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 small primary in West Horndon, this school mixes traditional primary priorities with a handful of unusual, confidence-building experiences, including a pupil-led radio station and a structured approach to outdoor play. The headteacher, Mr Matthew O’Grady, has led the school since 2008, which shows up in a coherent identity and consistent messaging across the curriculum and wider life.
Academically, the most recent published key stage 2 outcomes show a very strong combined expected-standard figure, well above England averages. At the same time, the school’s overall England ranking sits in the lower national band, a reminder that small-cohort primaries can look different depending on which measure you prioritise and how stable results are year to year.
West Horndon Primary leans into the idea that pupils should have real responsibility, not just token roles. The clearest example is West Horndon Radio, a pupil-led station supported by broadcasting equipment (including a vinyl turntable) and structured adult expertise. Pupils plan, produce and present programmes, with broadcasts played out to the playground at break and lunchtime. The school also describes a “Radio Professional in Residence”, Russell Prue, who works with pupils on presenting, interviewing and technical production.
That emphasis on voice and agency also shows up in how the school talks about play and wellbeing. OPAL (Outdoor Play and Learning) is framed as a whole-school approach to improving playtimes, with a focus on better outdoor provision and more varied, child-directed play. In practice, that tends to reduce low-level friction at lunchtime and gives pupils more chances to practise cooperation, negotiation and leadership, particularly for children who find the classroom easier than the playground, or vice versa.
Pastoral support has a distinctive strand too. The school presents its Dog Mentor programme as part of everyday life, using a nationally recognised approach that aims to support emotional regulation, confidence and readiness to learn. For some pupils, especially those who arrive anxious or who struggle with self-control, structured interactions with a calm, trained dog can be a practical route into better routines, and it can make “talking about feelings” feel less abstract.
Leadership stability is another defining feature. Mr Matthew O’Grady’s long tenure, described on the school website as serving as headteacher since 2008, often correlates with consistent behaviour expectations and fewer swings in curriculum direction. That does not automatically mean everything is perfect, but it usually does mean the school knows what it is trying to be, which matters for families deciding on fit.
This is a state primary, so the most useful academic lens is key stage 2 attainment and related scaled scores.
Results, 85.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The England average is 62%, so the school is well above England average on this headline measure. Average scaled scores are 105 for reading, 103 for mathematics, and 101 for grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS). Science is also strong at 95% meeting the expected standard.
At the higher standard, 17.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 8%. Writing depth is also notable at 24% greater depth in writing.
Alongside those outcomes, the school’s FindMySchool ranking places it 11,069th in England for primary outcomes and 16th locally in Brentwood. In plain English, that sits in the below-average band nationally. The most sensible way to read this combination is that attainment in a particular year can be very strong, while overall ranking measures can be sensitive to cohort size, volatility, and which indicators are weighted. For parents, the practical implication is to look for consistency over time and to ask how the school supports pupils who are not already confident readers and writers, not only those already near the expected standard.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
85.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The strongest clues about teaching style come from how the school structures the day and the kind of curriculum experiences it highlights.
The published school day includes an early start to the gates and registration (08:45), with the official start at 09:00 and the day ending at 15:30. Reading is given explicit protected time late in the day, listed as “The Big Read”, which typically signals a deliberate whole-school reading culture rather than leaving reading stamina to chance.
Curriculum enrichment is used as a lever for engagement and retention, not simply as “nice extras”. The school’s own description of West Horndon Radio positions it as a route into oracy, teamwork and technical skills, and the fact it broadcasts into communal spaces makes it feel like a real audience rather than a classroom performance. That tends to motivate pupils who might otherwise disengage from writing, scripting and editing tasks.
Outdoor learning is another pillar. The school promotes Forest Schools as part of its distinctive offer, and OPAL is explicitly linked to lunchtime provision. These strands usually work best where teaching staff are aligned on routines and risk management, because outdoor learning is only effective when behaviour expectations travel with pupils.
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 serving ages 4 to 11, the main transition is into local secondary schools. In this part of Essex, many families look at a mix of comprehensive and selective options depending on the child and the wider family plan.
For most pupils, the likely route is to local non-selective secondaries within reasonable travel distance of West Horndon and the wider Brentwood area. Families considering selective routes should remember that primary schools typically focus on broad primary outcomes and wellbeing rather than intensive entrance-test preparation, so any 11-plus pathway usually needs careful planning well in advance. A sensible question for prospective parents is how the school supports transition skills in Year 6, including independence, organisation and reading stamina, because those tend to predict a smoother first term in Year 7 than any single set of SATs scores.
Admissions are coordinated by Essex County Council, not decided directly by the school, and the published admission number for 2026 to 2027 is 30.
The demand picture suggests a school that is often oversubscribed, with 47 applications for 30 offers for the Reception entry route snapshot, which is 1.57 applications per place. That is competitive, but not in the “you must live on the doorstep” bracket that some urban primaries experience. There is no last-distance figure available for this school, so families should avoid assuming how far a place might reach in any given year.
For September 2026 primary entry across Essex, the county council’s published timeline indicates applications opened 10 November 2025 and on-time applications closed 15 January 2026, with applications after that treated as late. Even when exact dates shift year to year, that mid-November to mid-January window is the practical planning anchor.
