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.
For families looking at early years and Key Stage 1 in Dereham, this is a setting built around the practical realities of modern childcare and the fundamentals that matter most at ages 3 to 7. The academy serves Nursery through Year 2, with places for a relatively small cohort, and a faith designation that is clear from its Church of England status. It is also oversubscribed for Reception entry in the most recent published admissions cycle, which matters because the local authority allocation process will be the main route in.
Leadership is clearly identified, with Chloe Cole listed as headteacher and recorded on official registers as in post from the academy’s opening. The school sits within a multi-academy trust structure, which can bring shared policies and staff development, and it can also mean change moves quickly when priorities shift.
The first thing to understand is scale and age range. This is an infant and nursery setting, so the day is defined by routines, language development, early reading, and learning through play that becomes steadily more formal through Reception and into Year 1 and Year 2. The most helpful way to judge character at this stage is to look for evidence of how the school describes its practice, and which specific programmes it uses, because that is often where consistency shows up.
Early reading is a good example. The school sets out a clear progression, using Super Sounds in Nursery, described as a pre-phonics programme, then moving into Essential Letters and Sounds in Reception and Key Stage 1. This matters for parents because it signals a structured approach rather than an informal, ad hoc set of activities. For many children, especially those who thrive on predictable routines, that consistency can reduce anxiety and help learning stick.
Wraparound is another strong indicator of day-to-day culture. A school that runs breakfast and after-school provision at meaningful hours is often signalling that it expects to support working patterns, not just the core timetable. Here, the wraparound offer is explicit, with breakfast provision from 7:30am and after-school care available until 6pm. For families, that can be the difference between a manageable school run and a weekly logistical challenge.
The faith character is Church of England, and the academy sits within a trust that includes other Church schools in the area. Families who value a school with a Christian designation will see that clearly, while families who are less religious should still expect that collective worship and faith-inflected values are part of the backdrop in a Church school, even when day-to-day classroom teaching remains broad and inclusive.
Leadership is also easy to verify. Chloe Cole is named as headteacher on the Department for Education register, with governance records showing her ex-officio role beginning from 1 November 2023, matching the academy’s open date. The practical implication is that the current leadership era is still relatively new, which can bring energy and clarity, and it can also mean systems are still bedding in.
Because this is an infant and nursery age range, parents should not expect the same public exam dashboard that exists for older phases. The school does not take pupils through Key Stage 2 SATs, so common comparison points like combined reading, writing and maths at the end of Year 6 will not apply here.
A more useful lens is early reading, language, and curriculum sequencing, because those are the foundations that show up later. On that front, the school is unusually specific about its chosen programmes and how phonics is taught, including a daily structure described as review, teach, practise, apply. For parents, this is a practical marker of consistency. If a child struggles, a clear lesson structure can make it easier to identify what is not clicking. If a child flies, it can make progress more predictable rather than dependent on which adult happens to be leading an activity that week.
The curriculum story here is strongest where it gets concrete. In reading and phonics, the school sets out named programmes and a progression from Nursery into Reception and Key Stage 1. That is a level of specificity many schools do not communicate clearly, and it makes it easier for families to understand what reading will look like on a Tuesday morning, not just what the school hopes pupils will become by the end of Year 2.
Beyond reading, the wider curriculum appears framed around building knowledge and confidence across subjects, with subject pages outlining intent. For parents, the key question is often not whether a subject exists on paper, but whether it is taught in a way that feels purposeful rather than tokenistic. When a school describes how it wants children to think, and links that to particular activities and clubs, it usually indicates more coherent planning.
A useful example is how enrichment links into learning. The school references after-school clubs and curriculum-related activities, including science club opportunities in its science curriculum information. That kind of bridge matters. At infant age, children often learn best when an idea shows up repeatedly across contexts, such as a classroom activity, a story, and a playful club session that makes the concept feel real.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For an infant and nursery academy, the practical destination question is Year 3. Families should look closely at local junior options, especially how transitions are supported and whether there is a linked school relationship.
This academy is part of a trust that includes Dereham Church of England Junior Academy, which provides a natural continuity route for some families. That does not mean places are automatic, and families should still treat Year 3 planning as a real decision, but it does give a clearer local context than a standalone infant school with no obvious partner.
If you are building a longer-term plan, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages can be useful for comparing nearby junior options side-by-side, so you are not relying on one school’s marketing language to choose the next step.
Admissions are competitive in the most recent published data, so it is sensible to treat entry as something that needs planning rather than assumption. The academy is oversubscribed for Reception in the latest cycle shown with 103 applications for 49 offers, which is around 2.1 applications for each place offered. Preference patterns also suggest many applicants are prioritising the school highly.
