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.
A calm, tightly-run primary where routines matter and reading sits at the centre of the school’s approach. Official inspection evidence from January 2025 emphasises high expectations for behaviour, a purposeful climate for learning, and a carefully planned curriculum, with one clear improvement priority, sharpening how consistently staff pinpoint misconceptions and next steps, particularly in reading fluency and comprehension.
On outcomes, the most recent published Key Stage 2 picture is encouraging. In 2024, 77% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is also above benchmark, 13% versus an England average of 8%, suggesting that higher attainers are being stretched, not just supported to “get over the line”.
Demand looks real rather than hypothetical. For Reception entry, there were 91 applications for 46 offers, close to two applications per place, so families should treat admissions as competitive even though the school is not selective.
Eversley’s tone is defined by clarity and consistency. Expectations for behaviour are set high and the day runs on routines that pupils learn quickly, which tends to suit children who like structure and predictability. The school’s leadership team positions reading as a whole-school priority, and the inspection evidence backs up the idea that classrooms are focused and orderly, with pupils generally engaged and proud of their work.
The headteacher is Mrs Penny Pepper, and she has been in post since 2008, which is a long stint by current leadership norms. That length of tenure can matter in a community primary, it often means the behaviour policy, SEND systems, and curriculum choices have had time to bed in rather than being rebranded every few years.
There is also a clear “have-a-go” strand to the wider life of the school. The school frames enrichment through its “Eversley Endeavours”, which include character-building activities such as enterprise projects, and performance experiences such as choir at the O2 Arena. A culture like this tends to appeal to families who want primary school to build confidence and range, not only test scores.
Eversley is a state primary, so the most useful indicators for families are Key Stage 2 outcomes and the broader pattern of scaled scores.
77% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%.
13% achieved the higher standard, compared with an England average of 8%.
That is a strong headline. It suggests pupils, as a group, are leaving Year 6 with secure basics, and that a meaningful minority are operating beyond the expected level.
Scaled scores provide a second angle because they show attainment more granularly than a single threshold. Eversley’s 2024 average scaled scores were 103 in reading, 103 in mathematics, and 103 in grammar, punctuation and spelling. The combined reading plus maths plus GPS total was 309.
On FindMySchool’s primary outcomes ranking, the school is ranked 11,079th in England and 19th in Basildon. This places it below England average on the ranking distribution (bottom 40%). Families should treat that as a signal to look beyond any single metric and to ask the school how outcomes vary across cohorts and subjects, particularly for higher attainers and for pupils who need targeted support.
If you are comparing options locally, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can be a practical way to set Eversley’s outcomes alongside nearby schools without relying on anecdote.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
77.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading is presented as the “engine” of learning here. The inspection evidence describes a comprehensive reading programme from Reception through Year 6, supported by a phonics programme intended to spot pupils at risk of falling behind and respond quickly. The identified improvement area is not about whether reading matters, but about the precision and consistency of guidance, especially in developing fluency and comprehension and addressing misconceptions.
In mathematics, the curriculum emphasis includes problem-solving and reasoning, which is typically a good sign for depth rather than only procedure. The inspection evidence also points to subject knowledge as a staff strength, with teachers presenting information clearly and pupils applying it confidently in their work.
For parents, the practical implication is this: children who benefit from explicit teaching, clear explanations, and well-established routines are likely to settle well. Children who need frequent “next step” feedback should still be supported, but it is sensible to ask how feedback is made consistent across classes, particularly for reading comprehension and for foundation subjects where misconceptions can quietly accumulate.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Basildon primary, most pupils will move on to local secondary provision through Essex coordinated admissions. The school does not publish a single “destination list” for Year 6 leavers in the same way some independent preps do, so families should approach this as a catchment and transition question rather than a prestige pipeline.
A sensible approach is to identify your likely secondary options early, then ask Eversley how it supports transition in Year 6. If your family is considering selective routes or out-of-area secondaries, it is also worth checking how the school balances broad curriculum coverage with any extra preparation that individual pupils might pursue outside school.
Admissions for Reception are coordinated through Essex, rather than handled entirely by the school. For September 2026 entry, Essex states that the application window runs from 10 November 2025 to 15 January 2026.
Eversley’s own admissions guidance reflects the same annual pattern: the Reception application deadline is usually 15 January each year, with offers made on 16 April (or the next working day).
