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.
This is a village Church of England voluntary controlled Lower School serving pupils from Reception to Year 4, with a clear emphasis on character, belonging, and calm routines. The school’s Christian vision is summarised as “Together we grow”, with an explicit aim that children flourish as confident, resilient and kind individuals.
Day to day, the structure is deliberately steady: doors open at 8.45am, teaching starts at 8.55am, and the school day ends at 3.25pm for Reception and 3.30pm for Years 1 to 4. For working families, wraparound care is run on site from 7.45am and after school until 6.00pm on weekdays (5.30pm on Fridays).
The school was rated Good at its most recent inspection (March 2023).
The school’s identity is built around a shared language of values. A two year rolling programme covers 22 values, and children are recognised through celebration worship when they demonstrate them. Positivity is one of the named values pupils reference directly, and it is used as a practical tool for persevering when work feels hard.
Leadership stability matters in smaller communities, and the head teacher, Mrs Sarah Boyle, has been in post since September 2019. The school’s faith character is not an add on. It explicitly describes a close partnership with the local church and St Albans Diocese, and places Christian vision and worship at the centre of its approach to relationships, kindness, and community responsibility.
A distinctive element here is the school’s SEMH additional resource provision, Conifer Class. It is described as an 8 place provision for children in Years 1 to 4 with an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) where social, emotional and mental health needs are the primary need, with admissions determined by the local authority. This matters for the wider school culture because it signals inclusion in practice, not just policy language. The provision is based within the main school and is designed to support reintegration into mainstream learning as appropriate.
Because this is a Lower School ending at Year 4, it does not operate on the same end of primary Key Stage 2 assessment cycle as schools that go through to Year 6, so headline Year 6 outcomes are not a useful yardstick here.
Instead, the most reliable external evidence is the breadth of what is evaluated in inspection. The school’s March 2023 inspection graded Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, Leadership and Management, and Early Years provision as Good. Within that, early reading is treated as a priority, with a strong reading culture and regular checks to spot gaps quickly.
If you are comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool are the fastest way to line up schools serving the same age range and admissions system, then shortlist based on fit, travel, and provision rather than relying on one headline metric.
The curriculum intent is framed as knowledge rich and experience led, with the school positioning each subject as valued and deliberately planned to build breadth across the curriculum. In practice, the most distinctive curriculum feature is outdoor learning through Forest School. Pupils take part in practical sessions such as den building, making simple items from natural materials, and learning safe tool use within the school grounds. The implication is twofold: confidence grows through hands on problem solving, and children who learn best through doing have more chances to show what they can do beyond workbook tasks.
For children who need additional support, the school describes a structured approach using SEND support plans and EHCP processes, working with families and external professionals to remove barriers to learning. Conifer Class adds a further layer for pupils whose SEMH needs make full time mainstream access difficult, with a higher staffing ratio and a focus on self regulation and positive relationships alongside academic learning.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
In Central Bedfordshire’s three tier structure, Year 4 is a transition point. The school states it sits in the catchment area for Arnold Academy, and that middle school transfer admissions are completed through the local authority.
The school also lists other local middle schools families may consider, including Alameda Middle School and Robert Bloomfield Academy.
For parents, the practical implication is that you are planning two admissions journeys, Reception entry now and middle school transfer later. It is worth reading the local authority guidance early, especially if you are weighing catchment options or transport.
Reception entry is coordinated by Central Bedfordshire Council. For children starting Reception in September 2026, the school notes that applications open from 8 September 2025. The local authority deadline for on time applications is 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026.
Demand data indicates an oversubscribed picture in the most recently recorded admissions cycle, with 54 applications for 40 offers. That level of competition tends to reward families who are organised on dates and realistic with preferences, particularly in smaller villages where catchment patterns can shift from year to year.
For the SEMH additional resource provision (Conifer Class), the route is different. Places are commissioned by the local authority and require an EHCP naming the provision, with placement requests typically made through annual review or an interim review process.
100%
1st preference success rate
39 of 39 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
40
Offers
40
Applications
54
The school day is designed to start calmly. Children arrive from 8.45am and begin with emotional wellbeing and early morning activities before lessons start at 8.55am. That kind of routine can be especially helpful for children who benefit from predictable transitions.
Safeguarding is treated as a whole school responsibility. Ofsted confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective, supported by a strong safeguarding culture and staff training that helps adults act promptly and consistently.
Pupil voice also appears in how responsibility is taught, with children learning about British values through voting for representatives for councils such as eco and school council.
Outdoor learning is a defining strand. Forest School gives children structured time for practical projects, nature learning, and cooperative problem solving. For many pupils this becomes the place where confidence shows first, particularly for children who are quieter in whole class discussions.
Clubs and enrichment are concrete rather than generic. The school advertises a choir for Years 3 and 4, typically held after school on Tuesdays, and a breakfast dance club option currently listed for Monday mornings. These opportunities link back to the school’s emphasis on performance, teamwork, and steady commitment across a term.
Wraparound care also doubles as enrichment. Activities listed include creative play and craft, construction, board games and computers, which is useful for parents who want continuity between the school day and after school provision rather than a separate childcare setting.
The compulsory school day runs from 8.55am. End times are 3.25pm for Reception and 3.30pm for Years 1 to 4.
On site extended hours provision runs 7.45am to 8.45am, then after school from 3.30pm to 6.00pm Monday to Thursday and 3.30pm to 5.30pm on Fridays.
Transport patterns for village schools tend to be a mix of walking, driving, and local bus routes depending on where families live. If you are moving for a place, FindMySchool’s Map Search is the simplest way to sense check travel distance to the school gates before you rely on an allocation.
A different structure from many primaries. This is a Lower School that transfers pupils at the end of Year 4, so families need to plan for middle school admissions as well as Reception entry.
Oversubscription pressure. With more applications than offers in the most recently recorded cycle, preference strategy and deadlines matter.
Communication expectations. The inspection noted that a small number of parents raised concerns about the quality and timeliness of communication, which is worth probing during visits and information evenings.
SEMH resourced provision is specialist. Conifer Class is specifically for pupils with an EHCP where SEMH is the primary need, with placements decided through the local authority, not direct application.
Silsoe CofE VC Lower School offers a steady, values driven start to education, with routines that prioritise calm transitions, an outdoor learning strand through Forest School, and an established SEMH additional resource provision that supports inclusion at a practical level. It suits families who want a Church of England school ethos and a clear values framework, and who are comfortable planning ahead for the Year 4 transfer to middle school.
The school was rated Good at its most recent inspection in March 2023. Strengths include calm behaviour, a caring ethos where pupils feel included, and a strong emphasis on early reading, with regular checks to identify gaps and help children catch up.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire Council and depend on the published oversubscription criteria for the year you apply. For the Year 4 transfer stage, the school states it is in the catchment area for Arnold Academy, with transfer applications completed through the local authority.
Yes. The school runs extended hours provision on site, with a morning session from 7.45am to 8.45am and after school sessions running to 6.00pm Monday to Thursday and 5.30pm on Fridays.
Applications for children starting Reception in September 2026 open from 8 September 2025. The on time deadline set by Central Bedfordshire Council is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. Apply through the local authority rather than directly to the school.
The school describes a graduated SEND approach using SEND support plans and EHCP processes, working with families and external professionals. It also operates Conifer Class, an 8 place SEMH additional resource provision for pupils in Years 1 to 4 with an EHCP where SEMH is the primary need, with placements decided by the local authority.
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