A helpful way to shortlist is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your likely travel pattern and practical distance, then verify current-year admissions criteria via Essex, because small primaries can tighten or loosen unexpectedly depending on sibling patterns and cohort size.
100%
1st preference success rate
22 of 22 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
47
The school’s wellbeing offer is more specific than many primaries, which often describe pastoral care in general terms. Here, the Dog Mentor programme is described as supporting emotional wellbeing and self-regulation through structured interactions, which can be particularly valuable for pupils who find transitions, friendships, or attention control difficult.
Play and wellbeing are also treated as part of the school’s operating model rather than an add-on. OPAL explicitly sits inside the lunchtime structure, and that matters because lunchtime is where many pupils either flourish socially or struggle. A school that invests in play quality often sees knock-on benefits in afternoon learning time, because fewer issues spill back into class.
Special educational needs and inclusion are part of the picture too. The school has a resourced provision related to speech, language and communication needs, and the school’s own information describes a dual registration model with assessment and involvement from NHS colleagues to determine suitability. This kind of specialist strand can be a significant advantage for families whose child’s primary need is speech and language, provided the provision matches the profile and the placement process is clearly understood early.
The headline differentiator is West Horndon Radio. This is not a generic “media club”, it is positioned as a functioning school radio station, with pupils broadcasting live and learning a real workflow: planning, scripting, presenting, interviewing, editing, and producing. The presence of a named professional working with pupils strengthens this further, because it suggests sustained coaching rather than a one-off enrichment day. The implication for pupils is improved spoken confidence and better command of audience-aware writing, which tends to transfer into English outcomes over time.
A second distinctive strand is the combination of OPAL and Forest Schools style outdoor learning. OPAL is framed as a whole-school improvement programme for play, and the school day explicitly includes “Lunchtime and OPAL”, which suggests it is embedded, not occasional. Forest Schools is presented as part of the school’s “Standing Out” offer. For many pupils, especially those who regulate better through movement and practical activity, strong outdoor provision can be the difference between “coping” and enjoying school.
Finally, Cookery School@WHPS is listed among the school’s distinctive programmes. Even without detailed published session structures on the page snippet, its prominence in the school’s navigation suggests it is an established part of enrichment rather than an occasional activity.
The school publishes a detailed structure for the day. Gates and registration open at 08:45, the school day officially begins at 09:00, and the day ends at 15:30, with a stated total of 32.5 hours per week.
Wraparound care information is currently limited on the school site. The school notes that further information will be shared, and it points families towards a nearby breakfast club provider based at the West Horndon Village Hall. For working families, this is worth clarifying directly during the admissions process, particularly for after-school coverage.
For travel, West Horndon is a village setting with a rail station nearby, and many families will combine walking, local driving, or short drop-off routines depending on where they live within the parish. If you are comparing multiple schools, prioritise what the morning looks like in real time, because journey friction is one of the biggest drivers of late arrivals and family stress over a seven-year primary run.
Small cohort volatility. With a small published admission number, year-to-year results and cohort mix can swing more than in large two-form entry primaries. Ask about consistency, not only one headline year.
Ranking versus attainment signals. The figures show very strong key stage 2 attainment alongside a lower national ranking position. Families should ask how outcomes have looked across several years and how the school supports pupils below the expected standard, not only those already near it.
Wraparound care clarity. Wraparound provision details are not fully set out on the school website at the moment, and the school points to external breakfast provision. If you need guaranteed before and after-school coverage, verify the current arrangement early.
Specialist provision fit. The speech and language resourced provision has a defined suitability process and is not automatically the right route for every child with communication needs. Families should understand the assessment criteria and what dual registration means in practice.
West Horndon Primary School is a small state primary with an unusually distinctive enrichment offer, especially through its pupil-led radio station, outdoor play focus, and wellbeing initiatives. The latest inspection outcome is Good, and the most recent results attainment figures are well above England averages on key stage 2 combined measures.
Best suited to families who want a village-scale school, value confidence-building experiences like broadcasting and structured outdoor learning, and are comfortable engaging early on admissions and any wraparound logistics. The main challenge is that demand can exceed places, so families should plan on time and keep realistic options open.
The school’s most recent inspection outcome is Good, with all key judgement areas listed as Good. outcomes, key stage 2 attainment is well above England averages on the combined reading, writing and maths measure, which is a strong sign for academic foundations.
Applications are coordinated by Essex County Council rather than handled directly by the school. The published admission number for 2026 to 2027 is 30, and families should plan around Essex’s standard primary application window, typically running from mid-November to mid-January.
The school website indicates that wraparound care information will be shared when available, and it signposts a nearby breakfast club provider in West Horndon Village Hall. If wraparound is essential for your family, it is sensible to confirm the current before and after-school arrangements directly.
A standout feature is West Horndon Radio, described as a pupil-led radio station supported by broadcasting equipment and professional input, with live broadcasts played to the playground at break and lunchtime. The school also highlights OPAL for outdoor play and a Dog Mentor programme linked to wellbeing.
The school has a resourced provision focused on speech, language and communication needs, and it describes a suitability assessment process involving specialist staff and NHS colleagues, using a dual registration model. Families considering this route should understand what “primary need” means in the assessment process.
Get in touch with the school directly
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