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 two-form entry primary with nursery provision, a large sports hall, and a clear emphasis on inclusion, including a specialist on-site SEND unit known as The Haven. The context matters here, because families are not choosing between tiny village primaries, they are weighing a large, busy school that runs multiple entry points and wraps education, childcare, and specialist support into one site.
The performance picture is a major draw. In the most recent published Key Stage 2 results 85.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is also striking, with 27% achieving the higher standard compared to an England average of 8%. Those numbers suggest a school that converts strong classroom routines into outcomes, rather than relying on one exceptional cohort.
Leadership is stable. The headteacher is Ms Kelly James, and governance records show her term started on 11 September 2019. The school day runs 8.30am to 3.00pm, which is a 32.5-hour week.
The school’s published vision, Nurture, Grow, Succeed, points to the tone leaders want families and pupils to experience, and it is backed up by practical detail rather than slogans. A large primary can sometimes feel transactional, drop-off lines and quick handovers, but the way this school describes its work puts relationships and belonging in the foreground, especially around inclusion and how children are helped to regulate and learn.
Two features stand out as “identity markers” rather than generic facilities. First is the Forest School offer, which shows up repeatedly across site information and parent-facing documents, and is treated as part of normal timetabling rather than an occasional enrichment day. Second is the SEND unit. In the headteacher’s welcome, the unit is named The Haven and described as a two-classroom specialist provision; elsewhere, SEND documentation describes a 16-place unit for pupils with severe and complex needs, with or without a diagnosis of autism. The implication for families is straightforward, mainstream pupils are educated alongside a clearly defined specialist offer, and that tends to shape a culture where difference is normalised early.
The inspection profile reinforces that this is a school where personal development is not treated as a bolt-on. The latest Ofsted inspection (March 2023) rated the school Good overall, with Outstanding judgements for early years provision and personal development. That balance, solid academic standards plus a notable personal development judgement, is often what parents mean when they say they want “more than results”, without sacrificing them.
The headline story is attainment at the end of Key Stage 2. In 2024, 85.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. England’s average sits at 62%, so this is comfortably ahead. At the higher standard, 27% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared to an England average of 8%, which indicates a meaningful top-end as well as strong pass rates.
The underlying scores are consistent with that. Reading scaled score is 106 and maths scaled score is 107, both above the standardised England reference point of 100. Grammar, punctuation and spelling also looks strong, with an average scaled score of 109 and 52% achieving the high score in that test. Taken together, these results point to a school that has systems for core skills, not just a single cohort that happened to do well.
In ranking terms, this places the school above England average, comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England. Specifically, it is ranked 2,758th in England and 16th in Bolton for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). For parents comparing options locally, that local position matters because it suggests the school is not only strong in absolute terms, it is also performing well within its own local context.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
85.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum intent is described as broad and structured, with clear commitment to specialist teaching in several areas that many primaries struggle to staff consistently. The school describes using specialist staff to plan and teach music, computing, Spanish and PE. The practical implication is that pupils are more likely to experience these subjects as properly taught disciplines, rather than occasional cover-dependent lessons.
Early reading has an identifiable programme rather than vague “we do phonics”. The school states it follows Supersonic Phonic Friends. On reading more generally, the school sets out the components it uses to teach fluency and comprehension, including guided reading and vocabulary bags. This level of specificity usually correlates with consistency across classes, which is what families tend to notice in practice, children in different classes move through similar routines and language, and gaps are less likely to open between year groups.
Homework expectations are also clearly framed around core skill consolidation rather than heavy workloads. A published homework overview references weekly times tables work, phonics and spellings in early years and Key Stage 1, and spelling expectations rising through Key Stage 2. That approach typically suits pupils who benefit from short, regular practice at home, and it is easier for working families to sustain than project-heavy routines every week.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the main transition point is Year 6 to Year 7. The school’s wellbeing material describes a transition programme to secondary schools for all Year 6 children, with additional support for pupils with SEND, including staff mentoring for a smooth transition. SEND documentation also describes information-sharing with the Head of Year 7 in transition meetings where needed, with the SENCO present if required.
The key point for families is that transition appears planned as a process, not a single leavers’ assembly. That matters in a large school, because pupils are likely moving on to a range of secondary settings across Bolton and beyond, and the quality of handover can make a real difference, particularly for pupils who need routine, predictability, or ongoing support.
For parents who want specifics on likely destination schools, that usually depends on home address and admissions criteria for secondary schools in the area, rather than anything the primary can promise. The most practical step is to use local authority admissions information early in Year 6, then speak to the school about how their transition programme aligns to the destinations you are considering.
This is an oversubscribed school. For the Reception entry route, there were 117 applications for 60 offers, which is 1.95 applications per place. That ratio is a useful reality check. Even a strong primary can be straightforward to access if demand is low, but here demand exceeds supply.
The admissions process is coordinated by Bolton Council, while the academy trust acts as the admission authority, which is the standard pattern for many academies. The published admission number for Reception is 60. Children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school are admitted.
