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.
In a village setting just south of Berwick-upon-Tweed, Scremerston First School sits firmly in the small school category, the kind where children are known quickly and routines matter. The leadership team has a wide remit in a setting of this size, with Mrs Sarah Smith as Head Teacher and Designated Safeguarding Lead.
The most recent inspection, carried out on 08 and 09 July 2025, judged each key area as Good (quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision).
A practical point for families, the school has been part of a wider local shift from the three tier first school model towards primary age ranges, with a phased change to 4 to 11 referenced in local authority decision papers and reflected in the school’s own public facing description. That transition matters for planning, particularly for families thinking ahead to the next stage of schooling.
What stands out most clearly from the available evidence is the emphasis on relationships and a steady culture. Staff and pupils are described as having positive relationships, with pupils feeling safe and behaviour being calm in lessons and around school. That combination tends to be especially valuable in small settings, where consistency is highly visible and where the social mix in each year group is naturally tighter.
The school also leans into character and citizenship, with regular discussion of current affairs and a stated intent to build pupils’ understanding of British values in an age appropriate way. The idea is not just assemblies and posters, but structured conversation, which can help children learn to explain their thinking and listen to others.
For families who like a school to feel practical and outdoorsy, the published description of the grounds is a plus. The school highlights a wooden play area, a log circle, a large field, and a garden area where children can grow vegetables. In a rural school, these details are not cosmetic, they can shape breaktimes, enrichment, and how well early years learning moves beyond the classroom.
For this review, there are no Key Stage 2 performance figures or FindMySchool primary ranking metrics available so it would be misleading to imply a results profile beyond what is formally evidenced.
What can be said with confidence is about approach and priorities. Early reading is presented as a clear focus, with phonics introduced from Reception and pupils reading books that align to the sounds they know, so decoding skills build in a structured way. In a small school, a strong reading spine can be particularly important because it supports the full curriculum across mixed age classes.
The curriculum is described as sequenced and checked for understanding, with staff using assessment to revisit misconceptions. Where the evidence is more mixed, the inspection narrative indicates that in some foundation subjects pupils are not consistently supported to apply knowledge in wider contexts, geography is used as a specific example. For parents, this is useful because it pinpoints the difference between learning facts and using them meaningfully, which is often where small schools need to be very deliberate in planning.
Parents comparing local schools can also use the FindMySchool local hub tools to line up what is published for each option, so gaps in published performance data are easier to spot early in the shortlist process.
A school of this size typically relies on teachers working across a broad span of subjects, so subject knowledge and planning matter. The inspection evidence points to strong subject knowledge and clear introduction of new learning, with resources used to help pupils grasp concepts quickly. That tends to suit children who like structure and clarity, and it can also help pupils who need careful scaffolding to keep pace.
Reading and writing appear to be treated as core threads. The school publicly references Big Write as part of its writing approach, with an emphasis on talk, accurate basics (spelling, punctuation, grammar, handwriting), and regular assessment and target setting. That combination often benefits pupils who need routine practice to become fluent writers, while also giving confident writers a framework to refine their work.
In early years, the evidence suggests strong indoor planning and language development, with a more specific improvement point around the outdoor provision being less closely aligned to children’s next steps. For Reception age children who learn best through purposeful play, that is worth asking about directly, for example how outdoor activities are planned, and how staff decide what children practise outside.
Transition planning is a central question locally because Northumberland has historically operated a three tier model in parts of the county. The inspection report indicates that the school works with other small schools on a residential experience that supports wider social interaction and helps pupils transition successfully to middle school.
For families, the key practical task is to confirm the intended pathway for your child’s cohort, particularly during a period of phased change in age range. In the wider local context, public information about the village notes links to nearby Tweedmouth for middle and secondary provision, but individual routes depend on the system operating for your year group and the admissions arrangements at the time you apply.
Recent admissions demand data suggests the Reception entry route is oversubscribed, with 13 applications for 5 offers, a ratio of 2.6 applications per place. In a small school, a handful of families can shift the picture year to year, so it is best treated as a directional signal rather than a fixed trend.
