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.
Haydon Abbey School and Pre-School is a mixed community primary in Haydon Hill, Aylesbury, serving ages 2 to 11 with nursery provision on a separate pre-school site. It is a large school for the phase, with 540 places and a published capacity that suggests steady local demand rather than a tiny, hyper-local intake.
The most recent Ofsted inspection took place on 20 and 21 February 2024 and the overall outcome was Requires Improvement, with Good judgements for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision.
Day-to-day, the offer is shaped by two practical features parents tend to value: a clearly structured school day, and a broad set of enrichment opportunities that includes outdoor learning through Forest School. At the same time, the school is still embedding curriculum and assessment changes so that knowledge builds consistently across subjects, which is the central improvement theme coming through in official findings.
Leadership is relatively new. Miss Ashleigh Ferdinand is the headteacher, and started in post in September 2023, so the current direction is best understood as a school mid-implementation rather than one already at a settled endpoint.
This is a school that puts routine and readiness to learn at the centre of daily life. The published timetable shows structured whole-school assemblies and dedicated reading time built into the week, with clear rhythms to the day and a consistent finish time. That sort of predictability often matters for families managing busy mornings, and for pupils who benefit from calm, repeated expectations.
The February 2024 inspection narrative paints a school where pupils generally feel secure and supported, and where the behavioural culture in lessons is orderly rather than confrontational. Importantly for parents, the same report also notes effective safeguarding arrangements, and describes pupils as confident to share worries with staff. Those are meaningful signals about whether children are likely to feel listened to, especially in a larger-than-average primary where relationships have to be managed deliberately rather than relying on the intimacy of a small village setting.
The pre-school dimension adds another layer to the school’s character. Early years provision was judged Good in the latest inspection outcome, and the school publishes a clear description of how learning spaces and adult interactions are intended to work, including “enabling environments” and defined areas such as cosy reading nooks and role-play zones. That emphasis suggests an early years approach that aims to balance structured teaching with play, which often suits children who need time to develop confidence and language before formal learning ramps up.
Outdoor learning is also part of the school’s identity. Forest School is described as a planned, long-term approach using a designated area on the school field with basecamp space, den-making areas, climbing trees, and digging zones. For many pupils, this kind of provision is not just a “nice extra”; it can be a practical lever for engagement, confidence, and self-regulation, particularly for children who struggle to sit still for long periods.
As a state primary, the most comparable academic indicators are Key Stage 2 outcomes. The most recent published results available here shows that 55.33% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The England average in the same reference frame is 62%, so the current picture sits below England average on this combined measure.
The higher standard figure provides a more nuanced second lens. At 12.67% achieving the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, the school is above the England benchmark of 8% on that measure. This split is often what parents see in schools that have a smaller high-attaining group doing very well, while a broader middle group needs more consistent curriculum sequencing, assessment, or targeted support to secure the expected standard.
Scaled scores reinforce the same general direction. Reading is 104 and maths is 102 used here, with GPS at 105. These are above the usual England midpoint of 100 as a reference point for scaled scores, but they sit alongside the combined expected standard figure that matters most for headline attainment.
Rankings should be interpreted cautiously, but they can help parents compare locally. The school is ranked 10,409th in England for primary outcomes (a proprietary FindMySchool ranking based on official data), and 23rd within the Aylesbury local area. This places the school below England average overall, and it suggests that families prioritising results above all else may want to compare nearby options carefully using FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
55.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school’s published curriculum framing is explicit about how learning is meant to happen, particularly in early years: a balance between child-initiated play and adult-led learning, and classroom design that supports independence and problem-solving. Practical examples include construction zones, role play, mud kitchens, and reading nooks, all of which point to a provision where learning is expected to be active rather than desk-bound from the start.
The improvement challenge is coherence across subjects and year groups. In the February 2024 report, the key issue is that in some subjects, curriculum planning has not ensured pupils revisit and secure important knowledge, which leaves gaps that then hinder new learning. A second linked issue is assessment practice that is not consistently used to identify and address misconceptions across all subjects. In parent terms, this is the difference between a curriculum that feels like well-connected building blocks, and one that can feel like separate topics where children move on before fully understanding key concepts.
Reading is clearly a priority area. The inspection report describes increased time allocation for reading lessons and the use of incentives to encourage reading at home, alongside strong phonics teaching from the start of Reception and prompt support for pupils who fall behind. If your child is an early reader, or needs systematic phonics teaching, that emphasis is a meaningful positive, and it is the kind of work that can raise outcomes over time when consistently implemented.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as quickly identified, with approaches such as scaffolding and appropriate deployment of teaching assistants helping pupils to learn effectively. The area still developing is precise adaptation of the curriculum following recent changes, which matters because the most effective SEND support is not only about adult help; it is about the curriculum being structured so that pupils can access and remember the right knowledge at the right time.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Requires Improvement
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families at a Buckinghamshire primary, the transition conversation starts early because the county includes both grammar schools and non-selective upper schools. Haydon Abbey pupils typically progress into local secondary options based on family preference, admission criteria, and (where relevant) 11-plus outcomes.
The school’s own secondary transfer information is published as a resource for families, which is usually a sign that staff expect to support parents through the process rather than leaving them to navigate it alone. If you are considering the grammar route, it is worth building in time to understand the admissions timeline and the practical reality that preparation varies widely between families.
For families who are not pursuing selection, the practical focus is likely to be on travel time, friendship groups, and aligning your application strategy to Buckinghamshire’s coordinated admissions system.
Reception entry is coordinated by Buckinghamshire Council rather than handled directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, Buckinghamshire’s published timetable shows online applications opening on 5 November 2025, with a deadline of 15 January 2026 at 11:59pm, and national offer day on 16 April 2026.
