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 small lower school serving Lidlington, with an unusually long backstory. The school traces its origins to 1624, when local benefactor Thomas Johnson founded a school in the parish after building a successful life in London.
Today, the setting is firmly modern: ages 3 to 9 (pre-school to Year 4), a Published Admission Number of 30, and a close-knit feel that comes with being smaller than average. The most recent inspection judged the school Good across all key areas, including early years.
The prevailing tone is calm and inclusive. Pupils are described as happy, getting along well, and new starters settling quickly into routines, which matters in a school where early years and Key Stage 1 set the direction for everything that follows. Bullying is described as rare, and the relationship between pupils and adults is consistently presented as a strength.
Leadership is stable and visible. Mr Simon Bolger is the headteacher and also the Designated Safeguarding Lead; his appointment as headteacher is recorded as starting on 01 September 2022.
A few distinctive structures show up in the way the school talks about daily life. There is a house-point system, a school council, and named routines aimed at keeping children safe and listened to, including the Helping Hand approach to trusted adults and other pupil voice mechanisms.
This is a lower school, which means it finishes at Year 4 rather than Year 6. As a result, the usual headline Key Stage 2 measures that parents often use to compare primaries are not the main story here, and the most recent public narrative evidence focuses on curriculum quality and early reading rather than end-of-Key Stage 2 test outcomes.
The strongest, most specific evidence sits in early reading. A clear phonics and reading programme is described as starting immediately in early years, with books matched closely to pupils’ phonics knowledge, and timely support when pupils fall behind. That combination usually translates into confident decoding early, which reduces the risk of later gaps appearing in writing, comprehension, and wider curriculum access.
The overall academic picture is therefore best read as, “strong foundations, well-sequenced learning, and careful attention to early literacy”, with some curriculum areas still being refined to ensure teachers have the same level of detail and progression across every subject.
Curriculum thinking is explicit. Leaders describe a planned approach to content and progression, with regular checking across subjects. In most areas, including English and mathematics, the curriculum is described as carefully planned and well taught.
Where this becomes practical for families is in what children do day to day. Early years is described as ambitious, with a focus on early language and early mathematical skills, alongside routines that help children settle quickly. By Year 1, pupils are expected to use phonics knowledge to tackle increasingly complex words, and reading fluency is promoted through high-quality texts.
There is also a clear improvement edge. A small number of subjects are identified as having plans that are less detailed than others, which can make it harder for staff to gauge precisely what pupils have learned before and what comes next. In a small school, this sort of work often happens quickly once identified, but it is still a meaningful consideration if you are sensitive to consistency across the whole curriculum.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school finishes at Year 4, transition planning matters earlier than it does in a full primary. The school describes regular links with Marston Vale Middle School, including visits and staff coming to the school, plus bespoke transition planning for children who may need additional reassurance or structure.
For parents, the implication is straightforward: you are choosing an early-years and Key Stage 1 to lower Key Stage 2 pathway, then a separate middle school experience from Year 5. Families who like the three-tier rhythm often value having a fresh start point built into the system; families who want one school from Reception to Year 6 should weigh how they feel about an earlier transition.
For the main intake, Central Bedfordshire’s coordinated application deadline for on-time lower or primary applications for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026.
The school’s published admissions arrangements for 2026 to 2027 entry set a Published Admission Number of 30 and confirm that the designated measuring point is the school gate. Oversubscription is handled through a clear priority order: looked-after and previously looked-after children; children of qualifying staff; then catchment and sibling criteria; and finally other children prioritised by proximity, using straight-line distance as the tie-break.
Provided for this review, there were 38 applications and 16 offers for the relevant admissions route, and the school is marked as oversubscribed, with 2.38 applications per offer. For families, that usually means two practical steps: apply on time and be realistic about distance if you are relying on proximity. FindMySchool’s Map Search tool can help you check your exact home-to-gate position against local patterns, then you can combine that with the local authority’s published criteria to sense-check your shortlist.
