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 genuinely small lower school, capped at 75 pupils, where leadership leans hard into what small schools can do well: close relationships, quick identification of learning gaps, and an orderly, predictable day.
Leadership is split across a federation model. The executive headteacher is Mrs Samantha Barlow, and a January 2023 school report confirms she joined the Derwent and Southill Federation as the new executive headteacher that month. The head of school is Mrs Sonya Read.
Parents considering Reception should know two practical truths early. First, this is a three tier area. Pupils typically move on to middle school after Year 4, so the “primary” experience here is deliberately focused on early reading, writing, number, and learning habits. Second, entry is competitive relative to the school’s size; in the latest available admissions data, there were 32 applications for 15 offers.
This is a values-led school with a clear, repeated message about respect for self, others, and the environment. That emphasis shows up not as slogans, but as a framework for expectations and behaviour language.
The setting matters. School communications describe the school as tucked into a “special village environment”, and highlight outdoor learning through an environmental garden, pond area, field, and nearby woods. For the right child, that kind of outdoor rhythm can be grounding, and it can make curriculum topics feel more concrete, especially in early years and Key Stage 1.
The federation model also shapes day-to-day culture. Shared staffing and subject leadership across the Derwent and Southill Federation is positioned as a way to improve provision while protecting a small-school feel, with each school retaining its own character and separate inspection cycle.
Because pupils only stay to Year 4, families should not expect the usual Year 6 SATs headline measures to be the main lens for academic performance here. Instead, the most meaningful external signals are early reading, phonics, and the school’s internal checks on curriculum coverage and recall.
The 18 November 2025 report card inspection presents a very positive picture of pupil outcomes, noting that attainment in national tests supports that pupils achieve well, and that phonics outcomes have improved over time and sit above national averages. It also states that performance in the multiplication check has improved and is above the national average.
For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your priority is strong foundations before the middle school transition, the school’s published focus is aligned to that goal, with particular weight placed on reading fluency and confident number knowledge in the junior years.
(Parents comparing local schools can use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages to line up nearby options side by side using the Comparison Tool.)
Curriculum planning is described as a knowledge-based, sequenced approach, with clear intent to build vocabulary and subject understanding over time, including explicit reference to equality duties and inclusion expectations.
Class pages add useful texture. In Years 1 and 2, teaching references the Primary Knowledge Curriculum resources for subjects such as geography, history, religious education, and science, plus daily mathematics and structured spelling, grammar and punctuation within English lessons built around high-quality texts. In Years 3 and 4, the same Primary Knowledge Curriculum sequencing is presented as a way to link learning to prior knowledge so pupils can retain it in long-term memory.
Reading is treated as a whole-school habit rather than a standalone lesson. Year group information stresses both decodable phonics books and reading-for-pleasure texts, alongside home-school reading logs to encourage frequent practice and parental insight into progress.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The “next step” here is unusually clear because of the local system: pupils typically transfer to middle school after Year 4. The 18 November 2025 inspection report explicitly frames teaching and support as preparing pupils for that move, and the Year 4 page links pupil leadership roles to readiness for transition.
For families new to Central Bedfordshire, it is worth planning the pathway from the start, not in Year 4. Consider how your child handles change, what kind of middle school environment you want next, and whether you may need a longer primary phase elsewhere. The local authority’s catchment tool is designed to help families understand which schools typically serve their postcode.
Admissions are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire Council, not directly by the school, and the school publishes a Reception intake number of 15, with the same admission number stated for Years 1 to 4.
Demand, even in a small cohort, is meaningful. The latest available figures show 32 applications for 15 offers for the primary entry route, with an oversubscribed status. That gap is large enough that families should treat proximity and criteria as practical constraints rather than background details.
For 2026 entry, the on-time deadline for lower and primary applications in Central Bedfordshire is 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026. Late applications are processed in the late allocation round, and there is a further late allocation offer day on 1 June 2026.
