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.
Small schools can feel like a gamble, until the outcomes remove the doubt. This is a village primary with a Published Admission Number of 15 for Reception entry, and results that sit among the strongest in England for primary performance. The Christian character is lived day to day, with collective worship and close links to the local church forming part of the rhythm of school life. Practicalities are unusually clear too, from published school-day timings to externally delivered wraparound care. For families weighing rural calm against competitive entry, the key question is not whether standards are high, but whether you can secure a place when demand outstrips supply.
With around 96 to 98 pupils on roll and four classes, relationships matter. Children mix across ages more naturally than in a large two-form entry, and the culture benefits from it. The latest published inspection evidence points to pupils who are happy, thoughtful and kind, and to behaviour that is calm and well managed, including the confidence to resolve minor issues with adult support when needed. The atmosphere is values-led, with a Church of England identity that welcomes families of different faith backgrounds and none, while still keeping worship and community service visible rather than optional extras.
The physical setting reinforces the “small but purposeful” feel. Key spaces sit in an original listed building dating from 1815, with a renovation and extension completed in 1999. A later addition completed in August 2010 includes the library and newer accommodation, and the site has continued to evolve, including a teaching kitchen created in 2016 and phased refurbishments of classrooms and offices through 2018 to 2022. Parents who value heritage, but also want practical learning spaces, tend to like this blend of old and updated.
Leadership stability matters in a small school, because it shapes everything from curriculum coherence to parent communication. The current headteacher is Mrs Nicky King, appointed in June 2021 after serving as interim headteacher from January 2021. That timeline is helpful context when interpreting recent school improvement work and priorities.
Primary outcomes are exceptional. In 2024, 91% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 64% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. Reading, mathematics and grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS) scaled scores are also high, at 111 for reading and 113 for both mathematics and GPS.
Rankings align with the raw outcomes. Ranked 54th in England and 1st in Andover for primary outcomes, this places the school among the highest-performing in England (top 2%). These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.
For parents comparing options locally, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to view these outcomes alongside nearby primaries. In a small cohort, year-to-year variation is always possible, but the overall profile here is strong enough that the school sits in the “elite” performance bracket on the available measures.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
91%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Early reading and mathematics are clear strengths. The published inspection evidence describes reading as prioritised throughout the school, starting with a structured phonics programme and closely matched reading books, supported by trained adults and regular practice. Mathematics is described as logically sequenced, with teachers checking understanding carefully and addressing misconceptions quickly. The implication for families is straightforward, children who need a secure start in core learning are likely to get it, and those who are ready to move quickly are less likely to be held back.
Beyond the core, the picture is more mixed, in a way that is common in small schools that have invested heavily in the basics. The same inspection evidence signals that some foundation subjects were still being developed, with curriculum planning clearer in areas like science and history, but less precise in subjects such as art and information technology at that point. That does not mean these subjects are weak, but it does suggest parents should look for evidence of continued curriculum refinement and progression beyond English and mathematics.
The structure of classes also shapes teaching. Staff listings indicate mixed-age groupings across the school, including Year 1 to Year 2, Year 3 to Year 4, and Year 5 to Year 6, alongside Reception. Mixed-age classes can work very well when planning is tight, because pupils revisit concepts at increasing depth; they can be less comfortable for families expecting single-year cohorts and identical pacing for all children.
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 primary school, the key transition is into Year 7. Published SEND information indicates the school works closely with receiving secondary schools, sharing information and arranging Transition Partnership Agreement meetings for pupils for whom transition may be more challenging. Where appropriate, pupils can have additional familiarisation visits. The implication is that the handover is treated as a process, not a one-off administrative step, which tends to matter most for anxious pupils and those with additional needs.
For families considering the area longer term, the practical next step is to review Hampshire’s secondary admissions process early, so you can plan around the Year 6 timeline and your likely local options. The school’s small size means staff are usually well placed to give parents realistic guidance on readiness and transition support, particularly for pupils who have joined mid-year, including forces families.
This is a voluntary aided Church of England primary, and the Governing Board is the admissions authority. Reception entry is genuinely competitive in the available admissions data: 34 applications for 15 offers, which equates to about 2.27 applications per place, and an oversubscribed status.
For September 2026 entry, Hampshire’s main-round dates are clear. Applications open on 01 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. The school also sets out the same deadline and confirms the Local Authority sends offers in April.
Oversubscription rules matter here, because they determine whether faith grounds will help, and how catchment interacts with siblings. The school’s determined admissions policy for 2026 to 2027 sets a Published Admission Number of 15 and lists priorities after pupils with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school. These include looked after or previously looked after children, exceptional medical or social need, catchment with a sibling, catchment without a sibling, and then out-of-catchment categories. Denominational grounds are a specific route, but they require a supplementary information form certified by an appropriate church authority. A letter from a vicar alone is not sufficient. Where applications are tied within a category, straight-line distance is used as the tie-break.
