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.
For a school that only has three year groups, Brookfield Infant School has a surprisingly distinctive “feel”. The culture is anchored in everyday language about kindness and emotional literacy, paired with high expectations for routines and learning habits. That mix matters at infant stage, because it shapes how quickly pupils settle, how confidently they communicate, and how prepared they are for the step up to junior school.
This is a state infant school in Larkfield (Aylesford), serving ages 5 to 7 with a published capacity of 180. The headteacher is Cathy Smith, who describes a journey from class teacher to Head of School in 2017, and then into the headship.
If you want a Reception and Key Stage 1 experience where pastoral systems and personal development are treated as core, not “extra”, this is one to look at closely.
The atmosphere here is structured, but not severe. Adults spend real time teaching routines, and pupils learn quickly what good behaviour looks like in practice. The day-to-day tone leans on consistent expectations and warm correction rather than loud sanctions, which is exactly what many families look for at this age.
A key strand is emotional wellbeing. Pupils are taught to identify feelings and to communicate them clearly, which helps staff intervene early when a child is anxious, dysregulated, or struggling socially. That approach also supports learning, because pupils who feel safe tend to take more academic risks, whether that is attempting a harder piece of writing or reading aloud.
Leadership continuity helps. The headteacher has a long institutional memory and frames the school’s work as “through-school” thinking, seeing pupils through into the junior phase within the federation. It also shows up in practical consistency across subjects and routines, which is especially valuable in an infant setting where pupils benefit from predictable structures.
The wider governance structure is shared across the federation’s infant and junior schools, with joint chairs and vice chairs named publicly. That matters less for day-to-day parenting, but it can matter for continuity of priorities, resourcing decisions, and how smoothly children transition at age 7.
Because Brookfield Infant School is an infant school (Reception to Year 2), it does not publish Key Stage 2 outcomes, and it is not positioned as a “results table” school in the way a full primary (Reception to Year 6) might be. Instead, parents should focus on the quality of early reading, phonics, number fluency, and learning behaviours, because those are the building blocks that drive later attainment.
External commentary on the curriculum emphasises strong early reading, with a consistent phonics approach and careful matching of books to what pupils are learning. In plain terms, this suggests pupils are likely to develop decoding confidence early, which reduces the risk of falling behind when the curriculum becomes more language-heavy in Year 3 and beyond.
A useful way to evaluate “results” at infant stage is to ask practical questions during visits: how reading is assessed, how quickly additional support is put in place, and how the school communicates progress to parents. The school’s published curriculum information places reading and phonics prominently, signalling that this is treated as a priority rather than a background skill.
For families comparing local options, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can still help, but the most meaningful comparisons at infant stage are often around approach and consistency rather than headline exam figures.
Teaching in an infant school succeeds when it balances three things: clear modelling, structured practice, and enough variety to keep curiosity alive. Brookfield’s published materials and external review evidence point towards that kind of balance.
The strongest signal is early reading. A clear phonics model, tightly matched books, and prompt intervention are exactly the ingredients that help children become fluent readers rather than slow decoders. The school’s own reading statements also stress breadth of texts and building enjoyment, which matters because motivation is what keeps children reading once the initial novelty fades.
Infant maths is not about racing ahead; it is about secure number sense. External review evidence references a carefully sequenced approach and regular checks for understanding. For parents, the practical implication is fewer “mystery gaps” appearing later. When children understand number relationships early, they cope better with formal methods in junior school.
The school also leans into breadth. Forest School is used to build resilience and safe risk-taking, and the wider curriculum is framed around developing attitudes and values, not only content knowledge.
One area to watch, because it appears in formal improvement points, is consistency in the foundation subjects. The development direction is clear: strengthening subject knowledge and pedagogical choices so that pupils retain key knowledge over time across the wider curriculum. For most families, this is not a red flag, it is a useful discussion point during a visit: ask what has changed since the last inspection cycle, and how leaders ensure consistency across staff.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Brookfield Infant School sits alongside Brookfield Junior School within the wider Flourish Federation, which supports continuity in curriculum and pastoral expectations as pupils move into Year 3.
In Kent County Council admissions terms, families should be aware that moving from an infant school to a junior school is an application point. Kent explicitly highlights that children in Year 2 who are due to start junior school in Year 3 need to apply.
In practice, many families who are happy with the infant experience will naturally look to continue locally into the linked junior setting. The best advice is to treat Year 3 transfer as a planned transition rather than an automatic step, with calendar reminders and a clear understanding of the application process.