When oversubscribed, the school’s policy sets out priority groups, including looked-after and previously looked-after children, children with a child protection plan (or within a defined recent period), siblings, medical or disability grounds with supporting evidence, children of staff in certain circumstances, and then distance from the school. Distance is measured as a straight line from the home to the designated main entrance, with random allocation used if distance cannot separate applicants in the same building.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Bolton, applications open from 1 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026. Offer day is 16 April 2026, and Bolton’s coordinated scheme notes families typically have two weeks to accept the place offered.
A practical tip: if you are comparing multiple oversubscribed primaries, use FindMySchoolMap Search to check your home-to-school distance accurately, then cross-check the local authority’s allocation method and the school’s oversubscription criteria before relying on a place.
96.3%
1st preference success rate
52 of 54 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
117
The school’s safeguarding and leadership pages make the DSL structure visible and locate responsibility at senior level, including the headteacher as the Designated Safeguarding Lead. That is the administrative backbone; what parents usually want to know is how the school approaches day-to-day wellbeing.
The school’s wellbeing page describes a sustained piece of work towards a Well-Being Award for Schools in partnership with the National Children’s Bureau, with a focus on embedding mental health awareness, early identification, and matching support to need. Separately, a published wellbeing team document references structured wellbeing teaching programmes and transition support. The implication for families is that emotional wellbeing is framed as a whole-school responsibility, with both curriculum content and targeted support.
Inclusion is a core theme rather than a compliance statement. The SEND unit and sensory room are highlighted in senior leadership messaging, and the SEND policy describes high staff-to-pupil ratios in the unit and a personalised curriculum approach. For pupils in mainstream classes, this usually translates into a school that is used to differentiated needs and to working with external agencies, and families often find communication clearer as a result.
The extracurricular offer is concrete and dated, which matters because schools sometimes promise “lots of clubs” without showing what is actually running. A published clubs timetable includes activities such as Multiskills, Basketball, Gymnastics, Forest School, Girls’ Sports, Athletics and Netball across different year groups.
Forest School is not just a club label here. Parent-facing guidance in the prospectus notes that Forest School activities are included in the timetable, and families are informed which day their child attends, with practical kit expectations such as wellington boots and waterproofs. The implication is that outdoor learning is operationalised, not occasional.
Swimming is also treated as a standard entitlement rather than an optional extra. The prospectus states that children in Year 1 to Year 6 are expected to take part in swimming lessons. For many families, this is a real-life skill priority, and it can be a differentiator when comparing primaries that struggle to secure pool time.
Facilities support this breadth. The school describes a purpose-built sports hall, multi-purpose games areas, a running track or trail, a grassed sports pitch, plus dedicated spaces such as music and drama rooms and a design technology suite. A sports hall hire page also confirms the hall is large and used beyond the school day, which is often a proxy for it being a substantial, usable space rather than a small converted hall.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
The school day runs from 8.30am to 3.00pm. Wraparound care is clearly laid out. There is an early breakfast club option (7.30am to 8.30am) and a free breakfast club for Reception to Year 6 (8.00am to 8.30am). After-school club runs from 3.00pm with options up to 6.00pm, booked via an app.
For visits, the Reception information page references a school tour, but does not publish fixed open day dates, so families should check the school’s calendar and ask for the current tour pattern.
Competition for places. Demand is higher than supply with 117 applications for 60 offers for Reception. Families should plan early, and make sure their application is submitted on time.
Large-school feel. Two-form entry with extensive facilities can suit children who like variety and bigger peer groups. Pupils who prefer a very small setting may need time to settle into a larger site with multiple entry points and a busy timetable.
Inclusion is prominent. The on-site SEND unit and sensory provision are strengths for many families, and they shape the school’s culture. Parents who want a quieter, more uniform intake may not prefer a school where inclusion is a defining pillar.
Structured routines. Strong outcomes and a clearly defined phonics programme often correlate with consistent routines and expectations. This suits many pupils, but children who struggle with pace or predictability may need careful transition planning, especially into Reception or Year 3 and beyond.
This is a high-performing Bolton primary with outcomes that sit above England average and a credible top-end. The school pairs that with clear, visible inclusion work, including a named SEND unit and sensory support, plus a timetable that treats Forest School and swimming as normal rather than special occasions.
Who it suits: families who want strong academic basics, a broad weekly offer, and a school that has the staff structures and facilities to support a wide range of needs. The main challenge is admission, because demand outstrips the Reception places available, so families should approach the process early and realistically.
The latest inspection profile shows a Good overall judgement, with Outstanding judgements for early years provision and personal development. Key Stage 2 attainment is well above England average, which suggests strong teaching routines in reading, writing and maths.
Reception applications are made through Bolton’s coordinated admissions process. Applications for September 2026 open from 1 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026. Offers are released on 16 April 2026.
Yes, it is oversubscribed. For Reception entry, there were 117 applications for 60 offers, which is about 1.95 applications per place. When oversubscribed, the admissions policy sets out priority groups, and distance is used as the final allocation method once higher priority criteria are applied.
Yes. The published information includes breakfast club options in the morning and an after-school club running from 3.00pm with sessions available up to 6.00pm.
The school hosts an on-site 16-place SEND unit and also describes sensory support provision. SEND documentation describes a personalised curriculum approach within the unit and higher staff-to-pupil ratios. For pupils moving to secondary school, SEND information also describes structured transition meetings where relevant.
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