Faith, hope and love are presented as working values here, not decorative slogans. The tone is purposeful, with clear routines from the early years onwards and a strong emphasis on pupils taking responsibility, including through structured leadership roles.
Academically, the numbers are hard to ignore. In 2024, 90.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 46% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and maths, compared with 8% across England. Reading and maths scaled scores were both 109, alongside a grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score of 111.
On FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings based on official data, the school ranks 611th in England for primary outcomes and 4th in the Amersham local area.
The setting is Chesham Bois, with a one-form entry intake and a published capacity of 218.
This is a Roman Catholic primary where Catholic life is woven through the day, from prayer and worship to pupil-led service. The school’s admissions information also signals that faith is not an add-on, with Catholic applicants encouraged to provide supporting evidence through the supplementary process.
Leadership is stable. The head teacher is Mr Mark Holdsworth, and Ofsted documentation indicates he assumed responsibility in January 2012, which is a long run in primary leadership terms.
Pupil voice and responsibility show up repeatedly in the school’s materials and in external verification. The 2025 inspection notes that every pupil holds a leadership role, with examples including a school parliament and “playground guardians”, and links this to confidence and personal development.
The trust context matters too. The school is part of St Thomas Catholic Academies Trust; formal documents identify the trust leadership structure and confirm the school’s academy status.
A final point on identity: school history materials linked to local heritage work describe the school as being founded in 1945, connected to the arrival of nuns in Chesham Bois. That founding story helps explain why the school still foregrounds faith and service so explicitly.
The results profile is among the strongest you will see in a state primary.
Expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined: 90.33% (England average: 62%)
Higher standard (greater depth) in reading, writing and maths: 46% (England average: 8%)
Reading scaled score: 109
Maths scaled score: 109
GPS scaled score: 111
These are broad-based, not narrowly concentrated. Reading expected standard is 94%, maths 90%, and science expected standard is 94%. (Where a child sits on that distribution matters, but the overall picture suggests a consistently high floor as well as a strong top end.)
Ranked 611th in England for primary outcomes
Ranked 4th in the Amersham local area
This places the school well above England average, within the top 10% of primaries in England by the FindMySchool percentile banding.
High attainment at this scale usually reflects three things working together: tight curriculum sequencing, strong reading culture, and classrooms where low-level disruption is not allowed to dilute learning time. The school’s published routines also support that interpretation, with a dedicated reading session built into the start of the morning for older pupils.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
90.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school day structure gives a useful window into priorities. Registration begins at 8.55am, and Key Stage 2 has an Accelerated Reading session between 8.45am and 9.15am. That is a concrete signal that reading fluency is treated as a foundational skill rather than an optional extra.
The 2025 inspection also points to a carefully ordered curriculum, with subject content sequenced so pupils build knowledge in the right order and remember more over time. Phonics is described as structured and consistent, with quick intervention when pupils risk falling behind.
In practice, this combination tends to suit children who respond well to clear routines and direct teaching. It can also be reassuring for parents who want evidence that “high standards” translate into classroom habits, not just ambitious language.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Good
As a Buckinghamshire primary, the next step often involves weighing selective and non-selective routes.
In the Amersham and Chesham area, families commonly consider local grammar options (for those pursuing selection) alongside upper schools and community colleges. Nearby secondary options listed in Buckinghamshire’s own directory include Dr Challoner’s Grammar School and Dr Challoner’s High School, among other local secondaries. This is not a feeder list, but it reflects the realistic menu of local choices families explore at Year 6.
For Catholic families, the transition conversation may also include Catholic secondary options within reasonable travel distance. The best way to handle this is practical rather than speculative: shortlist the secondaries you would genuinely accept, then check each school’s admissions rules and transport implications early in Year 5.
Entry is competitive at Reception. The school’s published admission number for September 2026 is 30, and Buckinghamshire’s directory flags that a supplementary form is required alongside the local authority application route.
The data in the input set suggests meaningful demand pressure: 54 applications for 30 offers, which is 1.8 applications per place, and the school is flagged as oversubscribed.
For Catholic schools, oversubscription is often resolved through a mixture of faith-based criteria, evidence requirements, and distance as a tie-break. The school’s admissions page signposts a Supplementary Catholic Admission Form and references a Certificate of Catholic Practice as part of the evidence route for Catholic applicants.