Given the combination of small PAN and oversubscription, parents should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check practical home-to-school proximity, then cross-reference that with the school’s criteria and the Local Authority process. It is a sensible way to avoid relying on hope rather than evidence.
Applications
34
Total received
Places Offered
15
Subscription Rate
2.3x
Apps per place
In a school this size, pastoral support often works through speed of response rather than layers of specialist staff. The inspection evidence points to pupils who feel confident that adults will help them when needed, and to a safeguarding culture that pays attention to small details and records concerns appropriately.
A useful feature of the school’s published practice is the way wellbeing support is embedded into ordinary routines. The pupil premium strategy document references lunchtime clubs such as a colouring club and a board game club, intended to give children a space to talk to an adult, plus a targeted art and craft lunchtime club for identified pupils. These are modest interventions, but in a small primary they can be precisely what helps a child settle, especially when family circumstances are changeable, including deployment-related pressure.
SEND leadership time is also acknowledged in published material. The 2022 inspection information notes that since the current headteacher joined, governors appointed a special educational needs coordinator for part of the week. In practice, parents should ask how support is prioritised across classes, and how the school manages continuity for pupils who need regular structured help in a mixed-age setting.
Extracurricular life here looks like the practical version of enrichment, not a glossy list. Sport is a visible pillar. Wraparound provision includes a weekly timetable of activities such as football, dodgeball, hockey and tag rugby, alongside a general “fun and games” session. For many families, this matters as much as competitive fixtures, because it solves childcare while still keeping children active and socially connected.
There is also evidence of pupil leadership and participation in sport beyond club sessions. Published sport premium documents refer to Sports Ambassadors and to lunchtime provision supported by coaches, alongside swimming provision for Year 3 and Year 4, and structured competitive opportunities through rural schools and secondary liaison. The wider implication is that physical activity is planned rather than incidental, which often supports behaviour and concentration in class, particularly for younger pupils.
Community-facing activity is another strand. The inspection report references a project where pupils collected crisp packets that were turned into blankets for people experiencing homelessness. PTA communications also indicate regular events that add levity and shared tradition across the year, including seasonal fairs and school-community activities. These details matter, because they show children learning that service and enjoyment can coexist.
The published school day runs from 9:00am to 3:30pm, with flexible drop-off from 8:50am. This equates to 32.5 compulsory hours per week.
Wraparound care is available via external providers. The school states that PH Sports delivers breakfast club and 360 Sports Coaching delivers after-school club provision. Published materials indicate breakfast club runs 07:50am to 08:50am at £5.65, and after-school provision runs until 5:00pm, with the stated intention to expand to 6:00pm if sustainable.
For daily logistics, the village setting typically means many families arrive on foot from within Amport or drive from nearby villages. Parents should check parking and pick-up expectations directly, as small rural sites can feel constrained at peak times even when day-to-day traffic is light.
Entry is competitive. With a Published Admission Number of 15 and recent demand exceeding supply, a place cannot be assumed even for families who feel geographically close. The denominational route is real, but evidence requirements are strict, so families should read the policy carefully and plan documentation early.
Mixed-age classes are part of the model. This can suit confident learners and siblings close in age, but some children prefer single-year cohorts and may need reassurance about progression and stretch.
Foundation subjects have required development in the recent evidence base. English and mathematics are strong, but parents should explore how art and computing are now sequenced and assessed, and what improvements have been made since the last published inspection.
Wraparound is provided by third parties. Many families will see this as a strength because it increases availability, but it is worth checking booking processes, staffing continuity, and how handovers work at the end of the school day.
Amport Church of England Primary School offers exceptionally strong primary outcomes in a genuinely small-school setting, with a clear Christian identity and a practical approach to wellbeing and wraparound provision. It suits families who value close relationships, mixed-age social confidence, and high expectations in the basics of reading, writing and mathematics. The limiting factor is admission rather than the educational experience, so families who want this option should approach the process early and evidence-led, especially around catchment and denominational criteria.
Yes. Primary outcomes place it among the highest-performing schools in England on the available measures, including 91% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics in 2024, against an England average of 62%. The latest published Ofsted inspection on 02 March 2022 confirmed the school continues to be Good.
The admissions policy prioritises children living in catchment ahead of most out-of-catchment categories, including denominational grounds, although looked after children, previously looked after children, and exceptional medical or social need sit above catchment. If the school is oversubscribed within a category, straight-line distance is used as the tie-break.
Applications open on 01 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026 for on-time applicants. Reception places are allocated through Hampshire’s coordinated admissions process, while the school’s own policy sets the priority order used to rank applicants.
Not necessarily. Catchment and sibling criteria sit above denominational grounds in the published priority order, but denominational grounds can apply in some circumstances. If you apply on denominational grounds you must complete the supplementary information form certified by an appropriate church authority, and the school notes that a letter from a vicar alone is not treated as sufficient evidence.
Yes, via external providers. The school states breakfast club is delivered by PH Sports and after-school provision by 360 Sports Coaching. Published information includes breakfast club times and pricing, and an after-school club programme running to 5:00pm.
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