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.
Clarendon Primary School serves the Deane area of Bolton as a community primary with nursery places from age 3 through to Year 6. It is a larger setting, with a published capacity of 455 and a school roll reported as 472 in the most recent inspection report.
The school’s most recent Ofsted inspection (4 and 5 March 2025) confirmed that standards have been maintained, with safeguarding judged effective. What stands out in the inspection narrative is the emphasis on pupils’ confidence, respectful relationships, and a curriculum designed carefully from Nursery through to the end of key stage 2.
Academically, the 2024 Key Stage 2 data paints a picture of solid attainment that is slightly above England averages at the expected standard level, with a more mixed story at higher standard measures. In admissions, demand is real: for the Reception entry route 91 applications competed for 48 offers, so families should approach this as an oversubscribed option rather than a guaranteed local place.
This is a school that leans into belonging and shared responsibility. The most recent inspection describes pupils as proud to attend, and it highlights a multi-cultural identity where pupils feel listened to and are confident sharing beliefs and opinions. That matters for day-to-day experience: pupils who are learning how to articulate their views, debate issues respectfully, and take on responsibilities tend to develop social confidence early.
There is also a clear personal development thread running through the way the school talks about itself and the way external review describes it. The inspection references pupils taking on roles of responsibility and contributing to the wider community, including fundraising activity organised by pupils. For families, the implication is that school life is not only about classroom attainment, it is also about building the habits that help children settle into secondary school with confidence.
Clarendon’s current headteacher is Mrs V Chatterjee. The leadership structure on the school’s website also signals clear internal responsibilities across curriculum, assessment, inclusion, and the early years, which often correlates with consistent routines and sharper follow-up when pupils need extra help.
A final practical point about setting: the school’s current building opened in April 2014, and the prospectus frames this as a facilities upgrade intended to support modern teaching and learning. Families who value accessible spaces and a contemporary layout, especially for early years, tend to prefer schools that have been designed or refurbished with nursery and primary flow in mind.
This review uses the results results for 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes, alongside England averages, and the FindMySchool ranking positions.
At the combined expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics, 67% of pupils met the expected standard in 2024, compared with the England average of 62%. This suggests that, at the core benchmark most parents look for, outcomes are slightly above England average.
At higher standard, the published figures suggest 16.67% achieving the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 8%. That is a meaningful positive indicator, because it points to a cohort of pupils being stretched beyond the expected threshold, not only reaching it.
Scaled scores add context: reading 102, maths 102, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 106. In practical terms, this typically reflects secure foundations rather than a heavily selective, results-driven profile. For families, the implication is that most children who engage well with routines and expectations should be well supported to reach expected standards, while higher-attaining pupils are not being ignored.
The school is ranked 10,640th in England and 82nd in Bolton for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data). This places overall performance below England average in the FindMySchool distribution, even though the headline expected-standard measure sits slightly above the England average.
How can both be true? The simplest way to think about it is that a single headline percentage never tells the whole story. Rank positions reflect a basket of attainment indicators, and small shifts across several measures can move a school materially up or down a large national list. The takeaway for parents is to treat Clarendon as a school with broadly secure attainment and a strong wider offer, rather than one defined purely by high academic selectivity.
Parents comparing multiple Bolton primaries should use the FindMySchool local hub and Comparison Tool to line up KS2 measures side by side, because small percentage differences often look bigger in isolation than they do in context.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The 2025 inspection describes a curriculum that has been organised carefully from Nursery through to key stage 2, with an emphasis on staff workload and consistent delivery. The most parent-relevant implication of this is consistency: when staff share planning principles and sequencing, children often experience fewer “jumps” in expectations between year groups.
Reading and vocabulary are positioned as central. The inspection describes children being immersed in language and stories from early years onwards, plus prompt support for pupils with gaps in reading knowledge. This is a sensible focus in a larger school, because early identification and quick intervention prevent reading gaps from becoming a barrier across the wider curriculum.
The same inspection also flags a precise area to improve: pupils would benefit from more regular opportunities to set out and produce work independently, particularly to strengthen presentation and written response quality. For parents, this is a helpful, concrete talking point for a visit: ask how independent writing and presentation are being built across subjects, and what it looks like in Years 5 and 6.
Because nursery provision is part of the school, early years practice matters. The inspection notes warm, supportive relationships from the beginning of early years, which is usually the difference between children who settle quickly and those who need longer.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Clarendon pupils move on to a range of Bolton secondary schools. The school’s prospectus says that the majority transfer to Essa Academy, King’s Leadership Academy, Eden Boys, and Bolton Muslim Girls’ School, with others also moving on to schools including St James, Ladybridge High, Smithills, and Mount St Joseph’s.
