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 school where military life is not a footnote, it is part of the day-to-day context. The website describes a pupil community that is largely connected to the armed forces, with frequent joiners and leavers across the year, and it has built visible routines to help children settle quickly.
Leadership has been stable since 2018, with Mrs Deborah Cook as headteacher since September 2018. The most recent Ofsted inspection took place in May 2022 and confirmed the school as Good.
For working parents, the practical offer is clear: the school day runs from 8.40am to 3.10pm, with an on-site after-school provision to 5.45pm, and a breakfast club option.
The school’s public-facing language is direct about what matters in an infant setting: children need to feel they belong, make progress, and be ready for the next stage. The motto, Engage, Inspire, Achieve, appears repeatedly across school materials and sits alongside a small set of values that are easy for younger pupils to understand and for staff to reinforce consistently: honesty, kindness, pride, and ambition.
Aldershot’s garrison identity is treated as a strength rather than a challenge to work around. The school explicitly references the diversity that service families bring, and it also recognises the practical realities of posting cycles. That matters because infant schools can be a child’s first sustained experience of routine away from home; a child arriving mid-year needs a system that is already designed for joining, not a system that merely copes with it.
Several small, specific structures show how the school tries to make expectations concrete for four to seven year olds. One example is the way it explains routines to new starters, including where coats and bookbags go, and how punctuality is framed as part of feeling safe and organised. Another is its rewards language for pupils, including “Good Citizen” stamps leading to badges, “Good Work Points”, and a headteacher’s medal for sustained effort. These are not grand claims about culture, they are practical mechanisms that help very young pupils translate “behave well” into actions they can repeat.
The latest Ofsted inspection in May 2022 judged the school to be Good.
Because this is an infant school ending at Year 2, it does not publish the same headline outcomes parents may be used to seeing for junior and primary schools that run through to Year 6. In practice, this shifts the emphasis towards curriculum quality, early reading, number sense, and the consistency of classroom routines, rather than end-of-primary attainment data.
The May 2022 inspection provides a useful indicator of what leaders and staff are prioritising, because inspectors focused their deep dives on reading, mathematics, and art and design. For parents, the implication is straightforward: if your child is starting Reception or joining in Year 1 or Year 2, you should be looking for a school that has a clearly sequenced approach to early reading and early maths, plus enough breadth that children still get regular creative and practical learning. The published inspection focus aligns with that.
For families comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Comparison Tool can still be helpful, even when infant-school outcome data is less prominent, because it lets you compare admission demand, inspection timelines, and local context side by side.
The school frames its curriculum as topic-based, designed to excite and motivate children, with an explicit push for parent participation in learning at home. In an infant setting, that typically shows up in three places: structured early reading, regular practice of number facts through play and routines, and vocabulary building through stories, talk, and hands-on experiences.
The Early Years Foundation Stage is presented in a conventional, recognisable structure, covering the prime areas (communication and language, physical development, personal, social and emotional development) alongside literacy, mathematics, understanding the world, and expressive arts and design. For parents, that signals a familiar pathway into Year 1, with the strongest benefit for children who respond well to predictable routines and frequent repetition across the week.
A small detail that tells you something about the school’s approach is how it communicates expectations for home reading. New starters are told that reading at home should happen at least three times a week, with milestones acknowledged through certificates. That kind of clarity often helps families who want a school to set straightforward habits early, rather than leaving it to parents to guess how much practice is expected.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
In an infant school, the key destination question is not university pathways, it is what happens at the Year 2 to Year 3 transition. Talavera’s admissions information explicitly references a linked junior school, Talavera Junior School, within its oversubscription criteria.
For many families, that creates a natural route: start in Reception, build familiarity with school routines and early reading, then move on to the linked junior phase for Key Stage 2. The practical implication is worth stating: parents should plan for a second admissions step when Year 2 finishes, and should read junior-school admissions arrangements early, especially if the family expects to move during a posting.
Demand is real, and the numbers make that plain. For the most recent admissions cycle captured here, there were 261 applications for 87 offers, with the school recorded as oversubscribed and running at roughly three applications per place. First-preference demand was also high relative to offers. Those are meaningful figures for an infant school because they suggest competition is not limited to a narrow group of streets.
The school’s own admissions page is unusually specific about dates for the September 2026 Reception intake. It states that applications for Reception entry for September 2026 close on 15 January 2026, and that parents will be informed of the outcome on 16 April 2026.
Oversubscription criteria are set out in the school’s published admissions information, with catchment and sibling links (including the linked junior school) built into priority ordering once looked-after and previously looked-after children are accounted for. For families trying to sanity-check their chances, FindMySchool’s Map Search is the right next step, because it allows you to calculate your precise distance and understand how location interacts with published criteria, even when the last offered distance is not available.
