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 small-to-mid sized primary serving local families in Bishop Auckland, Etherley Lane Primary School puts community identity at the centre of school life. Its CHEER values, collaboration, honesty, equality, empathy and resilience, are used as everyday reference points rather than poster slogans. The most recent external review describes pupils who enjoy school, feel included, and take pride in their work, which matters for families seeking a calm, settled base from Reception to Year 6.
Academically, the latest published Key Stage 2 figures (2024) show a strong headline, 76.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. Reading is a particular strength in the published data, with an average scaled score of 104.
Admissions are competitive in the Reception intake route captured with 39 applications for 21 offers, about 1.86 applications per place.
Etherley Lane Primary School leans into the idea that children should feel they belong to something. That is explicit in how the school talks about itself, and it is backed up by the language pupils are encouraged to use. In the March 2025 inspection report, the school is described as warm and welcoming, with pupils appreciating an inclusive community where they can be themselves. It also notes that staff put pupils central to what they do, and that pupils want to do well and take pride in their work.
The CHEER values give the ethos a practical shape. Rather than relying on abstract aspirations, the values are framed as rules for living, including listening to differing opinions and treating diversity as something to celebrate. For parents, that usually translates into two tangible outcomes, a clearer shared vocabulary for behaviour, and a more consistent approach when staff are helping pupils navigate friendship issues or classroom expectations.
Leadership is clearly signposted on the school website. The headteacher is Mrs K A Lee, who also serves as executive headteacher within the federation arrangement referenced in the inspection report. The staffing page and headteacher message page both use the same naming format, which is helpful when families are checking they have found the correct school online.
For a state primary, the most meaningful published indicators are the Key Stage 2 outcomes and scaled scores, with context against England averages.
In 2024, 76.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%.
Reading average scaled score: 104 (England average is typically 100 for scaled scores).
Maths average scaled score: 102.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling average scaled score: 103.
Higher standard in reading, writing and maths: 16.67%, compared with an England average of 8%.
Expected standard in science: 75%, below the England average of 82%.
On the FindMySchool ranking for primary outcomes (based on official data), Etherley Lane Primary School is ranked 11,100th in England and 15th in Bishop Auckland. This places it in the lower band of the England distribution used in that ranking methodology.
If you are comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and comparison features can be a practical way to view these measures side by side, especially where schools have different cohort sizes that can make year-to-year percentages swing.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
76.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Two themes stand out in the evidence available from the school’s published curriculum information and the March 2025 inspection report: a deliberate approach to curriculum planning, and a strong emphasis on reading.
On curriculum structure, the school explains that subjects are planned as discrete disciplines, and it avoids cross-curricular linking unless the connection is purposeful. The curriculum overviews are designed to map content, vocabulary, progression, and enrichment activities such as visits. The implication for families is a clearer sense of “what is being learned when”, which often helps children who like routine, and helps parents support learning at home without feeling they have to guess what comes next.
Reading is treated as a high priority. The inspection report notes that early reading is taught well, that staff identify pupils who need extra practice with specific sounds, and that pupils who fall behind get additional help. The school’s reading and phonics information also sets out a structured daily approach, including consistent phonics teaching in early years and the use of Read Write Inc. materials for practice at home. For parents, the practical question is not just “is reading good here”, but “what happens if my child struggles”, and the available evidence points to routine identification and targeted extra practice rather than a wait-and-see approach.
A clear development point is also recorded. The March 2025 report highlights that, when learning is revisited, teachers are not always checking carefully enough for emerging gaps over time, and it recommends strengthening retrieval practices so knowledge is secured in long-term memory. That is a useful detail for families, because it signals a specific improvement priority rather than a vague “raise standards” message.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For primary schools, transition quality matters as much as results. The school’s published content does not set out a fixed list of destination secondaries, but there is evidence of structured transition activity and exposure to local options.
A 2025 newsletter lists Year 5 taster visits at King James, St Johns, and Bishop Barrington, alongside Year 6 transition activity later in the summer term. That suggests the school is actively building familiarity with local secondary pathways rather than treating transfer as a purely administrative step. For parents, this typically reduces anxiety for pupils who are moving from a smaller primary environment into a larger secondary setting.
If your child is approaching Year 6, ask specifically how the school supports pupils who need extra reassurance around change, and how information is shared with receiving schools for pupils with additional needs.
Etherley Lane Primary School is a state school and admissions operate through Durham’s coordinated process, with oversubscription criteria clearly summarised on the school website.
The school’s admissions page sets out a standard Durham-style priority order, including looked-after children and previously looked-after children, exceptional medical reasons (with supporting evidence), sibling links, then distance measured by the shortest walking distance. It also confirms that waiting lists operate by priority order, not by time spent on the list.
The figures record 39 applications and 21 offers for the primary entry route, with an oversubscription ratio of 1.86 applications per place.
County Durham’s published school timelines indicate applications open on 01 September 2025, with a closing date of 15 January 2026, offers on 16 April 2026, and re-allocation on 07 May 2026. These dates are widely reproduced across Durham primary school admissions pages.
