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.
This is a genuinely small primary (ages 4 to 11) serving the villages of Evenwood and Ramshaw, with a roll that sits well below its published capacity, which shapes almost everything about daily life here. Small schools can feel either insular or tightly supportive; the available evidence points to the second, with staff described as highly caring and ambitious for pupils across the ability range, including pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities.
The latest inspection (23 May 2024) confirmed the school continues to be Good, with safeguarding judged effective. What stands out in the inspection narrative is not headline grades, but the specificity, mathematics is well sequenced from Reception onwards, frequent checks for understanding are routine, and pupils finish key stage 2 achieving extremely well in maths.
Parents weighing a village school often want two things at once, warmth and high expectations. The published material suggests the school is trying to hold both, through clear routines, a rewards system, and a curriculum that is intentionally structured rather than improvised year to year.
A small roll tends to compress the distance between families and staff. The language used publicly leans heavily into safety, clear boundaries, and consistent expectations, alongside an emphasis on learning being “challenging, rewarding and fun”. That combination usually signals a school that wants calm classrooms without making school feel joyless.
The 2024 inspection report describes a warm daily welcome, with staff care evident across the pupil group, including those with SEND. It also notes a “broad and ambitious curriculum” and highlights older pupils acting as playground buddies, a detail that often matters more than it sounds. In small primaries, buddy roles are not a bolt on; they are a practical way of teaching responsibility and keeping playtimes steady.
The brochure adds further texture to how the school tries to keep culture consistent: a simple rules framework, rewards for behaviour and effort, and a restorative approach when children fall out or break rules. For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your child benefits from predictable boundaries, explicit praise, and adults who talk through incidents rather than simply punishing, this approach should suit. If you prefer a looser, more child-led behavioural style with fewer formal systems, the school’s stated approach may feel more structured than you want.
Leadership is clear in public materials. The school lists Mrs Liz Sturrock as head teacher, and the most recent inspection confirms Liz Sturrock as headteacher and notes that a new headteacher and deputy headteacher were appointed since the previous inspection. The key point for families is less the biography, which is not published in detail, and more the stability implied by clear routines, staff pride, and a collaborative approach to curriculum change described in the inspection report.
For this school, the most usable public evidence is qualitative rather than data heavy. In many very small primaries, published key stage figures can be suppressed or fluctuate sharply year to year due to cohort size, so a single percentage rarely tells a trustworthy story for parents.
What the latest inspection does provide is a detailed picture of curriculum impact. Mathematics is singled out as a well sequenced subject, adapted appropriately for mixed needs, with frequent retrieval and checks for understanding. The report states that by the end of key stage 2, pupils achieve extremely well in mathematics. Reading is also described as strong, with an expertly taught phonics programme, regular checks, and extra help when pupils need it.
The school is not currently ranked in the FindMySchool primary outcomes table for England, which usually indicates there is not a complete enough set of published attainment measures to calculate a stable ranking. In practice, that means parents should rely more on the substance of external evaluation and on how well the school’s approach fits their child than on league-table style comparisons.
If you are comparing options locally, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can still help you line up nearby schools on the measures that are available, rather than relying on word-of-mouth or isolated anecdotes.
The most persuasive evidence here is how specific the curriculum description is, particularly in early mathematics and phonics. In the 2024 inspection narrative, Reception children learn to recognise numbers early, count to 20, and develop number sense such as recognising quantities without counting. That foundation then carries through to Year 1 and beyond, with older pupils revisiting prior learning and practising number facts so recall becomes automatic. The practical implication is that children who thrive on small, repeated steps and frequent checking are likely to do well. It is a classic mastery style pattern, rather than a discovery-first approach.
Reading is positioned similarly. Phonics is described as expertly taught, with staff checking knowledge often and ensuring pupils get extra help quickly if they fall behind. The report also notes reading areas in classrooms and pupils enjoying talking about favourite books, suggesting reading is treated as a daily habit rather than a once-a-week event.
The inspection also points to an area still being tightened, assessment in some foundation subjects is not always used precisely enough to deepen knowledge and help pupils consistently recall prior learning. For parents, that is a useful nuance. Core subjects appear very structured; some wider curriculum areas may be at an earlier stage of refinement, with leaders still improving how they track what pupils remember over time.
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 a primary, the key transition is Year 6 to Year 7. The school does not publish a destinations list for secondary transfer in its prospectus materials, so it is best to treat progression as being shaped mainly by home location and the local admissions process.
In County Durham, secondary applications are coordinated through the local authority, and families typically consider a mix of nearby comprehensive schools and, where relevant, selective or faith options in the wider area. The most practical step is to map your address against likely secondary catchments early, then speak to the school about how they support transition, particularly for pupils with SEND.
For families focused on a smooth move, the school’s emphasis on pupil wellbeing, calm behaviour, and clear routines matters. Children who have learned to manage emotions and relationships well generally find the jump to secondary more manageable, even when the new environment is bigger and less personal.