This spread suggests that families at the school make varied choices at Year 6, often shaped by faith preference, single-sex options, and travel practicality rather than one single default destination. For parents of younger pupils, it is worth thinking about secondary early, because your preferred Year 7 pathway can influence how you weigh location and admissions risk at primary.
Clarendon is a local-authority coordinated admissions school. The school’s admissions page directs families to Bolton Council for Reception entry, and it refers specifically to Reception Class 2026 to 2027 registration via the local authority.
The Reception entry route shows:
91 applications received
48 places offered
Oversubscribed status
1.9 applications per place applications per offer
A ratio close to two applications per place is a clear signal that families should not assume that living nearby is enough on its own. The practical implication is to treat your preference order strategically and understand oversubscription rules in the Bolton coordinated scheme.
Bolton Council states that primary applications can be made from 1 September 2025 and close at 11:59pm on 15 January 2026, with offers made on or after national offer day, 16 April 2026.
For families who want to be thorough, the FindMySchool Map Search is useful at this stage for sense-checking practical travel time and day-to-day logistics, especially if you are comparing several oversubscribed options.
100%
1st preference success rate
44 of 44 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
48
Offers
48
Applications
91
The strongest evidence here comes from the most recent inspection. Pupils are described as feeling listened to, and behaviour is described as exemplary, underpinned by the school’s values. That combination usually points to clear routines plus adults who follow through consistently.
Safeguarding is a key baseline issue for any school choice, and the inspection states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The same inspection also notes high attendance and a focus on maintaining it through trusting relationships with families. While parents should always ask what day-to-day support looks like, especially around punctuality and attendance, this is the kind of line that typically reflects proactive follow-up rather than reactive enforcement.
This is where Clarendon looks particularly distinctive for a state primary, because the offer is specific rather than generic. The school publishes a structured extra-curricular programme across the year, with clubs that change by term and clear year-group targeting.
Examples from the 2025 to 2026 programme include:
Digital Leaders Club, building responsibility around technology and online safety-related skills
ECO Warriors, giving pupils practical ways to contribute to sustainability activity
Science and STEM Club, supporting curiosity and problem-solving
KS1 and KS2 Choir, plus Recorder Club, Keyboard Club, and Instrumental Ensemble Club for music continuity
Cross Country and Circuit Training Club, plus Netball Club and Cricket Club for pupils who enjoy sport and fitness
Drama Club and Creative Craft Club, adding performance and making opportunities beyond class time
The most recent inspection also describes a broad personal development offer, including growing vegetables on site and using produce as part of a life skills programme that includes cooking. The educational implication is strong: these are not “bolt-on” activities, they connect to curriculum and habits, particularly for children who learn best through practical application.
The school day runs from 8.40am to 3.30pm for Reception, Key Stage 1, and Key Stage 2, as set out in the school’s prospectus.
Oversubscription pressure. The Reception entry route shows 91 applications for 48 offers, so admission is competitive and preference strategy matters.
Higher standard versus overall ranking nuance. KS2 expected-standard outcomes are slightly above England average, and the higher standard figure is strong; the FindMySchool national rank position still sits lower overall, suggesting a mixed profile across the full basket of measures. This is worth exploring in a visit, particularly around how the school stretches higher attainers while keeping basics secure.
Independence in written work. The latest inspection highlights a need to strengthen pupils’ independent presentation and written response opportunities. Families of children who need extra structure with writing should ask what has changed since March 2025, and what classroom expectations look like in Years 5 and 6.
Clarendon Primary School is best understood as a large, well-organised community primary with nursery provision, strong behaviour culture, and a personal development offer that is unusually well specified for a state school. The March 2025 inspection confirms stability and a positive experience for pupils, and the school’s club programme shows that enrichment is planned rather than occasional.
Best suited to families who want a structured school day, a clear behaviour and values culture, and a broad set of opportunities beyond lessons, and who are realistic about the challenge of securing a place in an oversubscribed intake.
The most recent Ofsted inspection took place on 4 and 5 March 2025 and confirmed that the school has maintained standards, with safeguarding judged effective. The school’s culture is described as respectful and inclusive, with strong personal development opportunities and positive behaviour.
Admissions are coordinated by Bolton Council, and places are allocated using the local authority’s oversubscription criteria rather than a simple “first come, first served” approach. Because the school is oversubscribed families should read the Bolton coordinated admissions arrangements carefully and avoid assuming that living nearby guarantees a place.
In 2024, 67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 16.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with the England average of 8%. Scaled scores were 102 in reading, 102 in maths, and 106 in grammar, punctuation and spelling.
The school’s prospectus says pupils move on to a variety of secondaries, most commonly including Essa Academy, King’s Leadership Academy, Eden Boys, and Bolton Muslim Girls’ School, with others also moving on to schools including St James, Ladybridge High, Smithills, and Mount St Joseph’s.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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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