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.
Set beside the tall trees of Clifton, this is a two-form entry primary that blends academic ambition with a curriculum shaped by its immediate surroundings. The local area is not treated as background scenery. It is used as a teaching resource, whether that means regular walks into Clifton Village, museum learning, or faith and culture visits across the city.
The current headteacher is Mark Oldfield. He is recorded as headteacher in the Full Governing Board minutes from 10 October 2024, which is a useful anchor point for families trying to understand recent leadership transition.
Academic outcomes are a key calling card. In 2024, 86.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 35.33% reached greater depth, compared with 8% across England. Ranked 2,202nd in England and 24th in Bristol for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), performance sits above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England.
There is a clear sense of order and calm purpose here, paired with a warm community tone. The school’s published values are practical rather than abstract, and they are written in language that children can actually use: kindness, aspiration, respect, co-operation, responsibility, and honesty. That matters, because it makes values visible in day-to-day routines, not just on posters.
Being a Church of England school does not translate into a narrow intake or a closed culture. The school explicitly describes a community that includes families of different faiths and of no faith, which is a useful signal for parents who like the grounding of a faith ethos but do not want a mono-cultural feel.
The site itself supports a varied primary experience. The school describes modern classrooms, two halls used for physical education, drama and dining, plus specialist spaces including a practical room for art, pottery and design technology, a food technology room for cooking, ICT suites, a music room, and a learning resource centre. That range is more than a facilities checklist. It enables specialist, hands-on teaching that is hard to deliver well in a single classroom model.
Results are consistently strong, with a particularly clear picture at the combined reading, writing and maths measure.
In 2024, 86.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared to 62% across England. Reading and grammar, punctuation and spelling look especially secure, with 91% reaching the expected standard in reading and 89% in GPS. Science is also strong, with 94% reaching the expected standard.
At the higher standard, the story is equally compelling. 35.33% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared to 8% across England. For parents, that usually indicates a curriculum that does not just aim for threshold competence; it stretches the highest attainers in a structured way.
Ranked 2,202nd in England and 24th in Bristol for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), performance sits above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England.
A note on interpreting these numbers: primary results reflect cohorts, and cohorts can vary. The most useful way to use the data is as one strand in a wider judgement alongside curriculum quality, inclusion, and the practicalities of daily life.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
86.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is designed to build knowledge step-by-step, with strong sequencing across subjects. This approach is most visible when the school uses local context as an organising frame for learning. Pupils learn about the city and its stories through trips and projects that sit within the taught curriculum rather than being occasional add-ons.
Early years provision is an important strength. Reception is treated as the start of a coherent learning journey, not a holding year. The July 2024 inspection described a sharp focus on communication and language, and gave a concrete example of children using ambitious mathematical vocabulary. That tends to correlate with confident oracy and strong early number sense, both of which matter later for writing quality and maths reasoning.
Reading is positioned centrally. Pupils start phonics quickly, and reading books are closely matched to the sounds pupils know, which is one of the most reliable practical markers of an effective early reading model.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a state primary, the key transition point is into secondary education at the end of Year 6. The school does not publish a single destination list, which is common for Bristol primaries because families apply across a wide mix of city and neighbouring-area secondaries.
What is clear is that Year 6 is designed as preparation for the next step, both academically and for independence. The school’s enrichment programme explicitly describes Year 6 as a culmination and a bridge to secondary, including life-skills oriented visits and workshops, plus residential experiences for upper key stage 2 pupils.
For families comparing options across Bristol primaries, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool can help you view results side-by-side, then cross-check how those outcomes align with each school’s curriculum and inclusion approach.
Entry is via Reception, coordinated through Bristol City Council. Demand is high: 109 applications for 59 offers in the latest available admissions snapshot, which equates to 1.85 applications per place. The Reception route is therefore competitive, even before you factor in the practical reality that popular neighbourhood schools tend to attract multiple preferences.
For September 2026 entry, the published local authority timetable sets a clear set of dates. Applications open online from 12 September 2025, the closing date is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026. The council also sets 20 January 2026 as the final date for limited changes and address updates for the first allocation round.
At school level, Reception tours for the 2026 intake run in the autumn term, with an example of a final tour date in early January, which suggests a typical pattern of autumn open events for prospective families. Treat any specific tour dates as time-sensitive and check the school’s latest calendar before planning.
Oversubscription follows the Bristol framework, with priority categories including children who are looked after or previously looked after, siblings, children of staff, then geographical proximity.
If you are considering a move, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for checking your exact distance and modelling realistic options across nearby schools, especially where proximity is a decisive criterion.
