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.
For families looking for a start that blends nursery warmth with structured early learning, Cottesbrooke Infant and Nursery School has a clear focus: routines, relationships, and the basics that matter most from age three to seven. It is an academy serving Acocks Green in Birmingham, with places from Nursery through Year 2, and a published capacity of 348 pupils.
Leadership continuity is a defining feature. The head teacher, Mr Will Loughlin, notes 2024 as his tenth year leading the school, which points to a stable approach across the post pandemic period.
The school is oversubscribed for Reception entry in the most recent admissions here, with 92 applications for 56 offers. For many families, the practical question is less about whether the provision is solid, and more about how to secure a place, and what the transition looks like once children move on to a junior setting.
Cottesbrooke frames its ethos around community and inclusion, and the website consistently comes back to children being “known” and supported, alongside an emphasis on respectful behaviour and belonging. The tone is resolutely early years: confidence is built through predictable routines, language is developed explicitly, and families are treated as partners rather than spectators.
The school also has a distinct local story. It has served the community since 1933, later separating from the junior phase in the late 1960s, with nursery provision added in 1971. A full rebuild in 1998 is described as a major step change, adding a separate library and modern learning spaces. This matters because it helps explain why the school talks so much about dedicated learning areas and specialist spaces, including a sensory room supported by fundraising.
A notable feature for an infant setting is the explicit emphasis on family support. The school describes a pastoral manager role helping families access wider support, which is often a strong indicator of how a school handles the real life barriers that can affect attendance, punctuality, and readiness to learn.
The most recent published inspection outcome is a strong signpost for parents weighing up the overall quality. The latest Ofsted inspection (9 and 10 February 2022) confirmed the school continues to be good.
The report text highlights pupils feeling safe, behaving well, and benefiting from a broad curriculum that extends knowledge across subjects. It also flags two practical improvement themes that parents should take seriously: some subject curriculum clarity in a small number of areas, and attendance recovering to pre pandemic levels.
Early reading is positioned as the engine room. The 2022 inspection report describes a structured phonics and early reading programme, with staff trained to teach phonics and assessment used to identify pupils who need extra help with fluency. For parents, the implication is straightforward: if your child needs clear routines and repeated practice to get reading off the ground, this is the kind of approach that tends to work, because it is consistent and monitored.
The curriculum structure is also clearly defined by phase. Nursery and Reception follow the Early Years Foundation Stage, while Year 1 and Year 2 follow the National Curriculum, with a stated priority on reading, writing, and maths alongside a wider curriculum intended to build curiosity and confidence. In practice, that combination usually looks like daily phonics, regular story rich language work, and deliberate vocabulary teaching, alongside topic work that gives children something worth talking about.
For families considering the nursery, it is useful that the inspection report comments positively on early years routines and social development, and on adults spotting quickly when children are falling behind and providing additional support.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As an infant school, the main transition point is from Year 2 into a junior or primary setting. Cottesbrooke’s own history page notes that the junior school was built separately on Cedars Avenue and that the provision formally separated in 1968. In practical terms, many families will look first at the nearest linked or local junior options and then consider wider Birmingham choices depending on travel and childcare needs.
The school also states that its wraparound childcare service welcomes children from Cedars Academy, with drop off and collection managed by the team, which is a meaningful hint about a common onward pathway and an attempt to make family logistics workable.
If your shortlist includes more than one junior destination, it is worth asking how the school supports transition emotionally and academically, for example visits, shared records, and any targeted support for children with additional needs. The school has a published transitions section, so this is an area where the website and calendar are usually the best live guide to what is happening in a given year.
Reception admissions are managed through Birmingham City Council rather than directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, Birmingham’s published timetable states:
Applications opened 1 October 2025
Closing date was 15 January 2026
National Offer Day is 16 April 2026
Demand is real in the provided admissions results. With 92 applications for 56 offers, the school sits in oversubscribed territory. The practical implication is that families should treat distance, sibling priority, and any other oversubscription criteria as decisive. Use the FindMySchool Map Search to check your home to school distance in the same way the local authority measures it, and sanity check whether this looks realistic before you rely on a place.
Nursery admissions are handled by the school itself rather than the council. The school states it offers part time and full time nursery places depending on availability, and sets out the proof documents required. Attendance at nursery does not guarantee a Reception place in Birmingham’s coordinated system, so families should plan as if they need to apply twice, once for nursery and once for Reception.
