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 in and around Marston Green, this is a clearly organised infant setting that takes the early years seriously and thinks carefully about transition into junior education. The most recent inspection (January 2025) confirmed that the academy has maintained its previous standards, with safeguarding judged effective and a curriculum mapped from pre-school through to Year 2.
Leadership is stable. The headteacher is Beverley Elliott, with the role also referenced on the school’s official information and governance pages.
Demand looks healthy. In the most recent admissions, there were 150 applications for 83 offers at the main entry route, indicating oversubscription rather than spare capacity.
The tone here is unapologetically pro-learning, but still age-appropriate. Classroom life is framed around routines that help very young pupils settle quickly, with a strong emphasis on behaviour that supports learning. The January 2025 inspection describes pupils as hardworking and achieving well, particularly in reading and mathematics, and highlights structured support for emotional needs at the start of the day through the school’s “sunshine club”.
Play and learning are not treated as opposites. Breaktimes are organised into different “zones”, giving pupils choices between equipment and adult-led games, which is a practical way of reducing low-level conflict and keeping social play purposeful. The same document also notes a forest area used for outdoor learning tasks that build teamwork and social skills.
A distinctive feature is the way pupil leadership is introduced early. Year groups are small enough for responsibilities to feel real rather than symbolic, with examples such as pupils turning classrooms into museum-style showcases of learning for families.
. What parents can rely on instead is the most recent inspection evidence about the core building blocks.
Reading is a central pillar. The January 2025 inspection highlights a deliberate push to build fluent readers by the end of Year 2, with targeted extra phonics support introduced in response to weaker phonics outcomes in 2024. The same report also describes staff modelling reading effectively and engaging families through initiatives such as “12 Reads of Christmas”.
Writing is the main development area to watch. The report indicates that some pupils have not consistently secured basics such as spelling, punctuation and letter formation, with improvement work underway but still at an early stage. For parents, the implication is simple: expect a school that is candid about what needs tightening, and ask how handwriting and early transcription skills are being reinforced across Reception, Year 1 and Year 2.
Curriculum sequencing is one of the clearer strengths, with content planned from pre-school through to Year 2 so pupils are ready for Year 3. The inspection report states that leaders have identified what pupils should learn across that span, and that staff check understanding regularly, stepping in quickly when pupils have misconceptions.
The school leans on memorable hooks to make abstract ideas stick. Examples in the inspection report include early years role-play around a “train station” and structured number work supported by recurring characters such as “Number Bond”. For young children, these devices matter, they reduce cognitive load and make practice feel playful without diluting expectations.
The same report flags a specific teaching consistency risk: occasionally activities are not sharply focused on the most important curriculum content, which can slow learning. That is worth probing in conversation with staff, especially around how leaders support quality across classes and year groups.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is an infant school, so the key transition is into junior education at Year 3. In Solihull’s published transfer arrangements, Marston Green Infant Academy is linked to Marston Green Junior School, with a guarantee of a place at the linked junior school provided families apply on time through the local authority process.
For families considering the longer pathway into secondary, the practical step is to focus first on a smooth Year 2 to Year 3 handover, then revisit secondary options closer to Year 5 and Year 6 at the junior stage.
Admissions sit within Solihull’s coordinated scheme, and the academy’s published admission number for Reception is 90. When applications exceed places, priority is applied through oversubscription criteria, including looked-after children, exceptional circumstances, siblings, catchment area, nursery attendance, then distance measured in a straight line.
The supplied demand snapshot indicates oversubscription at the primary entry route, with 150 applications and 83 offers in the most recent.
Deadlines matter. The school’s own communications emphasise a 15 January closing date for submitting applications for Reception and infant-to-junior transfer. For families looking ahead, Solihull’s published admissions timetable for 2027 to 2028 lists 15 January 2027 as the closing date and 16 April 2027 as the offer day for Reception and infant-to-junior transfer.
If you are weighing multiple nearby infant options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tool is the quickest way to line up demand signals and headline context side by side, then shortlist sensibly before you dig into policies.
100%
1st preference success rate
77 of 77 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
83
Offers
83
Applications
150
Pastoral care is intentionally embedded into daily routines. The January 2025 inspection references structured emotional support at the start of the day via the sunshine club, which is particularly relevant in an infant setting where separation anxiety and regulation can shape the whole day.
Behaviour expectations appear clear and consistent. Pupils are described as learning to play and learn together respectfully, with careful adult presence during breaks and structured opportunities for pupil voice such as school council elections.
Safeguarding is not an area of concern in the latest evidence. The January 2025 inspection report states safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Wraparound and enrichment matter disproportionately at infant age because they shape routine, confidence and social development. The school runs a before and after school club, and describes breakfast and homework club elements, plus holiday and inset-day provision.
Within the school day, enrichment is also built into curriculum time rather than bolted on. The inspection report describes enrichment afternoons designed to give pupils confidence to try something new and spark interest in areas such as early physics activities.
Outdoor learning is a practical asset in this age range. The forest area and structured playground “zones” are not just amenities, they support social skill development, purposeful play, and calmer lunchtimes.
Start and finish times vary slightly by year group. Nursery sessions are listed as 8:30am to 11:30am (part time) or 8:30am to 2:30pm (full time), while Reception arrivals are 8:30am to 8:55am with a 3:15pm finish, and Year 1 and Year 2 finish at 3:30pm.
Wraparound is a real feature rather than an afterthought, with on-site before and after school club provision and a described holiday club offer. For families who need early starts or later pick-ups, ask directly about booking patterns and availability as these can change year to year.
For transport planning, this is a local school serving Marston Green and the surrounding area, so walking and short car journeys are typical. If proximity is central to your application strategy, FindMySchool Map Search is the most reliable way to check your distance against published criteria, then sanity-check it against how Solihull measures distance in practice.
Writing consistency is a current improvement focus. The latest inspection notes that some pupils’ basic writing knowledge is still developing, particularly around spelling, punctuation and letter formation; ask what has changed in handwriting and early writing routines since January 2025.
Oversubscription is plausible at Reception. The demand snapshot provided suggests more applications than offers; families should treat admission as competitive and apply on time, especially if relying on catchment, nursery-attendance priority, or distance.
Nursery does not guarantee Reception. Solihull’s published arrangements state that transfer from nursery to Reception is not automatic and a further application is required.
Marston Green Infant Academy suits families who want a structured infant setting where reading is treated as a priority, routines are clear, and pastoral support is integrated into the school day. It is particularly well matched to parents who value an organised transition into junior education, with a recognised linked pathway into Marston Green Junior School. The main challenge is the admissions process, getting timelines and criteria right matters as much as preference.
The most recent inspection (January 2025) confirmed the academy has maintained its previous standards, with safeguarding judged effective. Evidence highlights strong work in reading and mathematics, plus clear routines that support behaviour and learning.
Solihull’s admission arrangements use oversubscription priorities that include catchment area, siblings and nursery attendance, followed by distance measurement. Families should check the latest published arrangements each year because criteria order and definitions can change through consultation.
Applications are made through Solihull’s coordinated admissions scheme. For September 2026 entry, the closing date stated by the school is 15 January 2026. For September 2027 entry, Solihull’s timetable lists a 15 January 2027 deadline and 16 April 2027 offer day.
No. The published admission arrangements state there is no guarantee of transfer from nursery to Reception and a further application must be made for the following year.
Marston Green Infant Academy is linked to Marston Green Junior School for the Year 3 transfer process. In Solihull’s published arrangements, children at the infant school are guaranteed a place at the linked junior school provided the application is submitted on time.
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