91.8%
1st preference success rate
56 of 61 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
109
Pastoral care is underpinned by a strong safeguarding culture and clear staff responsibility. The school names designated safeguarding roles on its published safeguarding information, and governance minutes show routine governor engagement with safeguarding monitoring.
Inclusion is treated as mainstream work, not a side programme. Pupils with special educational needs and disabilities are identified promptly and supported through adaptations that keep them learning the same ambitious curriculum as their peers, with external specialist input where needed.
Pupil leadership also plays a part in the ethos. Roles such as school and house captains, plus worship councillors, are positioned as meaningful contributions, which tends to build confidence and responsibility across the pupil body.
The most distinctive feature of extracurricular and enrichment here is the way it is woven into curriculum intent. Trips are not framed as rewards; they are used to deepen subject understanding.
Local learning is a constant thread. The school describes regular access to cultural and sporting facilities within walking distance, and gives examples including Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, Clifton Suspension Bridge, SS Great Britain, and Tyntesfield. This has a real implication for pupils. It makes knowledge feel anchored, and it gives less confident learners extra ways into a topic through experience and memory.
STEM enrichment includes robotics and animation workshops, plus university-linked visits and practical demonstrations. The Ofsted report also references a computing club project where pupils create step counters using micro:bits. This is the kind of concrete, build-and-test learning that develops problem solving and persistence, particularly for pupils who do not shine through writing alone.
The arts are not treated as optional. The school describes a bi-annual Arts Week and gives previous themes that show genuine thought about linking art to wider learning, including Wildlife S.O.S, Our Beautiful Blue Planet, and Inspired by Faith. Participation extends beyond the school gates through involvement in a local arts trail exhibition, which matters because it raises the stakes and pride in finished work.
Wraparound care is provided by Shine After School Club, with breakfast provision from 7.35am and after-school sessions running until 5.55pm. The model is activity-based, with examples including archery, gymnastics, dance, cookery, pottery, junk modelling and LEGO Club.
This is a state primary school with no tuition fees. Families should still expect typical costs such as uniform, trips and optional clubs.
The location is a major practical advantage for families living in Clifton and nearby neighbourhoods, because many curriculum activities are designed around walkable local venues and green spaces.
Wraparound care on site is a clear strength for working families. Breakfast provision starts at 7.35am, and the later after-school session runs to 5.55pm, which creates a realistic full working day option without a second pick-up location.
For day-to-day logistics, governors have discussed unsafe parking and drop-off behaviour, which implies that walking, scooting, or planning a slightly earlier arrival can reduce stress at peak times.
Competition for Reception places. With 109 applications for 59 offers in the latest admissions snapshot, entry pressure is real. Have a Plan B in your application preferences, and use distance tools to sanity-check what is realistic for your address.
Leadership transition. The July 2024 inspection report lists Clare Jones as headteacher at that point, while the school now names Mark Oldfield as headteacher and governing minutes record him in post by October 2024. Families may want to ask how priorities have evolved and what has stayed consistent.
Drop-off constraints. Governance minutes raise concerns about parking and drop-off safety. If you rely on driving, ask about practical routines and consider whether your household can use park-and-stride habits.
Voluntary contributions and enrichment funding. Minutes indicate that enrichment can be sensitive to voluntary contributions, including a referenced voluntary contribution of £80. If extracurricular and trips are a major draw, it is sensible to ask how the school maintains equity of access for all pupils.
This is a high-performing Clifton primary with a clear academic core and a curriculum that makes intelligent use of Bristol as a classroom. The combination of strong results, serious arts investment, and practical wraparound care will suit many families.
Best suited to families who value ambitious learning, regular trips and workshops, and a Church of England ethos that remains welcoming to a broad community. The main hurdle is admission, so shortlisting should be paired with a realistic application strategy.
Yes, academic outcomes are strong, with 86.67% of pupils meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined in 2024, compared with 62% across England. The latest inspection outcome was Outstanding (July 2024).
Reception places are allocated through Bristol’s coordinated admissions, and proximity is used after higher priority categories such as looked-after children, siblings, and children of staff. The school does not publish a single fixed catchment map in the core admissions summary, so families should rely on the local authority criteria and check how distance works for their address.
For September 2026 entry, the closing date is 15 January 2026 and offers are issued on 16 April 2026. Applications open online from 12 September 2025 via the Bristol admissions portal.
Yes. Wraparound care is available on site through Shine, with breakfast provision from 7.35am and after-school sessions running to 5.55pm. Sessions are activity-based, and availability can vary, so booking early is sensible.
The faith character shows up through worship and values-led culture, alongside a stated commitment to welcoming families of different faiths and of no faith. Pupils also learn about a range of religions through visits and curriculum work, which helps keep the ethos inclusive rather than insular.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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