For pupils transferring to middle school in September 2026, the council uses the same on-time deadline of 15 January 2026 and the same national offer day of 16 April 2026, with a late allocation offer day of 22 May 2026.
(If you are moving house or trying to judge realistic options, use the FindMySchool Map Search to measure your distance and sanity-check choices, especially when numbers are small and competition is tight.)
Applications
32
Total received
Places Offered
15
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
The 18 November 2025 inspection report describes a calm, respectful culture in which pupils feel safe and listened to, and where behaviour is consistently strong with clear expectations from the outset. It also describes warm relationships between leaders and pupils and a strong emphasis on wellbeing.
Inclusion is described as a strength. The same report outlines established systems to identify barriers to learning and wellbeing, and notes that pupils with special educational needs and disabilities learn alongside peers through routine lesson adaptation and targeted strategies.
One concrete pastoral feature is the family engagement worker role shared across the federation, positioned as a support for children and families who need extra help.
Enrichment is tied to local context. School communications describe whole-school events such as a local Steam Fayre visit, plus fundraising and community events run by the Friends of Southill Lower School, including a Colour Run and discos.
Pupil leadership and participation are explicit rather than assumed. Both the inspection report and the Year 4 class information refer to ambassador roles, including supporting younger pupils at lunchtime, managing playground equipment and games, and contributing to assemblies. That kind of structured responsibility tends to suit pupils who like clear roles and enjoy being “helpers”.
Music has defined structures. Across the federation, music is taught weekly by class teachers, with Sing Up supporting the vocal curriculum, and peripatetic guitar and piano teaching plus an after-school choir run through Barnwell Music. There is also a long-running pattern of participation in Young Voices.
The school day begins at 8:50am and ends at 3:30pm, with lunchtime from 12:00pm to 1:00pm, giving a typical 32.5-hour week.
Wraparound care is clearly set out. Breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:50am, with a shorter drop-in option from 8:20am to 8:50am, and after-school sessions are offered to 4:30pm or 5:30pm. Published session prices are £4.00 (7:30am start breakfast club), £2.00 (8:20am start breakfast club), £3.50 (to 4:30pm), and £5.00 (to 5:30pm).
Three tier transition. Pupils typically move on after Year 4. This suits families who like an early-years specialist feel first, but it does mean another school move earlier than in a two tier primary system.
Small cohort dynamics. With a capacity of 75 and 15 per year group, friendship groups are naturally smaller. Some children thrive in that predictability; others prefer the social breadth of a larger primary.
Entry pressure in a small intake. With 32 applications for 15 offers in the latest available data, families should plan realistically and keep a strong second and third preference in the local authority application.
Early years interaction focus. The latest inspection highlights an area for development around ensuring frequent, high-quality adult interaction for those children who engage less readily in early years, so parents may want to ask how this is addressed in practice.
Southill Lower School is built around strong early foundations, with clear curriculum sequencing, a strong reading focus, and a pastoral model that suits a small, rural community school. Best suited to families who value a close-knit setting, structured expectations, and a purposeful run-up to middle school transfer. The main challenge is admission, because the intake is small and demand can exceed places.
The latest inspection report card (inspection date 18 November 2025) presents a very strong picture, with safeguarding standards met and multiple areas judged at a strong standard. The school’s published curriculum intent and class-level detail suggest a clear focus on early reading, writing and number, which aligns well with a lower school that prepares pupils for middle school transition.
Applications are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire Council rather than submitted directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, the on-time closing date is 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026.
Pupils typically leave after Year 4 to move into the middle school phase (Year 5). The school explicitly links Year 4 responsibilities and readiness work to that transition.
Yes. The school’s nursery provision accepts children from age 3 and is designed to be integrated into daily school life, including use of facilities such as the field, wildlife areas and pond, library and hall.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast club and after-school club hours for Nursery to Year 4, plus session prices and booking arrangements.
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