Greenfields School

Greenfields School is an independent, co-educational day and boarding public school for boys and girls aged 3 to 18 in Forest Row, East Sussex, England. It has a Montessori-based Pre-school & Reception class, followed by Infant, Junior, Senior, 6th Form and EFL (English as a Foreign Language) classes. The school uses the Cambridge Curriculum and is a member of the Independent Schools Council.

History
The school was founded in 1981 by Margaret Hodkin and moved to Forest Row in 1983. It is run by the Greenfields Educational Trust, a registered charity. it has about 180 pupils, of whom 30 are boarders.

Study method
Greenfields uses a study method called Study Technology which is a teaching method developed by Church of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, and licensed from U.S. non-profit educational organization Applied Scholastics. The school's website states that it does not teach any religious philosophies and includes children of all nationalities, cultures and religions.

The school has English as a Foreign Language programmes for international students. Summer holiday programmes run from June to August, minimum stay 1 week. The school also runs English programmes all year around for children from 10 to 18 years old. Boarding is on-campus and the school also has many day students.

The school is inspected by the Independent Schools Inspectorate; an inspection was last conducted in 2024. It noted that standards relating to the quality of education and to leadership and management were not met but that new leaders had only recently taken up their roles.

Buildings
Recent building developments have included a new four-classroom block in the Senior School, a purpose-built Sports Hall in the Lower School and a complete renovation of the Main Senior Building.

Notable alumni

 * Shannon Tarbet, actress

Press reports
In 1994, one of the teachers from the school was jailed for five years after he admitted sexually molesting teenage pupils.

In 2006, a detailed article was published by Tes in which the teaching methods used by the school were discussed. It pointed out that these had been praised by school inspectors from the Independent Schools Inspectorate. The Financial Times had said the school had the most improved A-level results for an independent school and had ranked it at number 46th in England. At that time, 90 per cent of teachers and 80 per cent of pupils were from Scientologist backgrounds but the deputy head said that its religious philosophies were not being taught.

A 2012 newspaper report suggested that many students left the school after completing their GCSEs, without going on to the sixth form, in order to transfer to Sea Org. Another similar report calls this a "rumour" but notes that, owing to the school's proximity to Scientology's UK headquarters and the teaching methods used, it attracts children whose parents are employed there.

During the Covid pandemic, the trust running the school was given £200,000 in UK government support.