Demand, as reflected provided, is strong. The school is recorded as oversubscribed for primary entry, with 141 applications for 58 offers, which equates to 2.43 applications per place offered. In a practical sense, that means families should treat application strategy as important even if the school is geographically close.
The school also publishes specific open mornings for parents and carers of children due to start in September 2026, including a date in November at 9am. Open events matter because they are often where parents get a clear feel for behaviour, routines, and how the early years setting operates, which can be hard to judge from a website alone.
If you are weighing the likelihood of admission, using FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your exact distance and likely routes is sensible, but you should treat any single year’s pattern as indicative rather than guaranteed, since allocations change annually with cohort distribution.
100%
1st preference success rate
51 of 51 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
58
Offers
58
Applications
141
Pastoral support is described in the February 2024 report as attentive and prompt, with pupils confident about sharing concerns. That is a useful marker for parents, because a calm pastoral culture is often what makes a large primary feel manageable for younger children.
Personal development was judged Good in the most recent inspection outcome, and the report narrative points to pupils learning about equality, different cultures and backgrounds, and wider world issues. This is the kind of personal development that tends to show up in classroom discussion norms and in how staff handle disagreements and unkindness, rather than being limited to one-off themed days.
Online safety is explicitly mentioned as an area pupils understand, which is increasingly important in primary settings where device access often arrives earlier than parents expect. If your child is moving into KS2, it is worth asking how the school communicates with families about online risks and what the expectations are for homework platforms and digital tools.
The school’s enrichment offer is more specific than many primaries publish. Forest School is a whole-school experience across year groups, with practical guidance on clothing and an expectation that sessions continue in all weathers, which usually indicates it is embedded rather than occasional.
Clubs are also detailed by term. For Spring Term 2026, examples include Years 5 and 6 dodgeball, Years 4 to 6 netball, Years 5 and 6 badminton, crochet for Years 3 to 6, and both girls’ and boys’ football for Years 4 to 6. There are also targeted phonics clubs by invitation, which signals structured intervention alongside optional enrichment. This blend matters: it suggests the school is using after-school time both to broaden experiences and to plug learning gaps where needed.
The school also has a pupil leadership structure with named ambassador roles such as Eco Warriors, Mind Ambassadors, Reading Ambassadors, Science Ambassadors, Sports Leaders, and Anti Bullying Ambassadors. In practical terms, these roles can help quieter pupils develop confidence, and they can make behaviour expectations feel peer-owned rather than only adult-enforced.
The published school day is unusually clear. The main site opens at 8:30am, gates close at 8:40am, and the school day ends at 3:00pm. There are differentiated break and lunch times by year group, which is typical in larger primaries and can reduce crowding.
Breakfast club is open from 7:45am for Reception to Year 6, with arrival and registration between 7:45am and 8:00am, and it is described as fully funded by the school. For working families, that combination of early opening and school funding can make a material difference to monthly costs.
After-school clubs run from 3:00pm to 4:00pm, with some tuition clubs running 3:15pm to 4:15pm. For wraparound care beyond that window, the school signposts a paid after-school care arrangement run via the pre-school site, operated by an external provider. Parents who need late collection should check the current hours and booking arrangements directly with the provider, as these can change year to year.
For term dates, the school publishes full calendars well into the future, including the 2025 to 2026 academic year. That is helpful for parents planning childcare and leave in advance.
Overall effectiveness is not yet where it needs to be. The current headline judgement is Requires Improvement, with the improvement work focused on curriculum sequencing and consistent assessment practice across subjects. Families who prioritise consistently above-average results may want to compare nearby schools carefully.
A school mid-change can feel uneven. The direction of travel is clear, but embedding curriculum change takes time, and children in different year groups can have different experiences during implementation. It is worth asking how leaders are checking consistency between classes and subjects.
Competition for Reception places is real. The available admissions figures indicate oversubscription, so families should treat the local authority application timeline as non-negotiable and make sure evidence is ready well before the January deadline.
Wraparound coverage depends on your needs. Breakfast provision is clear and early, but later after-school coverage relies on an external provider. If you need consistent care beyond 4:00pm, confirm the current offer before assuming it will match your working day.
Haydon Abbey School and Pre-School is a large, structured community primary with clear strengths in early years, behaviour, and personal development, plus a well-articulated approach to outdoor learning and a genuinely specific clubs programme. The academic picture is more mixed, with outcomes below England average on the combined expected standard measure, and improvement work centred on making curriculum and assessment more consistent across subjects.
Who it suits: families who want a big, organised primary with strong routines, a visible reading focus, and an outdoor learning strand, and who are comfortable choosing a school that is actively improving rather than already performing at the top of local tables. Entry remains the hurdle, so deadlines and application strategy matter.
It has a number of clear positives, including Good judgements for behaviour and personal development in the most recent inspection outcome, alongside a strong focus on early reading and a well-developed enrichment offer. The overall effectiveness judgement is Requires Improvement, so it is best viewed as a school with a positive culture that is still embedding academic and curriculum improvements.
Applications are made through Buckinghamshire Council’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 5 November 2025 and the on-time deadline was 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The admissions indicates oversubscription for primary entry, with more applications than offers. In practice, families should assume competition and apply on time with accurate address evidence where required.
Yes. The school has pre-school provision and nursery places, including for younger children, with session times published for the pre-school day. For the most up to date eligibility, sessions, and funding routes, check the school’s published pre-school information.
The main school day runs from 8:30am opening with a 3:00pm finish. Breakfast club starts at 7:45am for Reception to Year 6, and after-school clubs typically run to 4:00pm. Later wraparound care is signposted via an external provider, so parents should confirm current timings and availability directly.
Get in touch with the school directly
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