Reception entry in Norfolk is coordinated by the local authority. For September 2026 entry, the published timetable lists applications opening on 23 September 2025, closing on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. If you are applying, those dates are the anchor points to work back from, especially if you are also weighing multiple schools and trying to align childcare arrangements.
The school’s own published admissions policy for 2025 to 2026 states a Published Admissions Number of 60 for Reception. Do not assume that number equals the offers you will see in any given year, as cohort organisation, in-year movement, and the way classes are structured can affect what is actually available.
Because no last-distance figure is published in the material provided, families should avoid making assumptions based on anecdotes. If distance is likely to matter in your circumstances, the FindMySchool Map Search is a practical way to understand your home-to-school distance accurately before relying on a place.
Applications
103
Total received
Places Offered
49
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
At infant age, pastoral strength usually shows up in three places: routines, communication with home, and how quickly staff notice small changes. The strongest hard evidence available publicly often sits inside safeguarding and behaviour policies, plus the way a school structures the day and extended provision.
Wraparound care can be an indirect but meaningful indicator, because it requires consistent staffing, clear expectations, and safe handovers across a longer span of the day. The school’s wraparound offer is explicit, with breakfast provision from 7:30am and after-school care up to 6pm. For parents, the implication is not only convenience, but also stability, particularly for children who find transitions difficult.
For children with additional needs, families should also review how SEN support is described and who leads it, then use visits and questions to understand what support looks like in practice. At this age, the most important point is responsiveness, not labels.
Extracurricular in an infant setting should not read like a secondary school brochure. The right question is whether activities reinforce confidence, coordination, language, and curiosity, rather than whether the list looks long.
Here, the school communicates a number of concrete clubs and pupil roles over time. Examples include gardening, choir, and sports clubs, as seen in its club updates. That blend is sensible for this age range. Gardening works well for vocabulary, patience, and seasonal understanding. Choir is a strong tool for listening, memory, and group confidence. Physical clubs matter for coordination and social play, especially for children who are still learning to manage big feelings in busy settings.
Curriculum-linked enrichment also appears in subject information, including references to science club activities. The best version of this is when a child can bring home a new fascination, not just a sticker.
This is a state-funded school with no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the typical costs that come with primary education, such as uniform, trips, and optional clubs.
Wraparound is a clear practical strength. Breakfast provision starts at 7:30am, and after-school provision runs until 6pm. Nursery session times are also communicated in school materials, and these can change by term, so families should confirm the exact pattern that applies to their child’s entitlement and chosen sessions.
For travel, most families will be looking at walkability, a short drive, or local buses within Dereham. If you are trying to minimise daily friction, do a trial run at drop-off time rather than judging solely on a map.
Competition for Reception places. Recent demand data indicates oversubscription, with around 2.1 applications for every offer made. This is a school where it is wise to list realistic alternatives on your application.
A new academy phase. The academy opened in November 2023, and leadership is recorded from that point. New structures can bring improvements quickly, but they can also mean policies and routines are still evolving.
Inspection context can be confusing. The current academy record shows an academy conversion letter in November 2023, while the predecessor school’s most recent graded outcome on Ofsted’s site is Good from a short inspection in January 2019. Parents should read this as a timeline, not as two competing judgements.
Year 3 planning matters. Because the academy stops at Year 2, every family has a transition decision ahead. Linked local junior options exist, but continuity is not automatic, so it is worth thinking about early.
This is a practical, structured infant and nursery setting that puts early reading clarity and wraparound provision front and centre. The strongest evidence points are the explicit approach to phonics progression and the childcare hours that match working life. It suits families who want a clear early literacy pathway, reliable wraparound, and a Church of England designated school in Dereham. The biggest constraint is admission, competition for places is the limiting factor, so a careful application strategy is essential.
It has a recent history of being judged Good on Ofsted’s site for the predecessor school, with the most recent graded outcome coming from a short inspection in January 2019. The current academy record reflects its November 2023 conversion and includes an academy conversion letter rather than a graded inspection outcome.
Reception applications are coordinated by Norfolk County Council. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 23 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school advertises breakfast provision from 7:30am and after-school provision available until 6pm. Availability and booking arrangements are best confirmed directly with the school.
Children transfer to junior school for Year 3. A local continuity route exists because the trust includes Dereham Church of England Junior Academy, but families should still plan and apply according to the relevant admissions process.
The school describes a progression that uses Super Sounds in Nursery and Essential Letters and Sounds in Reception and Key Stage 1. It also sets out a structured approach to phonics sessions, which helps provide consistency for children and clarity for parents.
Get in touch with the school directly
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