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.
When a primary school has a roll counted in tens rather than hundreds, almost everything changes, relationships, routines, teaching groupings, and how quickly adults can respond when a pupil needs help. Here, that small scale sits alongside a wider structure: the school is part of the Alston Moor Federation, which shares leadership and governance across three schools.
Headteacher Rob Dawson has led the federation since March 2024, giving the school a single leadership line while keeping day to day life distinctly local.
This is a small school that leans into being small. External review language points to pupils being happy and proud, classrooms calm and purposeful, and pupils supporting one another across age groups. A tiny detail says a lot: the inspection report notes how pupils compliment a weekly “special person”, a simple ritual that fits a close community.
The school also presents itself as embedded in local life, with community links and volunteers referenced on the school website. For families moving into the area, that matters, a rural village school can be a practical route into friendships and local networks, not only for children, but for parents too.
On the physical side, pupil voice content highlights outdoor and play features such as an obstacle course, a mud kitchen, and a football pitch. Those are the kind of specifics that tell you this is not a “just classroom” experience, even with limited numbers.
Published performance measures can be hard to interpret for very small primaries, because cohorts are small and year to year variation is high. In practice, parents get more meaningful signals from curriculum clarity, reading culture, and external evaluation of teaching and leadership.
The latest Ofsted inspection (11 to 12 June 2024; report published 12 July 2024) judged the school Good overall, and Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management.
Reading is positioned as a deliberate priority. The inspection report describes a well stocked library, author visits, and pupils reading widely, with staff actively building “love of reading” rather than treating reading as a narrow skill.
In mathematics, the school states it uses White Rose materials alongside NRICH and Hamilton Trust resources, and describes flexible groupings by subject area. For a small school, that combination is often a practical way to keep challenge appropriate across mixed ages.
Two school specific threads stand out as shaping how children learn. First, “Oracy 21” is presented as a whole school commitment to speaking and listening across the curriculum, not only in English. Second, the Key Stage 2 class description emphasises structured talk, debate, and expressing viewpoints. The implication is a classroom culture where explanation and reasoning are normal, which can benefit pupils who thrive on discussion, and can also support confidence for quieter children if the routines are well scaffolded.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is a primary for ages 4 to 11, so the key transition is to secondary. The federation itself spans ages 4 to 16 across its three schools, including Samuel King's School, which provides a local secondary route for many families in the area.
For families who anticipate moving again, or who want a larger secondary environment, the practical question becomes travel time rather than academic fit. It is worth looking at transport options early and, if possible, visiting likely secondaries before Year 6 so the transition feels predictable.
Nenthead is a state primary with no tuition fees. It is also tiny: the federation’s admissions policy sets a planned admission number (PAN) of 4 for Nenthead Primary School.
In the most recent recorded Reception admissions data available, the school was undersubscribed, with 2 applications and 2 offers. That can be reassuring for families concerned about place security, but it also means year groups may be very small, which some children love and others find socially limiting. (There is no furthest distance at which a place was offered figure available for this school in the provided admissions data, so distance based guidance is not appropriate here.)
For September 2026 Reception entry in Westmorland and Furness Council, the co ordinated scheme timetable gives two key dates parents tend to care about most: the application deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
A practical tip for shortlisting: use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand your likely travel patterns (winter roads matter in rural areas), then use Saved Schools to keep notes from open days and conversations with staff.
Applications
2
Total received
Places Offered
2
Subscription Rate
0.5x
Apps per place
Small schools live or die by whether children feel known. External review evidence points to calm behaviour in lessons, pupils concentrating, and positive peer support across the school, all consistent with a well managed, low friction day.
Ofsted states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The main improvement point raised is also pastoral adjacent in a subtle way: in a small number of subjects, assessment approaches do not consistently check how well pupils have embedded prior learning, which can lead to gaps over time. In a mixed age setting, that is worth asking about, because gaps can be harder to spot when pupils are working at different curriculum points.
“Wider Opportunities” is not treated as a vague add on here, it is structured through pupil passports, with examples that lean heavily into community participation. Specific examples include a monthly community breakfast, singing for elderly groups, collecting for a local foodbank, and taking part in events such as carol services and a lantern parade.
Educational visits are described as a core part of bringing learning alive. The school cites museums, fossil hunting, rural and city fieldwork, outdoor education days for Key Stage 2, and a Year 6 city residential including visits such as the Houses of Parliament and the National Portrait Gallery. These examples matter because they show how a small rural school can still deliver “big world” experiences.
A further detail that signals enrichment is the mention of visitors, including author Abi Elphinstone, and pupils working with the local Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty team on environment focused projects.
The school day runs 8:50am to 3:15pm, with breakfast club 8:30am to 8:50am and lunch 12:00pm to 1:00pm.
Wraparound care is organised at federation level. Breakfast clubs operate at both primary schools, and after school provision is offered at the Church Road site in Alston, running 3:30pm to 5:30pm, booked via the school office at least 48 hours in advance.
For travel, most families will be thinking about rural driving routes and winter reliability. If your child will use wraparound at the Alston site, factor in the additional journey and pickup logistics before committing.
Very small peer group. A roll of around 20 pupils (capacity 28) can feel wonderfully safe and personal, but it can also mean limited same age friendship choice in some year groups.
Assessment consistency. External review identifies that, in a small number of subjects, assessment does not always confirm what pupils have securely remembered, which can create gaps over time. Ask how the school checks learning across mixed age groups.
Wraparound logistics. Breakfast club is on site, but after school provision is offered at the Alston site, so transport and timing may be a deal breaker for some working families.
This is a highly local primary shaped by village life and small numbers, with the advantages that come with that: children can be known well, routines can be personalised, and community involvement is more than a slogan. It will suit families who value close relationships, outdoor play, and a curriculum that leans into reading and talk rich learning. The main question is fit, not quality, does your child thrive in a tiny peer group, and can your family make the wraparound logistics work.
The latest inspection judged the school Good across all areas, and safeguarding is reported as effective. The school’s strengths are centred on calm classrooms, positive relationships, and a clear reading culture.
The federation’s admissions policy uses catchment area and distance criteria when applications exceed places. For Reception entry in September 2026, applications are co ordinated through the local authority, and families should check the current catchment definitions and how distance is measured for tie breaks.
Breakfast club runs on site from 8:30am to 8:50am. After school provision is offered through the federation at the Alston site from 3:30pm to 5:30pm, so families should plan for that additional journey if they need after school childcare.
The school day begins at 8:50am and finishes at 3:15pm, with registration closing at 9:10am.
For September 2026 entry, the co ordinated admissions scheme timetable lists 15 January 2026 as the closing date, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
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