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 Church of England primary serving families in Muscliff, The Epiphany School balances warm community identity with clear academic intent. Its day-to-day language is built around three Gospel values, Love, Courage and Respect, and that shows up not just in assemblies and displays, but in routines, expectations, and how pupils are encouraged to treat one another.
Academically, the most recent published key stage 2 outcomes point to a school that is performing above the England picture on the combined expected standard. In 2024, 75.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 18% reached greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%. These are the sorts of figures that usually correlate with strong curriculum sequencing and consistent classroom practice, even when cohorts vary year to year.
Admissions are competitive at Reception. For the most recent set of figures available 150 applications were made for 60 offers, which equates to 2.5 applications for every place. For many families, the practical question is not whether the school is appealing, it is whether it is realistically achievable given how demand plays out locally.
The strongest clue to the school’s character is how explicitly it frames community life through its Gospel values. Love, Courage and Respect are presented as the school’s organising ideas, and they are referenced in the way pupils are guided to respond to challenge, conflict, and responsibility.
That values language matters for parents because it tends to shape two high-impact areas. First, behaviour norms become more consistent when everyone is using the same vocabulary. Second, pastoral support is easier to access when pupils are regularly prompted to articulate worries and choices rather than simply comply. The most recent inspection report describes a harmonious environment where pupils behave well and where staff create a safe place to learn, which aligns with what you would expect from a school that anchors conduct in shared expectations rather than constant sanctions.
The school is also explicit about safety and boundaries in the everyday running of the site. Expectations around drop-off and collection are clear, and routines are designed to keep pupils safe at transition points. The school car park is closed for fifteen minutes before the start and end of the school day, and the site has rules around smoking and dogs, which signals an approach that prioritises safeguarding and risk reduction over convenience.
Leadership context is also relevant for families assessing stability. The headteacher is Miss Vanessa Webster, and the current leadership team took up post in September 2021, meaning the school has had time to embed a consistent direction while still being close enough to leadership change that some systems may continue to evolve.
Finally, as a Church of England school, the community links are not an add-on. The school describes active links with local churches and the diocese, and this faith character is likely to be visible in worship, seasonal services, and the way values are framed.
The Epiphany School is a primary school, so the most useful academic indicators are key stage 2 outcomes and scaled scores, alongside how those results compare with England averages.
In 2024, 75.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%. This is a meaningful margin because the combined expected measure is typically harder to lift through short-term interventions alone. It usually reflects sustained curriculum coverage, stable classroom routines, and enough consistency in assessment practice that pupils are not surprised by what “expected” looks like.
The higher standard figure is also notable. In 2024, 18% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. In plain terms, that suggests the school is not only supporting borderline pupils to clear the expected threshold, but is also enabling a sizeable group to work at greater depth.
Subject-by-subject, the published percentages show a stronger position in mathematics and reading at expected standard level, with 73% meeting the expected standard in maths and 65% in reading. Grammar, punctuation and spelling sits at 57% meeting the expected standard. Science is particularly strong on the headline measure, with 90% reaching the expected standard.
Scaled scores help add texture. Reading and maths scaled scores are both reported at 104, and grammar, punctuation and spelling at 102. Without an England comparator for scaled scores, the safest editorial use is to treat these as supportive context rather than a headline claim.
Ranked 10,641st in England and 21st in Bournemouth for primary outcomes, The Epiphany School sits below England average overall, using a proprietary FindMySchool ranking based on official data. This is where parents benefit from reading the data in the round. The ranking position provides one lens on relative performance, while the key stage 2 combined outcomes suggest a school that is delivering a strong core for its pupils, at least in the most recent published year. The most sensible conclusion is that results are solid and can be very good in particular cohorts, rather than uniformly high across time.