In-year admissions are also addressed, which matters in Aldershot. The school notes that families move into the area and can apply via the local authority’s in-year process, with responses typically issued quickly once an application is received.
Applications
261
Total received
Places Offered
87
Subscription Rate
3.0x
Apps per place
Pastoral support here is shaped by two overlapping realities: children are young, and a large share are in service families. One of the most distinctive pieces of provision is Camouflage Club, run by school staff for children who have a parent or close family member deployed overseas or away on extended training. It runs weekly on Friday afternoons, with a rotating pattern so different year groups attend in alternating weeks, and children can record messages and prepare items to share with their deployed family member.
That kind of targeted provision tends to matter more than broad statements about wellbeing, because it responds to a specific stressor that can affect attention, behaviour, and sleep in infant-age children. It also signals to parents that staff are familiar with deployment cycles and have a school-normal way of supporting children through them.
The school’s service premium strategy also provides context on why this is central rather than peripheral, stating that over 61% of children are from service families. Even if your family is not military-connected, the implication is positive: a school that is used to welcoming new pupils regularly is often better organised about transition, routine-setting, and buddying new children into class.
The extra-curricular offer is closely tied to the realities of infant-age energy levels and working-parent logistics.
Breakfast club is positioned as more than supervision, combining breakfast with structured morning activities such as team games, arts and crafts, board games, and challenges led by the school’s sports provider, TS Coaching, and it takes place in a named space, the Meadow. The after-school provision is run by school staff, also based in the Meadow, and runs from 3.10pm to 5.45pm each school day, mixing activities and arts and crafts. For parents, the takeaway is that wraparound care is integrated into the site and routines, rather than being an off-site add-on.
For clubs that feel more like “activities” than childcare, the school lists TS Coaching Active Play Club for Years 1 and 2 (with Reception able to join later in the year), and TS Coaching Football Club for Years 1 and 2, both running after school. It also flags that other clubs are introduced across the year, which is sensible at this age where pupil interest, staffing, and seasons shift quickly.
There is also evidence of pupil voice being treated seriously in age-appropriate ways. The school describes School Council elections as part of how it teaches democracy, linking it to pupil voting and representing class views. For families who care about confidence and communication, that kind of structure can matter as much as sport or performance opportunities.
The school day runs from 8.40am to 3.10pm. Registers close at 9.00am, and late arrivals are directed through the office routine.
Wraparound provision is clearly signposted. After-school care runs daily from 3.10pm to 5.45pm, and breakfast club is also available on site in the Meadow. If you rely on wraparound, it is worth checking the latest booking process and availability early, especially for September entry.
Travel and parking are addressed in plain terms: the school encourages walking where possible, and states that the on-site car park is for staff and visitors only, so drop-off and pick-up routines need planning.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
High demand for places. With 261 applications for 87 offers cycle, admission pressure is real. Families should read the oversubscription criteria early, and avoid assuming that living “nearby” will be enough on its own.
Plan for the Year 3 move. As an infant school, pupils will transfer on for Key Stage 2, and the linked junior school is referenced in admissions arrangements. It is sensible to review junior admissions early, especially for families who may move mid-cycle.
Parking constraints shape daily life. The school states that the car park is not available for parent drop-off and collection. If you drive, factor in a realistic routine for safe handover at busy times.
Wraparound is strong, but confirm details early. After-school care to 5.45pm is a clear offer, and breakfast club is available, but parents should confirm current availability and booking expectations for their start date.
Talavera Infant School reads as a pragmatic, routines-led infant school that understands the realities of Aldershot’s service community and has designed specific support around it, including Camouflage Club and clear joining arrangements. Leadership stability since 2018 and a Good Ofsted judgement in May 2022 add confidence that systems are well-established.
Best suited to families who want a clear structure for the early years, value wraparound care, and either live locally or are comfortable navigating competitive admissions in a high-mobility area.
The latest Ofsted inspection (May 2022) rated the school Good, and the report focus on reading, mathematics, and art and design suggests a balanced approach to early learning. Families will still want to look closely at admissions criteria and daily routines, because the best fit at infant level is often about consistency, communication, and how well a child settles.
Reception places are coordinated through the local authority application route. The school’s website states that applications for September 2026 close on 15 January 2026, with outcomes communicated on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Camouflage Club is designed for children with a parent or close family member deployed or away on extended training, giving pupils structured time and activities to help them stay connected. The school also states that a large proportion of pupils are from service families.
The school day runs from 8.40am to 3.10pm. After-school care is offered daily from 3.10pm to 5.45pm, and breakfast club is available on site.
As an infant school, pupils transfer on for Key Stage 2. The school’s admissions information references a linked junior school within its oversubscription criteria, which many families use as their next step.
Get in touch with the school directly
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