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.
Bursted Wood Primary is a large, mixed primary in Bexleyheath with capacity for around 630 pupils, and the scale shows up in the breadth of what pupils can do day to day. The school’s stated values, Collaboration, Aspiration, Resilience and Empathy, are used as a common language for behaviour and expectations, and they sit alongside a strong academic profile.
Performance at the end of Key Stage 2 is a standout. In 2024, 88.7% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. A notably high 35% reached the higher standard, compared with 8% across England. This is a school that sets ambitious goals and, crucially, supports pupils to meet them.
Leadership has been stable through a period of development. Helen Charman has been headteacher since January 2020, and the most recent Ofsted inspection confirmed the school continues to be Good, with safeguarding effective.
The tone is purposeful but child-centred, which is an important balance in a large primary. Pupils are expected to take learning seriously, yet the school is explicit that it is a community, not just a timetable. In its own description, the school positions itself as a “happy” community with pupils at the core, and it highlights its setting near Bursted Wood and local amenities.
A values framework only matters if children and staff actually use it. Here, the language around care and respect is embedded into routines and behaviour expectations. Ofsted’s 2021 inspection described pupils enjoying learning, aiming to embody positive values, and experiencing calm classroom environments that support learning without disruption.
This is also a school where pupil responsibility is more than a token badge. The presence of pupil leadership groups such as the Care and Community Team and the Pupil Enrichment Team signals that older pupils are expected to contribute to school life in structured ways, not simply “help out”.
For families, the practical implication is that Bursted Wood tends to suit children who like clear routines and can handle high expectations, while still wanting a warm social experience. In a three-form entry setting, that consistency of message is often what helps pupils feel secure, because not every child is taught by the same adult every year.
Bursted Wood’s end of Key Stage 2 picture in 2024 is very strong.
Expected standard (reading, writing and mathematics combined): 88.7%, versus an England average of 62%.
Higher standard (reading, writing and mathematics): 35%, versus an England average of 8%.
Average scaled scores: Reading 107, Mathematics 108, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 107.
Science expected standard: 86%, versus an England average of 82%.
Taken together, these figures suggest success is not limited to one “spiky” cohort or one subject area. Reading and mathematics are both well above the national benchmark, and the higher standard rate is particularly meaningful because it indicates depth of understanding, not just threshold passes.
On FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings based on official outcomes data, the school is ranked 2,722nd in England for primary outcomes and 4th in the Bexleyheath area, placing it above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England. (FindMySchool ranking, based on official performance data.)
The implication for parents is twofold. First, children who are already secure in literacy and numeracy are likely to be stretched rather than simply maintained. Second, for children who need consolidation, the school’s track record suggests systems are in place that help pupils catch up and still achieve the expected standard at strong rates.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
88.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum design is described clearly by the school: learning is planned through curriculum maps for each year group, often “hooked” on a quality text and deliberately linked across subjects. The intent is that learning is coherent, relevant, and rooted in the National Curriculum, rather than a carousel of disconnected topics.
External evidence broadly supports that direction. Ofsted noted that pupils benefit from a broad curriculum and highlighted effective sequencing in some areas, giving history as an example where knowledge and skills build from Reception upwards. The same inspection also makes it clear that development work was still under way in computing and art, with curriculum plans not yet fully developed at that point.
Early reading is a key strength, and it matters because it tends to underpin outcomes later at Key Stage 2. Ofsted reported a strong approach to early reading, with leaders ensuring curriculum and support help pupils who need to catch up to become confident readers.
For families, the practical takeaway is that Bursted Wood looks well suited to children who respond to structured teaching and clear knowledge-building. It is also a good fit for parents who value transparency about what is being taught, since curriculum overviews are a visible part of how the school presents itself.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the main destination question is transition at age 11. Bursted Wood sits within the London Borough of Bexley, where families have a mix of non-selective secondary routes and selective grammar options across the borough, so it is common for parents to weigh both local secondaries and selection testing when planning ahead.
What Bursted Wood can control is readiness for Year 7. The academic outcomes suggest pupils leave Year 6 with secure foundations, and the curriculum emphasis on building knowledge over time is aligned with what secondary schools expect, particularly in reading comprehension, writing stamina, and mathematical fluency.
If your child is likely to pursue selective routes at 11, it is worth understanding early what that preparation looks like in your family, because approaches vary widely across Bexley. If your child is likely to take a comprehensive route, the school’s consistent academic standards still matter, because strong literacy and numeracy make the first year of secondary far smoother.
Entry is competitive. In the most recent admissions data, 221 applications were made for 90 offers, which equates to 2.46 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. This is the central practical reality for families considering the school.