100%
1st preference success rate
15 of 15 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
16
Offers
16
Applications
38
The latest Ofsted inspection (23 and 24 November 2022) judged the school Good overall, with Good judgements for behaviour, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
The report also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Beyond the headline judgement, there are several practical indicators of how wellbeing is handled. Staff training and clear reporting expectations are emphasised, and pupils are taught how to keep themselves safe in different settings, including online. The school’s own safeguarding guidance also describes structured transition work and pupil voice routines, which typically reduces anxiety for younger children and creates predictable channels for raising worries.
SEND support is framed around access to the same curriculum, with needs identified and staff training used to help classroom adaptations land consistently. For families with additional needs in the early years, the early identification and routine-building emphasis can be particularly important.
Extracurricular life is presented as a mix of wraparound activity and teacher-led clubs.
For clubs, a recent published programme (example from a summer term offer) includes several specific options that go beyond generic sport lists. For older pupils in Years 3 and 4, there is Food Club (practical food hygiene and making simple dishes), Cube Club (Rubik’s Cube solving steps), Computing Club (coding and problem-solving), and Choir Club (classical and contemporary repertoire, with a performance opportunity). For Reception to Year 2, there is Science Club (investigations and experiments), Reading Club (book-based activities including texts from other cultures), and Art Club (exploring different materials and media).
Cultural breadth also appears in the curriculum enrichment described in inspection evidence, including first-hand experiences such as Bollywood dancing and cooking traditional Jewish food. For a village school, that sort of planned exposure can matter, because it widens the reference points children bring into reading, writing, and discussions in class.
School day routines are clearly defined. Doors open at 08:50 and close at 09:00, with end-of-day collection procedures designed to keep dismissal orderly and safe.
Wraparound care is available through an on-site before and after-school club based in the library and hall, running from 07:30 to 09:00 and from 15:20 to 18:00.
There is also on-site pre-school. The school states that every pre-school-age child is entitled to 15 hours of funded childcare, and that it cannot offer the 30-hour funding due to staffing, with additional funded hours referenced through the wraparound provider. For any paid session pricing, nursery and lunch costs, refer to the school’s own pages because these can change and early years fee presentation should always be checked at source.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual extras, such as uniform, trips, and optional wraparound care.
An earlier transition point than most primaries. The school finishes at Year 4, so children move on at Year 5. The school describes structured links with Marston Vale Middle School, which helps, but families should still think about how their child copes with change.
Competition for places. In the provided admissions snapshot, demand exceeded offers and the school is labelled oversubscribed. That is a useful warning sign for families who are hoping for a place without a strong proximity or catchment position.
Curriculum consistency is still being refined in some subjects. The inspection evidence highlights that a small number of subject plans were less detailed than others, which can affect continuity. For many families this will feel like a normal improvement priority, but it is worth asking how this has progressed since 2022.
Early years funding specifics. The school highlights the 15-hour funded entitlement and notes constraints around 30-hour funding. If funded hours are critical to your childcare plan, confirm the current offer and availability early.
This is a small, structured lower school that leans hard into the fundamentals: early reading, clear routines, and a curriculum built to progress step by step. The Good inspection profile and the emphasis on inclusion and safety support that direction.
Best suited to families who want a village-based start from pre-school or Reception through to Year 4, with wraparound available, and who are comfortable with a planned move to middle school at Year 5. The main hurdle is admission demand relative to places, so shortlisting should be backed by realistic distance and catchment checks.
The most recent Ofsted graded inspection (23 and 24 November 2022) judged the school Good overall, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. Safeguarding arrangements were confirmed as effective in that inspection.
For the main intake, applications are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire Council. The on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, and national offer day is 16 April 2026. If the school is oversubscribed, priority is then applied using the published oversubscription criteria and distance tie-break.
Yes. The school has on-site pre-school for children from the September after their third birthday, and it also has before and after-school provision on site. The school publishes the funded-hours approach for pre-school on its website, and parents should check the latest availability and session structure directly with the school.
Pupils transfer at Year 5, and the school describes regular links with Marston Vale Middle School to support transition, including visits and tailored planning for children who need it.
Club offerings vary by term, but published examples include Science Club, Reading Club and Art Club for Reception to Year 2, alongside options like Computing Club, Cube Club and Choir Club for Years 3 and 4.
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