Reception entry is coordinated by Durham County Council, rather than handled directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, the school’s published admissions poster states that applications open on 1 September 2025 and close at midnight on 15 January 2026.
The school’s own admissions page also makes clear that families are welcome to arrange a tour and discuss individual needs with senior staff, including SEND requirements. For very small primaries, that conversation can be especially important, because staffing patterns and mixed-age organisation can change as cohorts change.
Demand data suggests entry can be competitive in a small-school way rather than a big-city way. In the latest available admissions results, there were 11 applications and 2 offers recorded for the relevant entry route, with the school marked as oversubscribed and a subscriptions ratio of 5.5 applications per place. Small numbers like this can be volatile, but the message is consistent: do not assume a place is automatic simply because the school is small. If you are shortlisting, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check practical distance and travel time, then confirm the current criteria with the local authority before you rely on a place.
Applications
11
Total received
Places Offered
2
Subscription Rate
5.5x
Apps per place
The inspection evidence here is reassuring. Pupils are described as feeling safe and happy, with staff support readily available when problems arise. Behaviour is described as calm and purposeful in lessons and at breaktimes, with pupils showing respect for each other and staff.
A particularly useful detail is the school’s recently introduced system to help pupils identify and understand different emotions, which the inspection notes is helping pupils focus on learning. In small settings, emotional regulation support can have outsized impact, because peer groups are smaller and fallouts can feel bigger. A shared language for feelings and repair usually reduces repeated conflict and helps quieter children feel secure too.
The school’s prospectus also sets out practical safeguarding routines around collection including expectations that pupils are collected by a familiar adult and that staff are informed of changes. For parents, the implication is that routines are taken seriously, which is often exactly what families want when children are young.
Extracurricular provision in a small primary has to be realistic, which usually means fewer clubs but clearer access. The school publishes a straightforward weekly pattern.
Breakfast club runs Monday to Friday from 7:45am to 8:45am, with breakfast and activities available, and is priced at £3 per day. This matters for working families, because it provides a consistent early start rather than occasional childcare.
After-school clubs are set out by day: KS1 Sports Club (Monday), Year 6 Homework Club from February half term (Monday), Creative Club (Tuesday), KS2 Sports Club (Wednesday), and a Lego and Games club (Thursday). The mix is sensible: two sport options split by age, a creative session, a structured homework slot for Year 6 at the point pressure typically rises, and a Lego and games club that appeals to children who prefer quieter social play.
The 2024 inspection report also comments positively on pupils’ wider development, mentioning clubs such as football and art, as well as frequent visitors, including former pupils, to build career awareness. In practical terms, that means enrichment is not limited to after-school slots; it also shows up inside the curriculum through visits and themed learning.
The school day begins at 8:50am and ends at 3:20pm. Families are asked not to send children into the yard before 8:40am, a routine designed to keep supervision clear and consistent.
Wraparound care is available in the mornings through breakfast club, and the school also notes links with local childcare providers for after-school care, with details updated termly. If after-school coverage is essential for your family, it is worth checking the current provider arrangements early in the term you need them, because partner availability can change.
For travel, the rural setting usually means most families arrive by car, with some walking locally. If you are considering this school from further afield, do a reality check on winter travel time and on how you would manage collection if your child is unwell, as small schools can have limited flexibility around late pickups.
Very small cohorts. A small roll can mean individual attention and a close-knit feel, but it also means friendship groups are smaller and year-to-year cohort dynamics can matter more. This suits many children, but some thrive better in a larger peer group.
Admissions competitiveness can be sharp. Recent admissions data indicates oversubscription with a high applications-to-offers ratio, even though the school is small. Make sure you understand current criteria and timelines rather than assuming a place will be available.
Wider curriculum assessment is still being refined. The latest inspection highlights that assessment is not used precisely enough in some foundation subjects to deepen pupils’ knowledge consistently. That is an improvement point, and families may want to ask what has changed since May 2024.
A small rural primary where care, calm routines, and structured teaching come through clearly in the published evidence. Mathematics and early reading look particularly well organised, and the wider enrichment, from clubs to visits, is stronger than many parents expect from a school of this size.
Best suited to families who want a close-knit primary with clear boundaries and a traditional school-day rhythm, and who are prepared to engage early with the admissions process. The main watch-out is that small numbers can make admissions and cohort dynamics less predictable, so it pays to confirm the latest position directly before committing your plans.
The latest inspection (23 May 2024) confirmed the school continues to be Good, with safeguarding effective. The report describes a warm welcome, high levels of staff care, calm behaviour, and a curriculum that supports pupils to achieve well, particularly in mathematics.
Reception applications for September 2026 entry are coordinated by Durham, not made directly to the school. The school’s published admissions poster states that applications open on 1 September 2025 and close at midnight on 15 January 2026.
Yes. Breakfast club runs Monday to Friday from 7:45am to 8:45am, and the school publishes a weekly timetable of after-school clubs including KS1 sports, KS2 sports, creative club, and a Lego and games club.
The school day starts at 8:50am and finishes at 3:20pm, with a request that children are not in the yard before 8:40am.
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