“Be all you can be” is more than a slogan here, it is used as the organising idea for a school that sets ambitious expectations from Nursery onwards. The most recent Key Stage 2 picture is strong: 80.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 27.67% reached greater depth, well above the England average of 8%. Those outcomes place the school above England average overall, within the top 25% of primary schools in England (FindMySchool ranking band), and 2,838th in England and 49th in Birmingham for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data).
This is a state primary with no tuition fees. The age range runs from 3 to 11, with Nursery and Reception sitting alongside Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2. In the latest Ofsted inspection, the school was confirmed as Good, and safeguarding was judged effective.
At drop-off and pick-up, the tone is purposeful rather than frantic. The clearest thread is expectation: pupils are encouraged to take learning seriously, while adults work hard to keep behaviour calm and respectful. The most recent inspection describes pupils as happy and safe, with bullying and poor behaviour reported as rare. That matters for families who want a primary that feels orderly without being austere.
Leadership is in a moment of transition. Get Information About Schools lists the headteacher as Ms Helen Slack, while the school’s own staff information also references Mr A. Drummond as headteacher from April 2026. In January 2026, parents should assume the day-to-day leadership is still under the current headteacher, while watching for communications about the April 2026 changeover.
Pupil voice is structured rather than ad hoc. The school has a School Parliament with Year 6 representatives elected by classmates, and the members meet regularly with the headteacher. The practical implication is that children who enjoy responsibility and structured roles will find obvious ways to contribute, and quieter pupils can still participate through class voting and feedback mechanisms.
Nursery is presented as an on-ramp into the school’s routines. The Nursery page names a Nursery Leader and staff team, and it explicitly frames early years as building excitement about learning. It also points to weekly home learning through Google Classroom, which is unusual at this age and signals that home learning habits are established early. (For families, that can be a positive if you like structure, but it does rely on consistent home support.)
The headline combined measure at the end of Key Stage 2 is strong. In the latest published results, 80.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with 62% across England. That is the sort of gap that parents usually feel in day-to-day confidence: more pupils leave Year 6 secure in the basics that matter for secondary readiness, especially the reading and maths fluency that underpins every other subject.
Depth is also a feature rather than an exception. At the higher standard, 27.67% reached greater depth in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with 8% across England. Writing depth alone sits at 23%, which suggests that extended writing is not being left to a small top set, it is being pushed more widely.
The component scores back up the combined picture. Reading scaled score is 108 and maths is 103, with grammar, punctuation and spelling at 111. Expected standard rates are also high: 88% in reading, 70% in maths, and 87% in GPS. In plain terms, this is a school where the core is taken seriously, and outcomes show it.
Rankings reflect the same story. Ranked 2,838th in England and 49th in Birmingham for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), results sit above England average, placing the school comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England. For parents, the practical takeaway is that you are not relying on one exceptional cohort; the profile looks broadly secure.
If you want to compare this performance against nearby schools in Birmingham using the same measures, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and the Comparison Tool are designed for that sort of like-for-like view.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
80.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum narrative in the most recent inspection is a helpful anchor: it describes a well-structured curriculum that identifies the knowledge and vocabulary pupils should learn and remember. That kind of curriculum clarity tends to show up in classrooms as lessons that build in small steps, regular checking for understanding, and fewer gaps between classes or year groups.
Reading is treated as a priority. The inspection highlights regular staff training in phonics and a strong approach to early reading, with pupils enjoying a range of books in school and at home. Reception routines also reference a structured reading scheme, with reading books sent home on a weekly cycle, plus a separate book to share for enjoyment. The implication is that children who need systematic decoding support should get it early, while confident readers still see reading as normal rather than niche.
The most important curriculum caveat is languages. The inspection notes that the teaching of a modern foreign language was paused for some pupils, and that teachers did not yet have the expertise needed to plan and teach French confidently across Key Stage 2. Families who value a continuous language journey into secondary should ask directly how French is now delivered, and whether coverage is consistent year to year.
Early years writing is another area where the school has been prompted to tighten practice. The inspection points to weaker checking of early writing, including pencil grip, which can affect later fluency. The sensible interpretation is not that children are failing to write, but that the fine-motor and handwriting foundations need sharper monitoring so that issues do not compound.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
This is a Birmingham City primary, so the most common next step is a local secondary school allocation through Birmingham’s coordinated admissions. In practice, families in Kingstanding often consider a mix of nearby non-selective options, plus selective routes for children aiming at grammar schools in Birmingham.
The school’s Key Stage 2 outcomes suggest many pupils will be well placed for a smooth transition into Year 7, particularly in reading comprehension and basic number, which tend to be the pinch points in the first secondary year. Pupils also gain experience of leadership roles such as play leaders and School Parliament representatives, which translates well into secondary form tutor systems and student leadership structures.
If grammar is on your horizon, the best next step is usually to look at Birmingham’s 11-plus timeline and decide early how you want to approach preparation at home. This school does not advertise itself as a grammar “feeder”; instead, it looks more like a high-expectations community primary where strong attainment keeps options open.
Competition for places is real. The most recent admissions data shows 103 applications for 39 offers, a ratio of 2.64 applications per place, and an oversubscribed intake. One reason this can happen even with a published admission number of 60 for Reception is internal progression, the school’s policy gives priority to children attending the Nursery on a full-time basis at the time of application, and those children may fill part of the Reception cohort before external offers are made.