A practical way to use this as a parent is through the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool. Comparing a shortlist of nearby schools on the same measures, expected standard, higher standard, and scaled scores, usually surfaces whether a school’s strengths are consistent, and whether one area, such as writing depth or grammar, is the differentiator.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
75.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading is positioned as the gateway skill and is treated as a priority. The most recent inspection report describes carefully chosen books that build vocabulary and pupils’ understanding of the world, alongside an emphasis on phonics and targeted support when pupils fall behind. That combination matters because it tends to reduce the number of pupils who drift quietly into weaker comprehension, which then affects every subject from Year 3 onward.
Curriculum development is described as being upgraded subject by subject, with key concepts and vocabulary planned from Reception through to Year 6. The practical implication for families is usually twofold. First, pupils are more likely to remember what they have learned because content is revisited deliberately. Second, teaching becomes more coherent across year groups because staff share an agreed sequence rather than improvising from textbooks.
It is also worth noting that the school acknowledges unevenness between subjects. The inspection narrative highlights that some curriculum areas are more established than others, and that work is at an earlier stage in some subjects, including mathematics, compared with stronger areas. For a parent, this should not read as a red flag on its own. It is often a sign of leadership being specific about next steps, rather than claiming everything is already perfect.
For pupils who need additional help, the school’s approach combines academic and pastoral strands. The report references the Phoenix Room as a pastoral support space supporting emotional wellbeing, and it also describes how staff monitor and adapt teaching for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities. The practical implication is that support is intended to be part of the learning day rather than a separate track.
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 school, the key transition is to secondary education at Year 7. The most reliable school-specific information here is that the school reports receiving positive feedback from the secondary schools that its pupils move on to, which suggests the school is mindful of transition readiness and the habits pupils need when they leave Year 6.
For families in Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole, secondary transfer is coordinated through the local authority, and the realistic next-step options will usually be shaped by distance, admissions criteria, and whether a family is considering a selective route. The best approach is to identify the likely secondary catchment options for your address early, then check the admissions criteria carefully.
A practical tip is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search when shortlisting. Even where a secondary is not formally “catchment only”, distance and oversubscription rules can make it feel that way in practice. Starting that work while your child is still in lower primary avoids rushed decisions in Year 5 and early Year 6.
The most important first point is that Reception admissions are local authority coordinated. For children starting school in September 2026, applications open on 1 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with the national offer day on 16 April 2026. These dates are confirmed on the school’s published admissions information and the local authority application guidance.
Demand is high. For the most recent admissions figures available there were 150 applications and 60 offers for the main entry route, which equates to 2.5 applications per place. Put plainly, many families will like the school, but not all will be able to secure a place, even when they apply on time.
There is no published furthest distance at which a place was offered for this school, so parents should be cautious about relying on informal assumptions about “how close is close enough”. The best way to handle this is practical rather than speculative. Read the current local authority admissions booklet and the school’s admission arrangements, then use your exact address to understand how distance is measured.
The school also offers school tours for the 2026 intake and indicates that the key admissions timings sit within the BCP council application window. Tours matter for primary shortlisting because they help parents test the fit, how behaviour routines feel, how staff talk about learning, and whether the values language shows up in real interactions, not just in statements.
80.3%
1st preference success rate
57 of 71 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
150
Pastoral strength is often easiest to see in the consistency of routines and the clarity of safeguarding systems. The school provides clear guidance to families about safety, including routes for raising concerns and signposting to local authority services for out-of-hours safeguarding worries.
The most recent inspection report describes staff who show genuine care and compassion, and a culture where pupils feel safe to share worries with adults. It also explicitly confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective, which is the baseline parents should always look for when evaluating any school.
Pastoral support is also described as including the Phoenix Room for pupils who benefit from additional emotional wellbeing guidance. For families, the implication is that support is likely to be available for pupils who need help regulating emotions, managing friendships, or coping with anxiety around learning, and that it is framed as part of school life rather than a stigma.
Attendance expectations are stated clearly, including a whole-school attendance target of 96.5%. This matters because schools that talk explicitly about attendance usually back it with systems that notice patterns early, which is often a protective factor for pupils who might otherwise slip into irregular routines.