100%
1st preference success rate
50 of 50 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
56
Offers
56
Applications
92
Pastoral care is often the difference between a school that looks fine on paper and one that works for families day to day. Cottesbrooke describes a pastoral manager role supporting families into wider services, which can be especially important in an infant context where routines and attendance can be sensitive to home pressures.
Behaviour and safety are also explicitly addressed in the 2022 inspection report, which describes pupils behaving well and understanding how to seek help if they have concerns, and it confirms safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For children with additional needs, the school publishes a detailed SEND offer and names an enhanced specialist provision, The Beehive and Learning Den, aimed at a small number of pupils with communication and interaction needs who require a low arousal environment and a highly structured approach. It also describes use of Widgit symbols, visual timetables, sensory regulation opportunities, and specialist practice frameworks. For parents, this indicates the school is thinking seriously about inclusion beyond classroom differentiation.
In an infant setting, extracurricular is less about prestige and more about access and habit building. Cottesbrooke highlights after school sports clubs running 3:15pm to 4:30pm on a rotation, with examples including football, dance, cricket, multi sports, and dodgeball. These are simple activities, but the implication is valuable: children practise taking turns, following rules, staying active, and building friendships beyond their class group.
Community engagement is also visible in two strands:
A fundraising group, Cottesbrooke Infant School Supporters, linked to projects such as the sensory room and playground improvements.
A weekly Stay and Play session for children aged 0 to 4 and their parents or carers, held every Tuesday morning from 9:00am, which can help families build familiarity before nursery or Reception.
Wraparound care can be the make or break factor for working families. The school runs Kids’ Club before and after school during term time, describing it as flexible wraparound care, and it also welcomes children from Cedars Academy with managed transfers.
The published school day timings are clear:
Reception, Year 1 and Year 2: 8:45am start (doors open 8:35am), 3:15pm finish
Nursery: morning 8:30am to 11:30am, afternoon 12:30pm to 3:30pm
Wraparound childcare is offered via Kids’ Club before and after school in term time, with details and paperwork provided on the school site.
For travel planning, the school sits on Yardley Road in Acocks Green, which typically suits families walking from the immediate neighbourhood and those using local bus routes along the corridor. Parking and drop off arrangements can change, so the school travel plan and calendar are usually the best place to check current guidance and any temporary changes linked to events.
** With 92 applications for 56 offers in the latest admissions here, securing a Reception place may be competitive. Treat the local authority criteria as decisive, and use a distance checker tool rather than assumptions.
Nursery is not a back door to Reception. Nursery places are managed by the school, but Reception applications go through the council, and nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception offer.
Attendance expectations matter. The 2022 inspection report flags attendance as an area needing continued work post pandemic. If your child has health needs or complex family logistics, ask early about support and communication routines.
Specialist support has capacity limits. The enhanced provision described on the SEND page is designed for a small number of pupils and operates within defined limits. If your child needs this sort of support, ask how decisions are made and what the timeline looks like.
Cottesbrooke Infant and Nursery School reads as a purposeful, community anchored infant setting with a strong emphasis on early reading, stable leadership, and practical support for families. The latest inspection confirms the school continues to be good, with safeguarding effective and pupils feeling safe.
Who it suits: families who want a structured start to schooling from nursery through Year 2, value consistent routines and early literacy, and can engage with the Birmingham coordinated admissions process on time. The main constraint is admission pressure rather than provision quality.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (9 and 10 February 2022) confirmed the school continues to be good, and it describes pupils feeling safe, behaving well, and learning through a broad curriculum. Safeguarding arrangements were judged effective.
Reception places are allocated through Birmingham City Council, using the council’s oversubscription criteria rather than an informal “school catchment” idea. If the school is oversubscribed, where you live and how the authority measures distance can be decisive, so it is worth checking your precise home to school distance using a mapping tool before relying on a place.
For Birmingham’s September 2026 primary admissions round, applications opened on 1 October 2025, closed on 15 January 2026, and offers were released on 16 April 2026.
Nursery admissions are managed directly by the school and places may be part time or full time depending on availability. Reception admissions are managed by Birmingham City Council, and nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception offer.
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