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 lower school with a genuinely small scale can feel very different from a larger two-form entry primary. Here, that smaller footprint is the point. With mixed-age classes and a roll of 52 pupils recorded at the most recent inspection, day to day routines tend to run on clear relationships, consistent expectations, and children being known well by staff.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (04 May 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Personal development rated Outstanding and safeguarding confirmed as effective. Those headlines align with what the school itself emphasises, a friendly village setting, wraparound care that starts early, and a culture that puts pupil voice and responsibility front and centre.
The school’s own language focuses on values and “Golden Threads”, namely Wonder, Ambition, Learn, Inspire. That messaging is not presented as a poster exercise. The same page also frames pupil participation as part of daily life, describing a School Council as a way for children to experience democracy in action.
Externally, the picture is of a calm, close-knit community where pupils feel listened to and supported, with older pupils taking on roles such as sports leaders and reading buddies. For parents, that matters because it tends to translate into smoother mornings, fewer behaviour flashpoints, and children who grow in confidence as they move through the mixed-age structure.
Leadership is stable in presentation. The headteacher is named as Deborah Willans on both the school website and the local authority’s directory entry. Where families may want to probe further is how leadership continuity is reflected in curriculum planning and assessment across all subjects, because the latest inspection highlights that a small number of subjects are not planned or assessed with the same precision as the strongest areas.
This is a lower school, so pupils transfer to middle school at the end of Year 4, and Key Stage 2 outcomes sit with the receiving middle schools rather than being a clean “end point” here. In practice, that means parents often learn more from curriculum quality, reading development, and how securely knowledge builds year on year than from a single published results snapshot.
The strongest academic signals in the latest official evidence sit around early reading and mathematics. Phonics is described as effective, with quick progress in early years and clear checks to identify pupils who need extra help. Mathematics is used as an example of staff adapting teaching based on close observation and checks on learning.
For families comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can still be useful, particularly for viewing nearby schools’ published outcomes side by side. The key is to interpret any results with the context that this school’s phase ends at Year 4, so transition readiness is a major success measure.
Mixed-age classes are often the defining feature of a small village lower school. Done well, they can build independence because pupils are used to self-managing tasks, listening carefully, and learning alongside children at slightly different stages. The latest inspection notes that leaders have adapted a broad curriculum for mixed-age classes, and in most subjects have clearly set out the important content pupils should know and remember.
Reading is treated as a core culture, not a bolt-on intervention. The external evidence points to a structured approach: early reading begins promptly, phonics teaching is consistent, and comprehension is developed through planned activities that build subject-specific vocabulary. For parents, the implication is simple: children who become fluent readers early tend to access the rest of the curriculum more confidently, particularly in a setting where independence is expected.
Where the school is still sharpening practice is consistency across every subject. The improvement priorities from the latest inspection focus on ensuring that all subjects identify the most important knowledge as clearly as the strongest areas, and that assessment routinely picks up gaps in learning, not just in mathematics. In a small school, those refinements can be implemented quickly, but families should still ask how subject leaders are tightening planning and checking impact.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because this is a lower school (ages 4 to 9), transition happens earlier than in a standard primary. Pupils move on at the end of Year 4 into middle school, and the most recent inspection explicitly frames preparation for that step as a strength.
For parents, the practical takeaway is to treat Year 4 as a key readiness year, not simply “more of the same”. Look for how the school builds study habits, independence, and confidence in reading, because those tend to be the skills that travel best into the middle school model.
If you are shortlisting, check Central Bedfordshire’s middle school catchment and transfer arrangements early, as they shape the realistic next-step options in a three-tier area.
Admissions are coordinated through Central Bedfordshire Council for lower and primary school places, and the school is described as Oversubscribed in recent admissions data. In the available figures, there were 20 applications for 4 offers, a ratio that signals competition for places when year groups are tight. (The year for those figures is not specified provided, so treat them as directional rather than a guarantee of current levels.)
The published admission number shown by the local authority directory entry is 12 places available, and the oversubscription criteria follow a typical priority order: looked-after and previously looked-after children; children of staff; then catchment and sibling categories before other applicants. If you are aiming for a place, it is worth reading the criteria carefully and being realistic about how often the decision comes down to catchment and sibling priority rather than preference alone.