Reception applications are handled through Northumberland’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the local authority publishes an opening date for the online portal of 01 November 2025 and a closing date of 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
If you are trying to judge realistic chances, distance and criteria matter more than reputation in most coordinated systems. FindMySchool’s map based search tools can help families sanity check practicalities early, especially if you are weighing several rural options with different transport patterns.
Applications
13
Total received
Places Offered
5
Subscription Rate
2.6x
Apps per place
In a small primary, pastoral care is usually inseparable from day to day teaching. The evidence points to pupils being taught how to recognise risk and keep themselves safe, with outside organisations referenced in safety education, such as lifeboat and fire services, which makes sense given the local geography and travel routes.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as early identification and use of external experts to clarify next steps, with purposeful adjustments in class so pupils can access learning alongside peers. For parents, a good question here is how support is delivered in mixed age classes, and how targets are set and reviewed when staffing is naturally lean.
Inspectors stated that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The school positions enrichment as part of the offer, not an optional extra. The inspection report cites extra curricular clubs informed by pupil interests, with computing, art, and a knitting club named specifically. Those details matter because they show the school is not just relying on generic sport clubs, it is responding to what children actually want to do.
The site also references structured work on reading culture, including a Reading Vision and a 2026 reading challenge theme. In a small school, these whole school initiatives can have outsized impact because they are easy to embed consistently across year groups. If your child is a reluctant reader, the practical question is what daily reading looks like in class and at home, and how books are matched to phonics stages and interests.
Outdoor learning is another clear strand. The school highlights its field, garden, and play features, which can support science, physical development, and less formal leadership opportunities for older pupils.
The school describes itself as small and rural, close to the A1 and within reach of Berwick-upon-Tweed, which is relevant for commute planning and wraparound logistics.
A breakfast club is referenced in the inspection documentation, and the school’s extracurricular page describes breakfast as an optional provision with a per day cost. Wraparound patterns vary year to year in small schools, so families should confirm current days, booking approach, and collection windows directly with the school, especially if you rely on after school care for work.
Small school volatility. With very small cohorts, the experience can change quickly with staffing shifts or a few additional pupils in a year group; ask how mixed age teaching is structured and how consistency is maintained.
Curriculum application in foundation subjects. Evidence suggests pupils sometimes learn skills without applying them widely enough, geography is the example given; ask what has changed in planning and teaching to fix this.
Early years outdoor learning. Outdoor provision is highlighted as an improvement area; if you are choosing mainly for Reception, ask how outdoor activities now match children’s next steps.
Transition during phased change. Local documentation references a phased move towards a primary age range; confirm exactly which year groups are affected for your child and how transition arrangements work in practice.
Scremerston First School offers the clear advantages of a small rural school, close relationships, calm behaviour, and a strong emphasis on early reading. It suits families who value a tight knit setting, outdoor space, and a culture where children are known well by staff. The decision point for many will be practical rather than philosophical, confirming the current age range pathway and the day to day wraparound arrangements that make rural schooling workable.
The most recent inspection in July 2025 judged each key area as Good. The evidence points to pupils feeling safe, behaviour being calm, and reading being treated as a priority with a structured phonics approach.
Reception entry is coordinated by Northumberland, and places are allocated using the published oversubscription criteria for the relevant admissions year. Because local systems and school age ranges are changing in some areas, it is sensible to read the current primary admissions handbook and confirm how criteria apply to your child’s cohort.
A breakfast club is referenced in official documentation, and the school describes breakfast provision on its extracurricular information page. For after school care, families should confirm current club days, finish times, and booking expectations directly with the school, as small school wraparound provision can change with staffing and demand.
Reading is positioned as a core priority, with phonics taught from Reception and books aligned to pupils’ phonics knowledge. Teaching is also described as well planned and sequenced, with checks on understanding used to address misconceptions.
The evidence includes pupil led club choices and names specific examples, including computing, art, and a knitting club. Outdoor space and practical learning features are also highlighted in the school’s own description of its grounds.
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