A primary school that treats spoken language, music and performance as central, not decorative. That distinctive curriculum direction sits alongside results that place the school among the highest-performing primaries in England. In 2024, 88.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 47.33% achieved greater depth, compared with 8% across England.
Feversham Primary Academy serves families in Little Horton, Bradford, and sits within Lift Schools. It is also a school with deep local roots. A predecessor board school on Feversham Street was commissioned in 1873 by the Bradford School Board, and the historic building remains listed Grade II*.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. The practical trade-off is competition for places. In the latest published admissions cycle there were 123 applications for 59 offers for Reception entry.
The defining feature is the sense of purposeful calm. Expectations are clear, routines are well embedded, and pupils tend to present as confident in conversation and comfortable explaining their thinking. That matters here because spoken language is not treated as a soft skill. It is positioned as a route to better reading, stronger writing, and greater confidence across subjects.
The school’s leadership has a strong public profile. Naveed Idrees is the principal, and a 2019 profile hosted on the school website notes he had been headteacher for eight years at that point. The wider staffing model also signals the school’s priorities. Alongside class teachers, the website highlights specialist teaching in areas such as music, and the breadth of arts-related activity suggests this is built into the staffing plan rather than bolted on as occasional enrichment.
There is also a strong civic and community dimension. Pupils are given roles that connect school life to wider responsibilities. For parents, this can feel like a school that expects children to contribute, not just comply, while still keeping behaviour consistent and predictable.
Feversham’s Key Stage 2 outcomes are extremely strong.
In 2024, 88.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The England average was 62%.
At the higher standard (greater depth across reading, writing and mathematics), 47.33% achieved this benchmark, compared with 8% across England.
Scaled scores reinforce the same pattern:
Reading: 111
Mathematics: 109
Grammar, punctuation and spelling: 112
These figures indicate attainment well above typical national benchmarks.
Rankings are equally emphatic. Feversham is ranked 275th in England and 1st in Bradford for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This places the school among the highest-performing in England (top 2%).
Parents comparing options locally should use the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool to view these results side-by-side, because a high-performing cohort can look different depending on how results are distributed across local schools.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
88.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A school can produce top results through many models. Here, the evidence points to a combination of consistency and deliberate curriculum choices.
Reading is treated as a priority from the earliest years, with consistent routines and targeted support for pupils who need extra practice. That consistency is often what parents notice most in high-performing primaries, less about a single intervention and more about day-to-day teaching that does not drift between classrooms.
Oracy is another central thread. Pupils are given structured opportunities to build vocabulary, explain ideas, and speak with clarity. The implication for families is practical. Children who are naturally quiet are not disadvantaged, but they are likely to be encouraged to participate verbally earlier and more frequently than in some schools. For many pupils, that helps writing improve because sentences become clearer once ideas can be expressed clearly out loud.
The curriculum is described as ambitious and carefully designed, with adjustments made so that pupils with special educational needs and disabilities can access the same learning goals through practical adaptations. Families with children who need support should expect an approach focused on access to the full curriculum, rather than lowering expectations by default.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
Reception admissions are coordinated through Bradford Local Authority as part of the standard primary application process. For September 2026 entry, the published timetable is specific:
Applications open: 17 November 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
Offers released: 16 April 2026
Feversham’s admissions policy sets a Published Admission Number (PAN) of 60 for Reception. If applications exceed that number, priority is given in this order: children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, looked after and previously looked after children, exceptional medical or social need, siblings, then distance. If two applicants are tied for the last place, the policy describes a random allocation tie-break (independently verified).
The most recent demand indicators show why families should plan early. There were 123 applications for 59 offers for the Reception entry route, a ratio of 2.08 applications per place. First preference demand was also slightly higher than the number of offers.
Parents who are distance-sensitive should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check their exact home-to-school distance and avoid relying on assumptions about streets that “feel close”. Local allocation patterns can change each year.
Nursery provision is part of the school offer, and the admissions policy states an admission number of 81 nursery places (based on two sessions per day). It also makes an important point for parents planning ahead: a place in Nursery does not guarantee a Reception place.
On the nursery side, the school describes flexible session options (morning, afternoon, and full day) and accepts 15-hour and 30-hour government-funded entitlement for eligible families. For nursery fees and paid session details, families are directed to contact the school office, and specific nursery pricing is not published on the nursery page.
