This is a small independent primary in Blackburn, with places for pupils aged 5 to 11 and a stated ambition to grow. A recent phase of refurbishment and a material change application to increase capacity indicate a school in transition, operationally and physically.
The latest standard inspection (01 July 2025, published 18 September 2025) rated the school Good overall.
Families should expect a tightly run setting where safeguarding leadership is clearly identified, communication is structured, and curriculum intent is set out in school documentation, including year group curriculum coverage materials and regular newsletters.
The school’s public-facing materials present a faith-aligned ethos alongside the national curriculum. The Ethos and Values page sets out a distinctive framework, including the “5 O’s” outcomes and a values acronym that is used as a character anchor across school life.
Leadership is presented as identifiable and accessible, with the head teacher named on the staff listing and the advisory group page.
A practical indicator of day-to-day tone is how the school communicates with families. Recent newsletters describe ClassDojo notifications as the primary communications channel, which typically suits families who prefer frequent, lightweight updates rather than occasional long letters.
What can be evidenced is curriculum planning and sequencing. School materials describe a themed approach within a school-specific curriculum model, and year-group curriculum coverage documents show structured weekly routines, for example daily reading practice within Key Stage 1.
For parents comparing local schools, the most reliable approach is to pair what is published by the school with official inspection findings, then validate fit through questions about reading, early literacy, and how learning gaps are handled.
Curriculum intent is set out clearly on the curriculum page: national curriculum objectives are taught through a school-specific framework, with themes varying by year group and some whole-school themes. Reception provision references the Early Years Foundation Stage statutory framework.
The July 2025 inspection report sets out key operational context, including staffing and premises changes, and identifies the school as being in a transition phase after refurbishment with additional classrooms. That matters because staffing, timetabling, and routines can shift during expansion, so families should ask how consistency is maintained for pupils during periods of change.
A sensible question for prospective families is whether the school provides structured transition support, for example liaison with receiving secondaries and preparation for the routines and independence expected in Year 7.
Admissions information on the school website frames registration as a direct process, with families encouraged to contact the school and begin the admissions journey, alongside an online admission form. Specific application deadlines for September 2026 entry are not published on the admissions page reviewed for this report.
Because this is an independent primary, entry is not typically constrained by a local authority catchment in the same way as state primaries. The practical implication is that places may be available outside immediate neighbourhoods, but families should ask directly about year-group capacity and waiting lists, particularly during an expansion phase.
If you are using FindMySchool tools, the Map Search remains useful here for travel-time reality checks, especially if school run logistics are a deciding factor.
Safeguarding leadership is named in the school’s safeguarding and child protection policy, which is a concrete signal of accountability.
The school also publishes behaviour and internet access policies, which is helpful for families who want clarity on routines, expectations, and online safety. Those documents indicate an emphasis on consistent conduct frameworks and filtered internet access as part of safe digital practice.
For families, the key question is not whether policies exist, but how they are used. A useful admissions conversation is to ask how behaviour expectations are taught, how parents are informed, and how concerns are escalated and resolved.
Examples include a Whole School Milaad with script preparation and rehearsals, and a Fire Service Visit for selected year groups. These are the kinds of activities that can make a small school feel purposeful and connected to wider community themes.
The events page also lists parent-facing workshops such as a phonics workshop and a parent reading workshop, which suggests an emphasis on early literacy partnership at home.
Fees for the 2025 to 2026 academic year are published on the school admissions page as £1,800 per year plus VAT, stated as £2,160 for Reception to Year 6.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
A recent newsletter states that the school day begins at 8:30.
Given the Blackburn location, travel planning matters. A practical step is to test your likely route at peak times rather than relying on off-peak estimates.
A school in expansion mode. Refurbishment and a planned increase in capacity can be positive, but it can also bring short-term disruption or organisational change. Ask how routines, staffing stability, and class groupings are managed during growth.
Fees plus VAT. The published fee structure explicitly references VAT. Make sure you understand what is included, what is extra, and how payment is scheduled across the year.
Clubs detail is light in public sources. Events are listed, but regular weekly clubs are not clearly itemised. If extracurricular breadth is a priority, ask for a termly timetable.
Dar Ul Madinah is best understood as a small independent primary with a defined ethos, structured communication, and visible momentum, reflected in premises work and capacity planning. Its latest inspection outcome is Good, and published materials show a deliberate approach to curriculum sequencing and family engagement through workshops and newsletters.
Who it suits: families looking for a small school with a clear values framework and a direct admissions route, and who are comfortable verifying academic progress through school evidence and inspection findings rather than published comparative results.
The most recent standard inspection rated the school Good (inspection 01 July 2025; report published 18 September 2025). Families should read this alongside the school’s published curriculum information and ask how progress is assessed across reading, writing, and maths.
For 2025 to 2026, the school publishes fees for Reception to Year 6 as £1,800 per year plus VAT, stated as £2,160.
Admissions information is published on the school website and indicates a direct registration process via an admissions page and form. The reviewed page does not publish specific deadlines for September 2026 entry, so families should confirm availability and timelines with the school.
The school’s events listings include parent reading and phonics workshops, alongside whole-school events and external visits.
A published newsletter states the school day begins at 8:30. Families should confirm finish times and any wraparound care directly with the school.
Get in touch with the school directly
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