A free school promising individualised curricula for every pupil is being proposed.

Aiming to open in September 2015, the school could cost up to £15 million to build and would employ radical schooling techniques like online learning at home with just practical projects in the classroom.

A public meeting is to be held on tomorrow informing parents in Wimbledon about the new proposals. Mother-of -two Nikki O’Rourke is behind the movement.

She said: "Merton hasn’t got enough places so there is a real need for it "In Wimbledon the two schools we’re closest to are over-subscribed."

Mrs O’Rourke, of Edge Hill, Wimbledon, would like to see dramatic changes in how schooling is delivered.

She said: "I want to have a school that is child-led where each child has their own individual curriculum."

A primary school teacher for eight years, Mrs O’Rourke, 35, wants to employ a combination of teachers and industry professionals to run practical projects making school more enjoyable for children.

She said: "The most important thing is that school should be a place that is amazing and interesting for children. We’ve now got the technology and the expertise available to do that. It seems crazy to me that school isn’t a favourite place for children."

Her ambitions include teaching children aged four to 19 individual curriculums organised to revolve around a family life, with the school open from 8am to 6pm.

For the project to launch 30 children must be signed up, a board of governors assembled and a site for the school secured.

The Centre Court car park and the Dairy Crest dairy were both suggested as possible sites but nothing can be confirmed until the application has been approved by the Secretary of State.