For September 2026 entry, Central Bedfordshire lists 15 January 2026 as the closing date for on-time applications, and 16 April 2026 as national offer day for on-time applications. Parents can use FindMySchoolMap Search to check how your home location sits against the school’s measuring point and local patterns, and then keep a back-up list in Saved Schools in case your preferred option does not come through.
100%
1st preference success rate
4 of 4 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
4
Offers
4
Applications
20
Pastoral strength is the school’s headline. Personal development was rated Outstanding in the latest inspection, and the wider narrative points to pupils who are calm, respectful, and confident, with clear understanding of safety including online safety.
Leadership opportunities appear to be baked into daily life rather than reserved for a small group. Roles such as reading buddies and sports leaders give older pupils a reason to model behaviour and support younger children, which can be particularly valuable in mixed-age classes.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as well integrated, with teaching adapted to identified needs and additional adults providing individual and group support, so pupils can access the same learning as peers.
In a small school, “range” often looks different. Instead of dozens of clubs, enrichment tends to show up as whole-school experiences, responsibility roles, and carefully chosen activities that most pupils can access.
Trips and visitors are described as complementing classroom learning, and the school’s news feed highlights specific initiatives such as Bikeability and a Class 2 visit to Celtic Harmony Camp for a Stone Age themed day. Those kinds of experiences matter because they give concrete context for history and personal development, not just “a nice day out”.
Daily enrichment also comes through the pupil voice and community structures: the School Council is explicitly positioned as a practical lesson in democratic participation, and the PTFA is described as organising fundraising events to support the school. For many families, this community layer is a key reason to choose a village lower school over a larger setting.
The school day is clearly set out. Registration starts at 08:45, and home time is 15:15. Breakfast club runs from 08:00 to 08:45. After-school club provision runs until 17:30 through an external provider, and the school notes children are in school for 32.5 hours per week.
Wraparound costs are published: Early Birds is £4 for 08:00 to 09:00, or £2 for 08:30 to 09:00, with free access for eligible Pupil Premium families. Lunch information is also transparent, with hot meals for Year 3 and Year 4 priced at £2.70, while Universal Free School Meals apply for Reception to Year 2.
As a village lower school, travel is usually local and routine-driven. If you are new to the area, focus less on “commute time on a good day” and more on whether morning logistics work consistently for your household, particularly if you will use breakfast club or after-school provision.
Earlier transfer point. Pupils move on to middle school at the end of Year 4. This suits families who like the three-tier model, but it does mean thinking about the next step earlier than in a standard primary.
Competition for places. The school is oversubscribed in recent admissions data, and the local authority lists a published admission number of 12. If you are outside catchment or do not have sibling priority, keep realistic alternatives in view.
Curriculum consistency work in progress. The most recent inspection highlights that a small number of subjects are not planned or assessed with the same precision as the strongest areas. Ask how leaders are tightening curriculum sequencing and assessment beyond mathematics and early reading.
Wraparound is helpful, but not free. Breakfast club and after-school care are clearly available, with published charges for Early Birds and booking required for the after-school provider. Factor this into weekly budgeting if you will rely on it.
A properly small lower school that leans into its scale, strong relationships, and leadership opportunities for pupils. The best fit is for families who want a calm, community feel, value personal development as much as academics, and are comfortable with the earlier Year 4 transfer into middle school. The main hurdle is admission, especially in years where available places are limited.
The most recent inspection (May 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Personal development rated Outstanding and safeguarding effective. Pupils are described as thriving in a close-knit community and being well prepared for middle school at the end of Year 4.
The local authority’s directory entry shows the oversubscription criteria, including catchment and sibling categories. Because priorities depend on who applies in a given year, families should read the published criteria carefully and check how their address is treated under Central Bedfordshire’s arrangements.
Yes. Breakfast club is available from 08:00, and after-school care runs until 17:30 via an external provider. Early Birds pricing and the after-school provider arrangement are published on the school’s wraparound page.
Central Bedfordshire lists 15 January 2026 as the closing date for on-time applications, with 16 April 2026 as national offer day for on-time applications.
Pupils transfer to middle school at the end of Year 4 as part of the local three-tier structure, and the latest inspection notes that pupils are prepared well for that move. Families should confirm which middle schools apply to their address under local arrangements.
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