A useful way to judge a primary’s enrichment is not the length of the activity list, but whether there is a pattern that suits different types of child, sporty, practical, reflective, or performance-oriented.
The published after-school activities timetable for Spring Term 2026 gives a concrete view of that range. There is Construction Club for Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2, which will appeal to pupils who like making, building, and structured creativity. There is Forest School for Year 2 and Key Stage 2, which adds a nature-based strand and tends to suit children who learn well through hands-on exploration.
Sport is well represented through Foundation Sports provision, including Key Stage 2 Dodgeball, Multi Sports sessions, and football for both Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2. For parents, the practical implication is that pupils who want regular sport beyond PE have accessible routes to it without needing to travel off site.
There is also a quieter wellbeing strand through Calm Club, offered for Year 1 to 3 and again for Key Stage 2. That is a specific, named example of a school recognising that enrichment should include emotional regulation and confidence-building, not just high-energy activities.
Gymnastics Club and Tennis Club round out the offer, giving pupils access to sports that support coordination and individual progression, not just team games. Together, the activity pattern suggests a school that is trying to meet different pupil needs, including those who want structured sport, those who want practical making, and those who benefit from calmer social spaces.
The school day is clearly set out. Gates open at 08:30 and the morning session begins at 08:40. The day ends at 15:10 for Key Stage 1 and Wrens, and 15:15 for Key Stage 2. The school office operates from 08:00 to 16:30, with a 16:00 finish on Fridays.
Wraparound care is available via an external provider on the school site. Breakfast club runs 07:30 to 08:30 and after-school club runs 15:10 to 18:00, offered by Foundation Sports and Play, and described as independent of the school. Holiday club is also offered during some school holidays, and is open to pupils and children from the local community.
For site logistics, the school car park being closed for fifteen minutes either side of the school day is worth planning for. In practice, families should expect to park a short distance away and walk in, or to use active travel where possible.
Competitive entry at Reception. With 150 applications for 60 offers demand is high. Families should approach this as a preference rather than a guarantee, and keep a realistic second choice in play.
No published last-distance data. The furthest offered distance is not available for this school. That makes it harder to judge the probability of a place without checking the local authority admissions rules in detail and comparing them to your exact address.
Some curriculum areas still developing. The school is described as having upgraded curriculum subjects over time, but with some areas at an earlier stage. For most pupils this will not be a barrier, but parents who want uniformly strong depth across every subject may want to ask about how development priorities are being sequenced.
Wraparound care is delivered by an external provider. For many families, that is a benefit because it can widen availability. For others, it may raise practical questions about booking, staffing continuity, and how communication works between school and provider.
The Epiphany School will suit families who want a values-led Church of England primary with clear routines, strong combined key stage 2 outcomes in the most recent published year, and a wide spread of enrichment that includes both sport and quieter wellbeing-focused clubs. Pupils who respond well to consistent expectations and who enjoy being part of an active school community are likely to do well here.
Admission is the key challenge. Demand is high and distance data is not published so families should treat this as a highly desirable option that needs careful planning alongside realistic alternatives.
The school continues to hold a Good rating, and the most recent inspection in November 2023 described a calm, safe learning environment with strong expectations and effective safeguarding. Key stage 2 outcomes for 2024 also show performance above England averages on the combined expected standard measure.
Reception entry is coordinated through Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole. The exact oversubscription criteria and how distance is measured are set out by the local authority and the school’s admission arrangements. It is sensible to check the published criteria alongside your address rather than relying on informal local assumptions.
Yes. Breakfast club runs 07:30 to 08:30 and after-school club runs 15:10 to 18:00, operated on site by Foundation Sports and Play. Holiday club is also offered during some school holidays.
Applications open on 1 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026 for on-time applications. The national offer date is 16 April 2026.
The Spring Term 2026 timetable includes Construction Club, Forest School, Calm Club, gymnastics, tennis, and multiple sports options including football, dodgeball, and multi-sports sessions.
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.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.