Because distance allocation depends on where other applicants live each year, families should avoid assuming that living “nearby” guarantees a place. Use precise measurement tools when shortlisting, and treat any single year’s pattern as indicative rather than definitive.
100%
1st preference success rate
21 of 21 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
21
Offers
21
Applications
39
The wellbeing picture is strongest where it is tied to specific, verifiable practices and outcomes.
The March 2025 report highlights improved attendance, noting that the school has taken effective action to tackle poor attendance before it becomes habitual, and that the proportion of pupils who miss school frequently halved compared with the previous academic year. That matters because attendance strategy is a reliable proxy for day-to-day pastoral systems, clear routines, early intervention, and consistent follow-up.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is also described in practical terms. The inspection report states that pupils with SEND are quickly identified and supported to learn the curriculum, including pre-teaching vocabulary for pupils with speech, language and communication needs. The admissions page also asks families to discuss identified needs prior to starting, so support can be planned with advice from the local authority or other agencies where appropriate.
Inspectors also confirmed safeguarding is effective, which is an important baseline for any school decision.
The best evidence of enrichment is where the school names what pupils actually do, rather than relying on generic claims.
A 2025 summer term newsletter describes after-school clubs running with a variety of activities including Forest School, craft club, reading club and iPad club. That range is useful for mixed cohorts, because it provides options for pupils who want outdoor learning, quieter creative time, and structured academic practice.
The same newsletter gives a flavour of seasonal events and experiences: a Colour Run, whole-school cricket sessions, and year-group trips such as Year 4 visiting Beamish and Year 6 residential to Ford Castle. For families, these are often the moments children remember, and they also serve a practical purpose, building confidence, independence, and shared community identity across year groups.
Breakfast provision also doubles as a light enrichment space. The newsletter states breakfast club runs daily from 8.00am to 8.45am, with pupils able to take part in activities such as sports or craft-style tasks alongside breakfast. For working parents, this can be a meaningful part of the weekly routine.
School day
The school office page sets out a start time of 8.45am, with gates open from 8.40am and registration at 9.00am; the school day ends at 3.15pm. It also references the Department for Education guidance on a 32.5 hour week, stating the school day length is 6.5 hours (excluding optional before or after school provision).
Wraparound
A published newsletter states breakfast club runs from 8.00am to 8.45am, and gives a listed cost of £3.00 per child. Details of after-school care as a formal wraparound provision are not set out as clearly in the material reviewed, beyond after-school clubs running in term time. Families who need childcare beyond 3.15pm should ask directly what is available, on which days, and whether places are limited.
Travel and parking
School communications in the newsletter include a specific reminder about being mindful when parking near school, referencing local concerns on nearby streets. For families who drive, it is worth scoping the area at drop-off and pick-up times so you understand how busy it gets and whether walking part of the route is more realistic.
Competition for places. The available admissions snapshot shows 39 applications for 21 offers for the primary entry route, suggesting real competition in some years. If you are applying for Reception, plan early and keep a realistic fallback list.
A specific teaching improvement point. The March 2025 inspection report notes that retrieval practice is not yet consistently strong enough to spot emerging gaps over time when learning is revisited. Ask how this has been addressed in curriculum planning and classroom routines.
Science outcomes in the published KS2 results. The 2024 figure for expected standard in science is 75%, below the England benchmark of 82%. It is worth asking how science is taught and how practical enquiry is supported across Key Stage 2.
Wraparound beyond breakfast club. Breakfast provision is clearly described, but childcare after 3.15pm is less explicitly set out in the material reviewed beyond after-school clubs. If you need consistent late cover, verify what exists and how places are allocated.
Etherley Lane Primary School suits families who value a settled, inclusive environment with a clear shared vocabulary for behaviour and relationships. The published 2024 Key Stage 2 headline is strong against England averages, and the most recent external review points to pupils who feel they belong and who achieve well across their time at the school. The main challenge is navigating admissions in a system where demand can exceed places, so it best suits families who can engage early with the Durham application process and who want a values-led primary experience from Reception to Year 6.
The most recent inspection information describes a warm, welcoming culture where pupils feel included and achieve well across their time at the school. In published 2024 Key Stage 2 data, 76.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%.
The school’s admissions information explains that, after higher priority categories, places are allocated using distance, measured by the shortest walking distance. In practice, that means proximity to the school matters, and families should use accurate distance checks when deciding whether to rely on a place.
In County Durham, Reception applications for September 2026 typically open on 01 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026. Applications are made through the local authority’s coordinated admissions process rather than directly to the school.
In 2024, 76.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. Reading scaled score was 104, maths 102 and grammar, punctuation and spelling 103. At the higher standard, 16.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
School communications list after-school clubs including Forest School, craft club, reading club and iPad club, plus seasonal events and experiences such as trips, sports days and year group activities. Clubs vary by term, so families should check what is currently running and how places are allocated.
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.
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