The published Reception admission number is 60. If there are 60 or fewer applications, all applicants are admitted. When oversubscribed, the policy order is clear: children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school; looked-after and previously looked-after children; siblings living in the same household; children attending the school’s Nursery full time; twins or multiple births; then distance from home to the school. The school also states explicitly that there is no catchment area, and it recommends registering children for Nursery after their second birthday because demand is high.
For September 2026 entry into Reception (children born 01 September 2021 to 31 August 2022), Birmingham City Council’s primary application window opened 01 October 2025, with a closing date of 15 January 2026. National Offer Day for primary places is 16 April 2026. These are the dates families should treat as fixed points in the process.
Because distance is a key criterion when the school is oversubscribed, parents who are weighing a house move should use the FindMySchool Map Search to measure their likely home-to-school distance, and then treat that as guidance rather than a guarantee.
Applications
103
Total received
Places Offered
39
Subscription Rate
2.6x
Apps per place
Safeguarding is described as effective in the latest inspection, and the report points to regular training so staff understand a range of risks, including peer-on-peer issues and domestic abuse. It also notes that pupils are taught about healthy relationships and online safety, and that they know how to raise concerns with trusted adults.
Support for pupils with SEND and disadvantaged pupils is described as strong, with pupils accessing the same curriculum as their peers and achieving well. Staff roles listed on the school’s site include a named SENCo, and there is also a Senior Mental Health Lead within the leadership structure. For families, the best practical question is how support is delivered day to day, for example, whether interventions are in-class, short withdrawal blocks, or a blend, and how progress is reviewed.
One pastoral area flagged for improvement is home-school communication. The inspection records that a small number of parents raised concerns about how effectively issues were listened to and acted on, and it asks leaders to improve communication and respond swiftly. Parents who like frequent, proactive updates should pay attention to how communication is handled now, especially with the leadership change scheduled for April 2026.
Enrichment is used here as a way to widen horizons, not just as a timetable filler. The inspection points to a range of clubs, including judo, ballet and football, which is a useful mix because it caters for children who want competition, children who prefer performance-based activity, and those who need a confidence boost through physical movement.
Trips are used deliberately to strengthen curriculum knowledge. Examples referenced include a Year 6 visit to the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool and a Year 2 visit to Tamworth Castle, while the school’s history curriculum page lists visits such as Warwick Castle, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Shugborough Hall, and The Black Country Living Museum. That sort of external learning tends to make classroom content “stick”, especially for pupils who need concrete reference points to bring writing and discussion to life.
Outdoor provision is also treated as part of the experience, not just breaktime. The inspection mentions outdoor play leaders supporting younger pupils, and it references outdoor facilities including a climbing wall. The implication is simple: children who regulate through movement, or who find structured outdoor play easier than unstructured playground time, may do well with that kind of supervised approach.
Pupil leadership roles add another dimension. Play leaders and School Parliament representatives are positioned as ways for pupils to take responsibility, develop confidence, and practise communication. For some children, that is the difference between being a passive “good pupil” and becoming someone who can speak up and influence a group.
The published core school day runs Monday to Friday, 8.30am to 3.15pm. The school notes that dates and times can change, so families should treat those as the baseline and check for updates when planning childcare.
Wraparound childcare is available via a before-and-after-school club operated by The Kick Start Academy, and the school warns that spaces are limited and booking is required. The website does not clearly set out daily start and finish times for the club in the sections available, so families should confirm hours, pricing, and availability directly before relying on it for shift patterns.
Uniform expectations are straightforward: royal blue tops, black or grey bottoms, and ties required in Years 5 and 6, with a small replacement cost for additional ties. That helps parents plan for the “extras” that can add up even when tuition is free.
Admission pressure is real. The most recent application-to-offer ratio is 2.64:1, and the school is oversubscribed. If you are outside the likely distance range, it is sensible to shortlist realistic alternatives alongside this option.
Internal Nursery progression can affect Reception availability. The admissions policy gives priority to children already attending the Nursery full time, which can reduce the number of places available to families applying only at Reception entry.
Curriculum continuity in French is a question to ask. The most recent inspection noted that French teaching had been paused for some pupils and that staff expertise needed strengthening. Ask how language teaching is now secured across Key Stage 2.
Home-school communication is worth probing. A minority of parents raised concerns about communication, and leaders were asked to improve responsiveness. If communication style is crucial for you, test it early through enquiries and meetings.
A high-expectations Birmingham primary with strong Key Stage 2 outcomes and a clear emphasis on reading, structured learning, and pupil responsibility. It will suit families who want an orderly school culture, who like purposeful homework routines beginning early, and who value trips and clubs as part of learning rather than as add-ons. Securing entry is where the difficulty lies, especially for families without a sibling link or a full-time Nursery place.
The latest Ofsted inspection confirmed that the school continues to be Good, with safeguarding judged effective. Academic outcomes are above England average, with 80.33% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in the latest published results, and a high share reaching greater depth.
Reception applications for September entry are made through Birmingham City Council under coordinated admissions. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 01 October 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
The school’s admissions policy states there is no catchment area. When oversubscribed, after higher priority categories, places are allocated by distance from home to the school.
Yes, the school has Nursery provision. The admissions policy gives priority to children attending the Nursery full time at the time of application, which can make it easier to secure a Reception place, although it is not a guarantee.
The school advertises a before-and-after-school club run by an external provider, and it notes that spaces are limited and booking is required. Families should confirm hours, costs, and availability directly, especially if childcare is a deciding factor.
Get in touch with the school directly
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