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 large, community primary in Northcourt, Abingdon, with an age range from 2 to 11 and around 420 places overall. The school is oversubscribed for Reception entry, with 135 applications for 53 offers in the most recent admissions results, so families should assume competition for places is real rather than occasional.
Leadership is stable. Mr Samuel Bartholomew is the current headteacher, and a 2017 inspection letter notes he took up the post in September 2016.
The latest inspection uses Ofsted’s newer grading language rather than the older single word judgement. The 25 November 2025 inspection report, published 23 January 2026, assessed the school at Expected standard across the evaluated areas, and confirmed safeguarding standards are met.
Daily routines and relationships are a defining feature here. The most recent inspection report describes pupils as confident and eager to learn, with warm, respectful relationships between staff and pupils, and behaviour that is typically calm and purposeful. That combination matters in a larger primary, because consistency in expectations is what stops corridors, transitions, and lunchtime from becoming a weak point.
The school’s own language places a lot of weight on adults and children working closely together, and on a friendly, inclusive culture. This aligns with the inspection picture of a positive sense of community and pupils who trust adults to handle bullying or unkindness quickly.
Early years provision is part of the same whole school story rather than a separate add on. Children in Nursery and Reception are expected to settle quickly and develop a sense of belonging; there is a clear emphasis on communication and language from the outset, which is particularly useful for pupils who arrive with uneven early development.
This is a school with a slightly mixed results profile, and it is worth understanding what is driving that.
In the most recent published KS2 results, 56.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 17.67% reached greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, which is above the England average of 8%. In other words, the top end looks relatively strong, while the overall expected standard measure is a little below the England benchmark.
Scaled scores are 105 for reading, 102 for mathematics, and 103 for grammar, punctuation and spelling. Science expected standard is 53%. (No England comparator is provided alongside those particular measures so they are best read as context rather than a direct above or below claim.)
On the FindMySchool rankings derived from official outcomes data, the school is ranked 11,052nd in England for primary outcomes and 18th in the local Abingdon area. This places it below England average overall, within the bottom 40% of primary schools in England on that ranking measure.
The most helpful way to interpret the combination is practical. If your child is already confidently on track, the higher standard figure suggests there is evidence of challenge for some pupils. If your child needs a lot of catch up to reach the expected standard by the end of Year 6, you should probe how the school identifies and closes gaps, especially in writing, which the latest inspection highlights as an area where consistency still needs work.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
56.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is described as broad, balanced and ambitious, and is built around strengthening reading, writing and mathematics. Vocabulary development is a consistent thread, and reading is treated as a priority with a range of texts and targeted support for pupils still developing fluency. Phonics is taught systematically in early years, and the report notes pupils get the right help to develop accuracy and fluency.
Where the school is still sharpening its edge is writing, specifically the consistency of how teachers explain to pupils how to improve writing across subjects. That distinction matters. It is not simply about English lessons; it is about whether history, geography, science and wider curriculum work are used to practise and deepen writing, with feedback that leads to tangible improvement. If your child is a reluctant writer, this is a sensible area to explore on a visit, including what writing looks like in books across the curriculum and how pupils are taught to edit.
Support for pupils with additional needs is positioned as part of normal classroom practice, not a bolt on. Staff training and adaptations are described as enabling pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, and disadvantaged pupils, to access the full curriculum successfully, with personalised programmes where needed.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a state primary, the main transition point is into local secondary schools at the end of Year 6. Dunmore sits in Abingdon, and families typically look at a mix of local comprehensives alongside any selective or independent routes they are considering. Because secondary transfer in Oxfordshire is strongly shaped by where you live and the local authority’s admissions criteria, it is best to cross check the likely destination schools for your address against Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions guidance, rather than relying on general assumptions.
Transition preparation is likely to be most visible in the final year, including building independence, routines, and readiness for a larger timetable and subject based structure. If your child has special educational needs, ask specifically about handover arrangements, how information is shared with secondary settings, and whether transition is staggered or supported with additional visits.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Oxfordshire, not directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, the school states applications opened on 4 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026 for on time applications. Oxfordshire’s published key dates match that, and include 16 April 2026 as national offer day for primary.
Demand is the headline. In the most recent admissions, there were 135 applications for 53 offers, a ratio of 2.55 applications per place, and the school is marked as oversubscribed. That does not mean a place is impossible, but it does mean families should treat distance, sibling criteria and any priority categories as decisive rather than theoretical.
Nursery entry follows different rules to Reception. The school states children are admitted to the nursery class at the beginning of the term after their third birthday for at least 15 hours of funded provision per week in term time, with up to an additional 15 hours for families eligible for the extended entitlement, and limited paid sessions subject to availability. Nursery fees are not listed here; families should use the school’s nursery admissions information for the latest details and eligibility guidance.
