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.
Broomhill is an infant and nursery setting that leans heavily into early years practice, with the practical realities of family life taken seriously. Wraparound options start early, the nursery offer is designed around funded entitlements plus paid extensions, and the school’s messaging is consistent about curiosity and learning through the physical world.
Leadership is stable. Miss Hayley Farthing is the headteacher and also the safeguarding lead, and she has held the headteacher role since April 2016.
The quality baseline is clear. The latest Ofsted graded inspection (October 2022) judged the school Good overall, and Good across every graded area, including early years provision.
The school’s identity is built around belonging and confidence. Its published vision and aims focus on children developing self-belief, curiosity, resilience and a sense of responsibility, which matters in an infant setting where children are still learning how to be in school, not just how to read and count.
In practice, the strongest signal is how deliberately early years routines and play are described. The nursery team’s approach emphasises children leading their learning through play, with adults scaffolding language and skills, which is the kind of phrasing parents tend to see when a setting has a clear Early Years Foundation Stage culture rather than a “mini Year 1” feel.
Inclusion is not positioned as an add-on. The school runs a specialist resourced provision, and the “Blossoms” placement is presented as part of the mainstream rhythm rather than a separate unit. That framing often shows up in day-to-day decisions, for example flexible grouping, adult deployment, and how play and sensory breaks are normalised rather than treated as exceptions.
For an infant and nursery school, published attainment measures are not as straightforward for parents to compare as they are at the end of Key Stage 2. The more useful evidence tends to be: inspection outcomes, curriculum clarity, reading and phonics approach, and how well children move into the junior phase with confidence.
The latest Ofsted inspection judged the school Good in every graded area, including Quality of Education and Early Years provision, which sets a credible baseline for teaching, safeguarding culture, and leadership.
A practical point for families is continuity. The school describes itself as part of a paired infant and junior pathway, with a very high proportion of families transferring to the linked junior school.
A useful way to think about Broomhill is “early years first, then structured step-up”. Early years is framed around play, language modelling and child-led exploration. The nursery page is explicit about staff scaffolding play and modelling language, which is often what parents want to hear if they are weighing up whether their child will be supported to talk, listen, negotiate and become independent.
As children progress into Reception, Year 1 and Year 2, the curriculum is presented as practical and meaningful, with an emphasis on engaging with the world around them. The school also uses its own language around learning mindsets, via its “States of Being” approach, which is intended to help children think about purpose and real-life relevance. That kind of shared vocabulary can help children articulate learning choices, even at a young age, and can also help parents understand what the school means by “engagement” beyond simple compliance.
Reading matters for this age range, so parents should look closely at the school’s phonics and reading approach and ask how it is taught across Reception and Key Stage 1, especially for children who need a slower, more oral-language-heavy start. The website signposts reading and phonics information, and it is worth asking how staff spot and respond to early speech and language needs, particularly given the school’s resourced SEND experience.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The dominant pathway is into the paired junior school. Bristol’s admissions guidance is clear that children at paired infant schools transfer automatically into the linked junior school unless a family actively applies elsewhere, and Broomhill is named as one of those paired schools.
Broomhill’s own messaging reinforces that continuity, with the school stating that most families remain within the paired route. For parents, that matters because the biggest transition point here is not Year 6 to Year 7, it is Year 2 to Year 3. In a paired arrangement, children often benefit from familiar expectations, shared curriculum language, and coordination around support plans for pupils with SEND.
If you are considering a different junior school, treat Year 2 as an admissions year in its own right and start early, because the transfer process is coordinated and deadline-driven in the same way as Reception entry.
Reception places are coordinated by Bristol City Council, not allocated directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, the council deadline is 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026. Families must then respond by 30 April 2026.
Demand is material. The most recent published admissions figures show 122 applications for 59 offers, which indicates that competition is a real factor for many families. A sensible next step is to use the FindMySchool Map Search tool to understand how your home address relates to likely distance priorities, then sanity-check that with the council’s oversubscription rules for the relevant year.
Nursery admissions are handled via the school, with the school advising that demand is high and that it operates a waiting list. For many families, the best practical move is to register interest early, even if you are still deciding between settings, because waiting lists can move slowly once the year is underway.
The school encourages prospective parents to visit and describes running regular tours and open events, with individual visits also available. If you are choosing primarily on early years practice, visits matter, because the difference between settings is often in adult interaction and routines rather than facilities.