Applications open: 5 November 2025
Deadline: 15 January 2026 (11:59pm)
Offer day: 16 April 2026
Visits are encouraged. The school explains that families can arrange a tour and discussion with the head teacher, which is often the most useful way to understand whether the Catholic ethos and behaviour expectations feel like a fit.
A practical tip: if you are comparing multiple Catholic primaries, map out which documents each school asks for and when you need them. Evidence gathering can take time, particularly if parish documentation is needed.
(FindMySchool tip: if you are shortlisting multiple local options, the Saved Schools feature is a simple way to keep policies, dates, and visit notes together in one place.)
Applications
54
Total received
Places Offered
30
Subscription Rate
1.8x
Apps per place
The 2025 inspection notes very high expectations for behaviour and learning, with exemplary behaviour and pupils feeling safe because of strong care from adults. Safeguarding is also confirmed as effective.
Pastoral strength here is not framed as soft comfort, it is framed as structure and responsibility. Leadership roles, peer support, and clear expectations are all described as contributing to pupils’ confidence and willingness to participate.
One specific example mentioned in the 2025 inspection is therapeutic horse riding as an activity that supports emotional confidence for some pupils, which then feeds back into classroom confidence. That kind of link between wellbeing and learning is worth noticing because it is practical rather than abstract.
Extracurricular provision is unusually transparent, with a published club list and places. In Autumn Term 2024, clubs included Construction Club, Performing Arts, Chess Club, Comic Club, Italian Club, and a French Club for Year 2 and Year 3 pupils, alongside sport options such as rugby and football. The club list also shows demand patterns, with some clubs oversubscribed.
This matters for two reasons.
First, it indicates that enrichment is planned as part of the school’s core offer. When a school can field specialist language clubs for younger pupils while also running arts and sport across the week, it usually reflects staff willingness and careful scheduling.
Second, the oversubscription within clubs suggests a strong take-up culture. For pupils, that can be motivating, but it can also mean not everyone gets their first-choice activity every term.
Music and arts have distinctive features too. The 2025 inspection refers to an artist in residence and a school brass orchestra, which points to a more structured arts offer than the standard “art club once a week” model.
School day timings
Site opens: 8.30am
Registration: 8.55am
Finish: 3.20pm (Reception), 3.25pm (all other years)
Wraparound care
Breakfast Club: 7.45am to 8.55am, £6 per session
After School Club: 3.25pm to 5.30pm (Monday to Thursday), £11 per session
Travel
The school is in the Amersham area, where many families combine walking with short car journeys. For public transport, Amersham station is the nearest major rail and Underground hub, served by the Metropolitan line and National Rail services.
Faith expectations and paperwork. This is a Catholic school with admissions criteria that can involve supplementary forms and faith evidence. Families not comfortable with an explicitly Catholic daily life should read the admissions policy carefully before committing time to the process.
Oversubscription is real. Reception places are limited to 30, and recent application data indicates more applicants than offers. Even strong candidates should plan a second and third preference that they would genuinely accept.
Club demand can exceed places. The published club list shows some activities have more applicants than spaces. Children keen on a particular club may need flexibility across terms.
High expectations may not suit every child. Behaviour and learning expectations are set high. For many pupils this is grounding, but children who need a looser structure may take longer to settle.
A high-performing Catholic primary with a clear behavioural culture, structured reading focus, and unusually well-documented enrichment. The KS2 outcomes place it well above England averages, and leadership stability adds to the sense of consistency over time.
Best suited to families who actively want a Catholic ethos, value clear routines, and are comfortable with a purposeful learning environment. Entry remains the primary hurdle, so a realistic admissions plan matters as much as enthusiasm.
Yes, the recent published outcomes are very strong, and the school sits well above England averages at Key Stage 2. The most recent Ofsted inspection (25 and 26 February 2025) was an ungraded inspection which indicated the school’s work may have improved significantly since the previous inspection, and safeguarding was confirmed as effective.
Applications for September entry are coordinated through Buckinghamshire’s primary admissions process, with a standard deadline in mid-January and offers released in April. The school also indicates a supplementary Catholic form is required alongside the local authority application.
In 2024, 90.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with 62% across England. At the higher standard, 46% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and maths, compared with 8% across England.
Yes. Breakfast Club runs from 7.45am to 8.55am. After School Club runs from 3.25pm to 5.30pm Monday to Thursday, and both clubs have published session costs.
Registration begins at 8.55am. The day finishes at 3.20pm for Reception and 3.25pm for the rest of the school.
Get in touch with the school directly
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