For families using FindMySchool.uk as part of a shortlist, it is sensible to use Map Search to sanity check your likely position against local demand patterns, then keep your options broad enough that you are not relying on a single outcome.
100%
1st preference success rate
47 of 47 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
53
Offers
53
Applications
135
The most recent inspection evidence points to a school where pupils feel safe, staff respond quickly to unkindness, and behaviour is generally calm and consistent. That creates the conditions for learning, particularly for pupils who find busy environments difficult.
Attendance sits around the national picture overall, with leaders promoting good attendance and following up concerns, but the inspection notes that attendance for pupils eligible for pupil premium funding remains below national averages. This is important context for parents because attendance is one of the simplest predictors of steady progress, especially in writing and early reading where learning builds cumulatively.
Personal development is framed through responsibility and leadership opportunities, including roles such as school councillor, librarian and sports leader. For many pupils, these small responsibilities are where confidence grows fastest, and they also help children practise speaking, collaboration and decision making in low stakes settings.
Dunmore’s enrichment offer is unusually specific for a primary, and that specificity matters.
Music is a clear pillar. The inspection report states that all pupils learn to play three instruments and have the chance to play in the school orchestra. The implication is practical: children who might not have accessed instrumental teaching outside school still get structured exposure, and those who enjoy it can build confidence through performance and ensemble work.
Clubs are also named rather than implied. The most recent inspection report references clubs such as Mandarin, choir and gymnastics. Separately, the school’s extracurricular listings have included golf, Mandarin for older pupils, and athletics as part of the programme. For families, the key question is not whether there are clubs, but whether the offer is stable enough for children to commit and improve across a term, and whether places are accessible rather than limited to a small group.
Trips are used to broaden experience as well as to reward engagement. visits to museums and a residential trip to a farm. Those kinds of trips often have the biggest impact on pupils who learn best through real world context, and they can also be valuable for writing, because shared experience gives children something concrete to describe and explain.
The compulsory school day runs from morning registration at 8.45am to 3.15pm, with gates opening at 8.30am and supervision from 8.35am. The school states total compulsory hours are 32.5 per week. Nursery sessions are listed as 9.00am to 3.00pm.
Wraparound care is available through the school’s breakfast and after school provision. Breakfast club runs between 7.45am and 8.45am depending on the session booked; after school provision runs from the end of the day to either 4.30pm or 5.45pm, again depending on session. Published session prices include £6.60 to 4.30pm and £10.60 to 5.45pm.
The school notes access via Farm Road as well as Northcourt Road, which can be useful for drop off logistics depending on where you live.
Entry pressure at Reception. The school is oversubscribed, with 135 applications for 53 offers. A realistic plan includes at least one strong alternative option.
Writing consistency is still being tightened. The most recent inspection highlights inconsistency in how well pupils are taught to improve writing across the curriculum. If writing is a key need for your child, ask what has changed since the inspection and how improvement is checked.
Attendance gap for disadvantaged pupils. Overall attendance is described as in line with national averages, but disadvantaged pupils’ attendance is noted as below national averages. Families may want to understand the school’s practical approach to supporting attendance, particularly where there are health or family pressures.
Nursery places and patterns change term by term. Nursery entry is linked to term dates and eligibility for funded hours; availability of additional paid sessions is stated as subject to capacity. If you need specific days or wraparound coverage, clarify early.
Dunmore Primary School looks like a well run, large community primary with clear routines, strong relationships, and a notably concrete enrichment offer, particularly in music. Demand for places is high, so admissions strategy matters. Best suited to families who value a structured, inclusive primary, want wraparound care options, and are prepared to engage early with Reception and nursery timelines, while keeping an eye on how writing consistency is continuing to improve.
It presents as a stable and organised primary with a positive culture and calm behaviour. The latest inspection report (25 November 2025, published 23 January 2026) assessed the school at Expected standard across the evaluated areas and confirmed safeguarding standards are met.
Reception places are allocated through Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions process using the local authority’s published criteria. The school is oversubscribed, so where you live, sibling links, and priority categories can make a difference. The school’s own admissions page and Oxfordshire key dates are the best starting point for the current cycle.
For September 2026 entry, the school states online applications opened on 4 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026 for on time applications, with offers released on national offer day in April. Applications are made through Oxfordshire, not directly to the school.
Yes. The school states children are admitted to the nursery class at the beginning of the term after their third birthday for at least 15 hours of funded provision in term time, with the extended entitlement available for eligible families. Additional paid sessions may be available subject to capacity, and families should check the school’s nursery admissions information for the latest details.
Yes. The school publishes a breakfast club window from 7.45am to 8.45am depending on session, and after school provision from 3.15pm to either 4.30pm or 5.45pm depending on session, with published session prices including £6.60 and £10.60 for the two finish times.
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