100%
1st preference success rate
58 of 58 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
122
For infants, pastoral care is mostly about predictable routines, adult availability, and early identification of needs. Broomhill’s staffing page makes the safeguarding structure visible and names the designated safeguarding lead and deputies, which is a positive signal of clarity and accountability.
The resourced provision and SEND emphasis are also relevant here. The school opened the Blossoms specialist resource base in September 2020 and presents it as part of a wider inclusive approach, including support around Education, Health and Care Plan processes. For families who are navigating assessments, that experience can reduce friction, because staff are more likely to be familiar with documentation, referrals and multi-agency working.
A small but telling detail is the presence of a named nurture therapy assistance dog (Jack) in the staff listing. While a dog is not a substitute for trained pastoral staff, it often signals that the school is thinking deliberately about emotional regulation and comfort for young children and for pupils with additional needs.
Infant schools can sometimes sound generic here, but Broomhill’s website provides enough specifics to avoid that. The school calendar and galleries show recurring themed activities and clubs that are age-appropriate and tangible.
Two examples stand out as distinctive:
Forest Skills Club, which suggests outdoor learning is not limited to occasional “nature days” but can be embedded as an ongoing strand.
Tinkering Days (and “Tinkering Tuesday” in the diary), which signals hands-on problem solving and making, a strong fit for children who learn best through building, experimenting and trying again.
Creative clubs also appear in the galleries, including Music Club and Drama Club, which matter in Key Stage 1 because confidence-building often comes through performance, rhythm, and structured play.
Trips and experiences are another indicator of how learning is made concrete for young pupils. The news section references a Year 1 trip to SS Great Britain, which fits the school’s stated emphasis on meaningful, practical learning.
The core school day aligns with typical infant timings, with children moving into class for the start of the day at 08:45.
Wraparound provision is more developed than many infant settings:
Breakfast Club starts at 07:30, and the published session price is £5.
After-school provision for Year 1 and Year 2 is available up to 17:30 via a partner provider.
For nursery-age children, the school describes funded hours as the core offer, with optional paid sessions around that, but for nursery fee detail you should use the school’s official early years pages rather than relying on summaries elsewhere.
Transport and travel will depend on your exact route in Bristol, but the key practical point is admissions geography. If you are shortlisting multiple local options, use FindMySchool’s comparison tools to line up admissions demand indicators alongside what matters to your child, for example early years structure, SEND experience, and wraparound.
Competition for places. Reception demand is higher than supply which means families should apply on time and keep realistic backup options.
Nursery waiting list reality. The school explicitly advises early registration of interest and operates a waiting list for nursery places. If you need a guaranteed start date, ask what flexibility exists.
SEND resourced provision. The Blossoms resource base can be a major strength for the right child, but it also means it is worth asking clear questions about how pupils split time between resourced provision and mainstream, and how support is reviewed.
Year 2 to Year 3 transition. The paired junior transfer is designed to be smooth, but if you plan to apply elsewhere for Year 3 you will need to engage with the separate transfer process and deadlines, not leave it until late Year 2.
Broomhill works best for families who want a strongly early-years-led start, with practical wraparound options and visible experience in inclusive SEND practice. The Good inspection outcome provides reassurance on the fundamentals, while the combination of Forest Skills and tinkering-style activities suggests learning is regularly taken beyond worksheets into play, making and exploration.
Who it suits: children who thrive with structured routines but need learning to be hands-on and language-rich, and families who value continuity into the paired junior phase. The main challenge is admission demand, so it rewards families who plan early and shortlist sensibly.
The latest Ofsted graded inspection (October 2022) judged the school Good overall, and Good across all graded areas, including early years provision.
Applications go through Bristol City Council. The deadline for on-time applications is 15 January 2026, offers are issued on 16 April 2026, and families must respond by 30 April 2026.
Nursery places are managed by the school. The school advises that demand is high and that it operates a waiting list, so registering interest early is sensible if you need a place in a specific term.
Yes, Broomhill is part of a paired infant and junior arrangement in Bristol. Children at paired infant schools transfer automatically to the linked junior school unless a family applies for a different junior school.
Breakfast Club starts at 07:30, and after-school care for Year 1 and Year 2 is available up to 17:30 via a partner provider. Availability and booking arrangements can vary by term, so check the current information before relying on a specific pattern.
Get in touch with the school directly
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