The admissions policy states that in-year applications are made directly to the school, with outcomes notified to the local authority.
Applications
123
Total received
Places Offered
59
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
Pastoral practice here is closely tied to routines and high expectations. Consistent behaviour norms start early, including in Nursery, which can be reassuring for families seeking predictability. The focus on online safety and community safety is explicit, and pupils are encouraged to understand risk in age-appropriate ways rather than simply being told what not to do.
Wellbeing is also developed through structured roles and responsibility. Leadership opportunities such as Eco Warriors and school council activity are designed to be meaningful rather than symbolic. The Eco Warriors model is particularly concrete, with responsibilities including recycling, reducing waste, and supporting sustainable habits around the school.
The implication is a school that tends to support confidence through participation and contribution. Pupils who thrive in that model can develop strong self-belief quickly. Pupils who prefer quieter forms of confidence may still do well, but families should expect staff to encourage active involvement rather than letting children remain on the margins.
This is an area where Feversham has a clearer identity than many primaries.
Music is a flagship. The school website profiles specialist staff and describes a programme that includes both classroom music and instrument-specific opportunities. Examples highlighted include drumming, guitar, and nasheeds led by named specialists. For families, the practical benefit is breadth. Children can find a musical pathway that fits them, whether it is rhythm-based ensemble work, vocal tradition, or instrumental tuition.
Drama is also embedded. The Drama and Dance Club meets weekly and is described as creating performance pieces that explore themes such as tolerance, mental health, homelessness and bullying, which are then used in whole-school assemblies. That is a strong example of the school linking personal development directly to performance and communication skills.
Leadership and citizenship opportunities add another layer. The school uses roles such as Eco Warriors and ambassadors, and themed events such as Dragons Den-style enterprise work and careers activities are used to widen horizons beyond the immediate local area. For pupils, this can make learning feel connected to real decisions and real audiences. For parents, it signals a school that invests time in personal development rather than treating it as a secondary concern.
The published school day timings are clear:
Monday to Thursday: 08:25 to 15:15
Friday: 08:25 to 14:30
Reception opening hours are listed as 08:00 to 15:30, Monday to Friday.
Breakfast club runs from 07:45 to 08:25 each school day, with menu items listed at £0.50 each.
After-school club information is presented in a general format on the website, but specific session end times and costs are not published in a completed form. Families who need reliable wraparound care should confirm current after-school arrangements directly with the school.
Competition for Reception places. Recent demand data shows around two applications per place for Reception. Families should treat this as a school where admission planning matters.
Nursery is not a guaranteed route into Reception. The admissions policy is explicit that a Nursery place does not guarantee a Reception offer, so families should still apply on time through the local authority.
Friday finish time. A 14:30 finish on Friday can create childcare pressure for some working families, particularly where after-school provision is limited or variable.
A strong emphasis on oracy and the arts. This suits children who enjoy performance, discussion and creative work. Pupils who are very reserved can still thrive, but they should expect to be encouraged to speak, present and participate regularly.
Feversham Primary Academy combines an unusually distinctive curriculum identity with results that place it among the strongest primary schools in England. The approach is structured and ambitious, with a strong emphasis on spoken language, music and performance alongside consistent reading and phonics practice.
Best suited to families who want a high-performing state primary with a clear cultural identity, and who are ready to manage an oversubscribed admissions process. The limiting factor is typically entry, rather than the educational offer once a place is secured.
Feversham’s 2024 Key Stage 2 results are among the strongest in England, with 88.33% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. It is ranked 275th in England and 1st in Bradford for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). The latest Ofsted inspection (June 2025) graded all key judgement areas as Outstanding.
Applications are made through Bradford Local Authority as part of the coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the published deadline is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No. The admissions policy states clearly that a Nursery place does not guarantee a Reception offer. Families should apply separately and on time for Reception through the local authority.
Breakfast club is published as running from 07:45 to 08:25. The after-school club page sets out a general structure but does not publish completed, school-specific end times and costs, so families should confirm current wraparound arrangements directly with the school.
In 2024, 88.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with 62% across England. At the higher standard, 47.33% achieved greater depth, compared with 8% across England. Reading, mathematics and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores are also well above typical benchmarks.
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