Admissions are coordinated through the local authority rather than handled as a direct “apply to the school” process. For September 2026 entry, the key dates for Kent were:
Applications opened Friday 7 November 2025 and closed Thursday 15 January 2026.
National Offer Day was Thursday 16 April 2026.
For Brookfield Infant School specifically, the Published Admission Number for 2026 entry is 60.
Demand data indicates that entry is competitive. In the most recent, there were 114 applications for 56 offers, meaning roughly 2.04 applications per place, and the school is classified as oversubscribed. For parents, that has two implications:
Timelines matter, late applications reduce your options.
It is sensible to include realistic alternative preferences in your list, especially if you are new to the area.
If you are shortlisting based on proximity, use FindMySchoolMap Search to check distances accurately and avoid relying on approximate “walking time” estimates.
Applications
114
Total received
Places Offered
56
Subscription Rate
2.0x
Apps per place
Infant pastoral care should look like early identification, consistent routines, and adults who know children well enough to spot subtle changes. Brookfield’s published and externally reviewed picture suggests that emotional wellbeing support is integrated into daily practice, not just delivered as occasional assemblies.
The school also provides pupils with responsibilities and structured participation, which builds confidence early. Even small roles at this age can have an outsized effect on belonging, especially for quieter children.
The latest Ofsted inspection in April 2023 judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding judgements for behaviour and attitudes, and for personal development. The same report confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular provision matters in infant schools for two reasons. First, it helps children try new activities in a low-stakes way. Second, it can make the school week workable for parents, especially where wraparound options are limited locally.
A key feature here is a federation breakfast club that starts at 7:30am, with structured activities alongside breakfast. That earlier start can be a real practical advantage for working families.
After school, the current published club list for the infant phase includes Film club, Construction club, Dodgeball club, Tennis club, and Science club, with Football Club also listed as part of the wider offer. These are not generic “something for everyone” placeholders; they are the sort of concrete, hands-on clubs that typically work well at Key Stage 1 because they build coordination, turn-taking, and confidence.
Forest School also plays a role in the broader offer. It is framed as a long-term process of regular sessions rather than a one-off enrichment day, which is the model most likely to build skills such as independence, safe risk assessment, and teamwork.
The school publishes clear opening hours: gates open at 8:30am, classroom doors open and register begins at 8:35am, lessons start at 8:45am, and the school day ends at 3:15pm. The total length of the school week is 32.5 hours.
Breakfast club starts at 7:30am and runs until 8:40am before children are escorted back to the infant site by staff.
For transport and drop-off realities, parking is limited and the school highlights safety-related restrictions around the start and end of day, which is a useful signal to plan walking routes or off-site parking if you are driving.
Competition for places. The school is oversubscribed, with around 2.04 applications per place. If you are moving into the area, build a realistic preference list and keep close to deadlines.
Year 3 transfer is a fresh application point. In Kent, moving from Year 2 (infant) to Year 3 (junior) is not something to assume, it is part of the local authority admissions process.
Foundation subjects consistency. A stated improvement priority is strengthening consistency of teacher subject knowledge and pedagogical choices across the foundation subjects, so that pupils retain key knowledge securely over time.
Drop-off logistics. Limited on-site parking and safety controls at peak times can be frustrating if you rely on driving. Families who can walk, or who can plan a reliable alternative parking routine, will find mornings easier.
Brookfield Infant School suits families who want a calm, structured infant education where personal development and emotional literacy are treated as core, and where early reading and routines are taken seriously. It is also a strong fit for parents who value continuity into a linked junior setting within the same federation.
The primary challenge is admission demand rather than the educational model. Families who secure a place are likely to find a coherent, values-led start to school life, with practical support like breakfast club and a club programme that feels age-appropriate and specific.
Brookfield Infant School is judged Good overall, with strengths in behaviour and personal development highlighted in its latest inspection cycle. The school’s approach places clear emphasis on early reading, strong routines, and emotional wellbeing, which are the foundations that tend to matter most between ages 5 and 7.
Reception applications are made through the Kent local authority process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on Friday 7 November 2025 and closed on Thursday 15 January 2026, with offers released on Thursday 16 April 2026.
Yes. In the most recent admissions, there were 114 applications for 56 offers, and the school is categorised as oversubscribed. That equates to roughly 2.04 applications per place.
Children typically move on to junior provision for Year 3. In Kent, this is an admissions point, so families should plan to apply for a junior school place during Year 2 rather than assuming transfer happens automatically.
Get in touch with the school directly
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