Demand data indicates competition. For Reception entry, there were 91 applications and 46 offers, which is about 1.98 applications per place.
The school has published Reception open mornings for September 2026 intake, both running 9:30am to 11:10am on Thursday 13 November 2025 and Tuesday 18 November 2025.
100%
1st preference success rate
44 of 44 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
46
Offers
46
Applications
91
Pastoral strength at Eversley is closely linked to behaviour consistency and inclusion. The inspection evidence highlights calm conduct and positive attitudes to learning, with older pupils actively leading play activities for younger children at social times. The same evidence also describes precise identification and support for pupils with SEND, with staff making meaningful adaptations so pupils can access the same curriculum as their peers.
Safeguarding is reported as effective, which is the minimum non-negotiable for any shortlist.
For families, the useful question is not whether pastoral care exists, but what it looks like day-to-day. At Eversley, the indicators point towards a school that takes routines seriously, builds positive conduct deliberately, and uses enrichment and leadership roles to develop confidence and responsibility.
The after-school offer is unusually specific and well-structured for a community primary. Breakfast Club and Early Morning Club run Monday to Friday from 7:50am to 8:40am (they incur a small charge), and after-school clubs run 3:15pm to 4:15pm.
Clubs vary by term, and the Autumn 2025 programme gives a good feel for the range. Examples include Musical Theatre (Years 3 to 6), Lego club, Puzzle Club, Wellbeing Club, Computer Club, Film Club, and sport options such as KS1 football, KS2 dodgeball, KS2 basketball, netball, and multi-sports.
Music is also a clear pillar. The school references Infant and Junior Choir, recorder club and glockenspiel club, alongside workshops such as African drumming and steel drums. There are also opportunities to perform at scale, including Junior Choir participation at Young Voices at the O2 Arena.
The implication is simple: pupils who gain confidence through performance, clubs, and team activity should find plenty of chances to do so, not only for the most “talented” children but across year groups.
The school day runs from 8:45am to 3:15pm, with gates opening at 8:40am and a one-hour lunch break.
Wraparound provision includes Breakfast Club and Early Morning Club from 7:50am, plus a menu of after-school clubs until 4:15pm.
For travel, Pitsea is the local area, and many families will think for walking routes and short car journeys at drop-off. If you will rely on public transport, it is worth doing a trial run at school-run times because peak congestion and bus reliability can change the experience considerably.
Competition for places. With 91 applications for 46 offers for Reception entry in the most recent admissions snapshot, you should plan on a competitive process and have realistic backups.
Consistency in deepening learning. The improvement priority is about staff consistently identifying misconceptions and giving precise next-step guidance, especially for reading fluency and comprehension. Ask how this is monitored across classes.
No nursery provision on site. Children join from Reception rather than progressing internally from a nursery class, which matters for families who want a single setting from age 3.
Wraparound is club-based. Early morning provision exists and after-school clubs are broad, but families needing later childcare should check what is available beyond 4:15pm and how places are allocated.
Eversley Primary School, Basildon suits families who want a structured, orderly primary with a clear reading focus and a strong menu of clubs that build confidence and breadth. Outcomes at Key Stage 2 look positive against England benchmarks, and the school’s enrichment offer, from Musical Theatre to Lego club to choir performance opportunities, adds genuine texture to pupils’ weeks. The main challenge is admission, competition for places is the limiting factor, so families should approach the process early and plan alternatives in parallel.
The most recent official inspection evidence from January 2025 indicates the school has maintained the standards from its previous Good judgement, with a calm culture for learning and effective safeguarding. Key Stage 2 outcomes in 2024 were also above England averages on the combined expected standard measure.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Essex. The oversubscription rules and how distance is measured are set by the local authority’s published arrangements, so families should check the current criteria carefully and avoid relying on informal “street by street” assumptions.
There is early morning provision, with Breakfast Club and an Early Morning Club running on weekday mornings, and after-school clubs running after the school day. Places for early morning provision can be limited, so it is sensible to ask about availability early.
Essex states that applications for September 2026 Reception places open in November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026. Offers follow in April.
The programme varies by term, but examples include Musical Theatre, Lego club, Computer Club, Puzzle Club, Wellbeing Club, Film Club, choir, and a range of sports clubs. Music also includes ensembles such as Infant and Junior Choir, plus instrument-based clubs like recorder and glockenspiel.
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