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.
Dream, Believe, Achieve sits at the centre of school life here, and it is not just a slogan on a newsletter. The most recent published Key Stage 2 outcomes show a picture that is broadly positive on core measures, with reading, writing and maths combined above the England average, while other indicators are more mixed. That balance matters for families weighing up academic stretch alongside a school experience that feels stable and purposeful.
Leadership is clearly established. The headteacher is Mrs Joanne Hardwick, and she was appointed after the previous inspection in March 2017.
Admissions are competitive for Reception. The school is oversubscribed with 130 applications for 59 offers, which equates to about 2.2 applications per place. This is a useful proxy for demand, even before you start thinking about where you live and how local allocations fall in a given year.
A defining feature of the school’s public-facing communication is its emphasis on welfare and safeguarding, framed as a whole-school, preventative approach. That sort of language can sound generic, but it sets expectations clearly for families who prioritise consistent routines and predictable adult oversight.
The school’s stated vision, Dream, Believe, Achieve, is reinforced through specific pupil-facing structures such as School Council content and a named Glee Club resource hub. The point is less about any single initiative and more about how the school uses shared language to create a sense of belonging across a relatively large primary setting (capacity 530).
Early years provision is part of the mainstream offer (nursery provision is in place), and the school publishes a nursery admissions form and admissions policy for the 2026 to 2027 cycle. For families needing a September start in Nursery rather than Reception, this is one of the practical advantages of the setting.
Academic performance needs to be read in two layers, outcomes and rank context.
69.33% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%.
At the higher standard, 9% achieved higher attainment in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 8%.
Subject indicators show a mixed picture, for example 74% reached the expected standard in science.
For parents, the practical implication is that the core combined measure is above England average, suggesting the basics are being secured for many pupils, but the profile does not read as consistently high across every strand.
Ranked 10,764th in England and 11th in the Accrington area for primary outcomes. This places the school below the England average overall when viewed through national ranking distribution, despite the above-average combined expected-standard figure. The main takeaway is that outcomes are not weak, but they are not consistently strong across the full basket of measures that feed league-style ranking models.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
69.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum design is presented as a school-built, thematic model, running on a two-year rolling programme and organised into half-termly themes. The advantage of this approach, when it is well executed, is coherence, pupils revisit concepts with increasing depth, and staff can align planning and resources across year groups. The trade-off is that families who prefer a more traditional, subject-siloed presentation may want to look carefully at how knowledge is sequenced year to year.
The most recent inspection evidence also points to an ambitious curriculum intent that aims to meet pupils’ needs. (This review avoids turning into an inspection summary, but that specific curriculum ambition is relevant when you are trying to understand the school’s educational direction.)
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 Lancashire community primary serving ages 3 to 11, transition is typically into local Lancashire secondary schools via the county’s coordinated admissions process. The school explicitly prompts Year 6 families to apply for secondary places for September 2026, reinforcing that transition planning begins early in the final primary year.
What families should do in practice is look at Lancashire’s secondary admissions criteria for the relevant year, then map it against your address and the schools you are considering. If you are building a shortlist, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and comparison views can help you sense-check local options side-by-side, especially where schools feel similar on the surface but differ in results profiles.
Reception entry is Lancashire local authority coordinated, and the school directs parents to apply through Lancashire’s online process for a September 2026 start.
Key dates for September 2026 Reception entry (Lancashire):
Applications open 01 September 2025
Statutory closing date 15 January 2026
Offers issued Thursday 16 April 2026
Demand signals are real. In the latest published admissions results, Reception had 130 applications and 59 offers, with 2.2 applications per place and an oversubscribed status. For families, the implication is simple, treat this as competitive even if you are relatively local, and do not assume that “near enough” will be enough without checking typical allocation patterns in your area.
Nursery admissions are handled through a separate nursery form published by the school. Government-funded early years hours may apply for eligible families, and the best next step is to confirm session patterns and eligibility routes directly with the school’s published nursery admissions information.
100%
1st preference success rate
56 of 56 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
130
The school’s own messaging places safeguarding and pupil wellbeing prominently, describing a preventative approach and positioning welfare as central to decision-making.
From a parent perspective, the question to ask on a visit is how this translates into routines, for example, staff training cadence, how concerns are escalated, and what day-to-day support exists for pupils who struggle with attendance, anxiety, or friendship issues. The school publishes safeguarding contact roles on its contact information pages, which indicates defined responsibilities rather than a vague “everyone is responsible” approach.
A useful signal of enrichment is that the school refreshes clubs on a half-termly timetable for Years 1 to 6, rather than running the same set all year. That typically allows staff to respond to pupil interest and seasonal opportunities.
Two named examples that give a sense of flavour:
Glee Club, with published song resources and rehearsal materials, which suggests singing is organised as a structured group rather than a one-off performance slot.
The school’s promotion of music initiatives such as “Totally RAD” in its news feed, which points to partnerships or structured provision beyond standard classroom music.
For families, the implication is that extracurricular life exists as a predictable part of the week, not an occasional add-on, which can matter for confidence-building, friendships, and routine, particularly for pupils who thrive on belonging to a group.
The published school day runs 08:35 to 15:15.
Wraparound care (breakfast club or after-school provision) is not clearly set out in the publicly visible pages reviewed here; families who need childcare around the school day should confirm current timings and availability directly.
For travel, the school is on Park Road in Accrington, and for most families the key practical question is walkability and safe routes at drop-off. If you are assessing admission chances, FindMySchool’s map tools are most useful when paired with your exact address and a realistic plan for the daily commute.
Oversubscription is a real constraint. With around 2.2 applications per place admission is competitive, and families should treat it as such when planning housing moves or relying on a place.
The results profile is mixed when you look past the headline combined measure. Reading, writing and maths combined is above England average, but other strands do not all show the same strength, so it is worth asking how the school stretches higher attainers and supports pupils who need catch-up.
This is a large Lancashire community primary that looks organised and values-led, with clear demand for places and a headline KS2 combined measure that sits above the England average. It will suit families who want a mainstream school with nursery provision, structured enrichment such as clubs and singing, and a calm, consistent framing around wellbeing. The key challenge is securing entry in an oversubscribed context, so shortlisting should be practical, map your address, understand Lancashire’s criteria, and keep realistic alternatives in view.
It was graded Good at its most recent full inspection (June 2022), and the Key Stage 2 combined measure for reading, writing and maths sits above the England average in the latest published outcomes.
Reception applications for a September 2026 start are made through Lancashire’s coordinated admissions process. The published deadline is 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes, the latest results indicates oversubscription, with 130 applications and 59 offers for the main primary entry route, which is about 2.2 applications per place.
Yes, nursery provision is in place, and the school publishes a separate nursery admissions form and admissions policy. For current session patterns and funded-hours eligibility routes, use the school’s nursery admissions information as the starting point.
The school runs a changing timetable of clubs for Years 1 to 6 and publishes materials for named activities such as Glee Club. Availability can vary by half term, so it is sensible to check the current club timetable.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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