be built on the school run.

✂️

Hands-on crafts

Cutting, sticking, threading, drawing — fine motor skills matter. Children who struggle to hold a pencil or use scissors confidently are at a disadvantage. Build these skills through play.

🗣️

Ask open questions

"What was the best part of your day?" "Why do you think that happened?" Children who can articulate their thoughts clearly, and listen while others speak, stand out in group sessions.

🎲

Play board games

Snakes & ladders, Uno, dominoes — turn-taking, following rules, winning and losing gracefully. These social skills are assessed informally throughout every 4+ day. Build them at home first.

👋

Practise independence

Encourage your child to put on their own coat, pour a drink, tidy up after themselves. Children who can do things for themselves project confidence. Assessors notice immediately.

🎭

Imaginative play

"Let's pretend" develops language, creativity and the ability to take on different perspectives. Schools assess imagination and curiosity — both flourish when children play without screens.

👨‍👩‍👧

Practise goodbye

If your child struggles with drop-off, build short separation into everyday life — nursery, a playdate, a class. A calm and confident goodbye is one of the most important skills we build together.

🌿

Keep it calm and positive

Never tell your child they are "being assessed" or that they need to "do well". Anxiety is contagious. Your calm is the most powerful preparation tool you have. Trust the process.

What parents say

Real families. Real progress.

4+ · Haberdashers' Boys'

"After just four Saturdays, the change in our son was visible. He had never been in a group without us before. By week three he was walking in smiling and didn't look back once."

SP

Sarah P.

BLS Stanmore · 2025

4+ · NLCS

"What I loved most was that Reena told me every week what we could do at home to reinforce what they'd covered. It felt genuinely joined-up — class and home working together."

KA

Karen A.

Edgware · 2025

4+ · Highgate

"My daughter had never been around other children she didn't know. After six Saturdays she was chatting to classmates like she'd known them for years. Highgate offered her a place."

MB

Meera B.

Finchley · 2024

Questions answered

Frequently asked questions

Our readiness classes are for children aged 3–4 preparing for 4+ entry to London's independent schools. Most children start between age 2.5 and 3.5, depending on when their real assessments are scheduled. If you're unsure whether your child is ready, just get in touch — we're happy to advise.

Maximum 8 children allows our teacher to give every child direct attention in every session. No child gets lost in the group, and no child can disengage without it being noticed and addressed. It also means the social dynamic stays manageable — children learn to work within a group, not get overwhelmed by one.

Absolutely. While we are the official preparation partner of Bright Little Stars, our Saturday readiness classes are open to all families regardless of nursery. Non-BLS children consistently achieve the same excellent outcomes as BLS children — great teaching works for everyone.

As a rule, starting 6–12 months before assessment day gives enough time to benefit from classes and complete 2–3 mocks. Most 4+ assessments take place between October and February, so many families start their Saturday classes in January or February of the year before. If you've left it later, don't worry — even 6–8 weeks of classes makes a meaningful difference.

No — and that's deliberate. Children drop off independently from the very first session. This is exactly what happens on real assessment day. A child who has practised separating calmly dozens of times arrives at their real assessment completely settled. We build this confidence gradually and gently — by the third or fourth session, most children are walking in without hesitation.

They work brilliantly together. Readiness classes build skills week by week. Mock assessments test those skills in realistic assessment conditions and give you a detailed written report. Most families who do both see the strongest outcomes. But both are also valuable independently — ask us what we'd recommend for your child specifically.

This is exactly why the readiness classes exist. Shy children often benefit the most — because they get the time and repetition they need to build comfort in a group setting, with consistent adults and consistent routines. We are experienced at welcoming and settling children who find new environments challenging. Please do share any concerns when you enquire — we'll make sure your child's first session is handled with extra care.

We send weekly progress notes every Saturday that include specific, practical suggestions for what to do at home that week — based on what we covered in class. Nothing academic. Activities that feel like play: reading together, counting games, crafts, board games. The home reinforcement section on this page gives a good overview of the kinds of activities we recommend.

Saturday mornings that build
genuine confidence.

Max 8 children. Expert teacher. Independent drop-off. Weekly progress notes. Everything your child needs for 4+ success — every Saturday morning in Barnet.