For Reception entry in September 2026, Bexley’s coordinated admissions timetable states:
Applications open 01 September 2025
Closing date 15 January 2026
Offer day 16 April 2026
Applications are made through the local authority’s process, even where the school is its own admissions authority as an academy. The school’s own admissions page signposts parents to apply via Bexley for Reception and in-year places.
A practical tip: if you are trying to judge viability, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your real walking distance to the school, then sanity-check against recent offer patterns. Even when distance figures are not published for a given year, precision matters, because small differences can be decisive in oversubscribed primaries.
Applications
221
Total received
Places Offered
90
Subscription Rate
2.5x
Apps per place
Safeguarding is the baseline that matters most. The most recent Ofsted inspection confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective, and it described an experienced and well-trained staff team with clear processes for identifying and reporting concerns.
Pastoral support is also visible in the way SEND is described. Ofsted noted strong pastoral care and effective work with external agencies and professionals to identify needs, with pupils with SEND supported and included in planned learning. The school also identifies its SEND leadership in its published staffing information, which helps parents understand who is responsible for coordination.
For families, the implication is reassuring: pupils who need additional support are not treated as an add-on. In a large school, consistency and systems matter, and the available evidence points towards structured approaches rather than ad hoc goodwill.
A large school should mean more than bigger year groups. It should translate into genuine choice, and Bursted Wood’s published clubs offer shows that extracurricular life is organised and wide-ranging, with options across sport, creative activities, languages, and computing.
Examples from the Spring 2026 programme include Jam Coding, Science Spectacular, Street Dance, Karate, Theatre Club, Choir, and Sewing Club, alongside football and multi-sports options. There is also an explicit before-school chess option for some year groups, which is a practical detail that often helps working families who want enrichment without extending the end-of-day run.
This kind of menu matters for two reasons. First, it allows children to find “their thing” early, whether that is performing, coding, or sport. Second, it reduces the sense that school is only about tests, which is particularly important in a high-attaining setting. Add in the “One Step Greener” pupil group mentioned in the Ofsted report, and you get a picture of a school trying to develop interests and responsibility, not just outcomes.
A note on wraparound: the school signposts childcare providers that support Bursted Wood pupils, including an after-school club, but availability and hours are provider-led, so parents should check details directly with the named organisations.
The school day runs 08:50 to 15:10, with gates opening at 08:30 and closing at 08:50. The website notes lesson hours specifically exclude before- and after-school activities, so families using wraparound should confirm times with the relevant provider.
On travel, the school highlights that it is close to local amenities and transport routes into London, which is helpful context for commuting families. Drop-off and pick-up will feel busy, as it does at most large primaries, so walking routes and staggered routines matter in practice.
Oversubscription is the main constraint. With 221 applications for 90 offers in the latest available results, the barrier is admission rather than school quality. Families should plan early and have realistic alternative preferences.
Large-school dynamics. Three-form entry brings breadth and opportunity, but it can feel less intimate for children who prefer very small settings. The right fit depends on personality.
Curriculum development work is real. External review noted that subject planning in computing and art was still developing at the last inspection point. Ask how curriculum sequencing and subject leadership have progressed since then.
Wraparound is not one single in-house offer. Childcare is signposted via external providers, which can work well, but it means parents need to check places, pricing, and policies early.
Bursted Wood Primary School combines a clear values framework with outcomes that compare strongly against England averages, particularly at the higher standard. It reads as a school with structured teaching, strong early reading, and enough scale to offer meaningful extracurricular choice.
Who it suits: families wanting a large primary with high expectations, clear routines, and a proven track record at Key Stage 2. The biggest variable is not the education, it is securing a place.
Bursted Wood Primary School has a Good Ofsted rating, and its Key Stage 2 outcomes are significantly above England averages. In 2024, 88.7% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics, and 35% reached the higher standard, which is far above the England benchmark. For many families, that combination of external assurance and strong results is compelling.
Reception entry is coordinated through Bexley’s admissions process. Oversubscribed schools typically prioritise places using published criteria, often including distance where relevant. Families should read the current admissions arrangements carefully and use precise distance checking when deciding whether the school is a realistic option.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Bexley, applications open on 01 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers made on 16 April 2026. Apply through the local authority’s coordinated admissions route, and ensure any supporting documents required by your preferences are submitted on time.
The school publishes lesson hours separately from wraparound and signposts childcare providers who care for Bursted Wood pupils, including an after-school club. Availability and timings are provider-led, so it is sensible to confirm practical details early if you rely on wraparound for work.
The clubs programme includes options such as Jam Coding, Science Spectacular, Street Dance, Karate, Theatre Club, Choir, and Sewing Club, alongside sports. The mix changes over time, so parents should check the current clubs list, especially if a particular activity is important to your child.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.