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 rural infant school where the practicalities feel genuinely village-sized, lunches are taken in the village hall, pupils take nature walks around the local area, and the timetable builds in regular movement through the Daily Mile.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (October 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision.
Leadership is currently under Mrs Laura Passenger, who has led since January 2023 (initially as part of a co-headship arrangement during that period).
For families weighing up infant options in and around Buckingham, the key question is fit. This is a tiny setting with small cohorts, close adult knowledge of each child, and a broad curriculum delivered with a strong emphasis on early reading, routines, and calm learning habits.
Scale defines daily life here. The published intake is 45 in total, with a published admission number of 15 per year group, so pupils are not lost in the crowd. That typically brings benefits parents can feel quickly: consistent routines, familiar adults, and a setting where responsibilities for pupils are realistic rather than tokenistic. Formal review evidence describes pupils taking on positions of responsibility as champions and ambassadors, which fits a school where everyone needs to play a part.
Behaviour is a defining strength. In the latest inspection grading profile, behaviour and attitudes were Outstanding, and the narrative describes exceptionally calm classrooms with no disruption to learning. In an infant context, that matters because the learning gains are cumulative. Phonics and early maths depend on children listening closely, practising frequently, and building confidence through success.
The school places a clear emphasis on community links. The public-facing descriptions include village exploration, gardening, and participating locally, and the inspection evidence points to regular community-facing activities such as singing to older residents and supporting a local foodbank. The implication is a setting where personal development is not bolted on. It is tied to everyday habits, local relationships, and age-appropriate service.
Traditional headline primary performance data can be limited for an infant school because statutory end of Key Stage 2 outcomes sit with junior or combined schools. That means parents should interpret “results” here as readiness for Key Stage 2, rather than league-table style comparisons.
The strongest published evidence focuses on early reading. Reading is treated as a priority from Reception, with staff training in phonics and regular checking for gaps so pupils catch up quickly when they fall behind. For parents, the practical implication is that early literacy is less likely to drift. Children who need extra repetition are identified early, and children who take off quickly are supported with appropriately matched books.
The wider inspection picture also matters because it signals how learning happens day to day. The graded judgements show Good for quality of education and Outstanding for early years. That combination usually correlates with clear routines, strong adult modelling, and consistent expectations, which are especially important in mixed-age infant classes and small cohorts.
If you are comparing nearby schools, FindMySchool’s local area tools are still useful here, but the comparison should focus on inspection profiles, curriculum approach, wraparound practicalities, and transition into Year 3, rather than expecting rich KS2-style metrics from an infant setting.
A key strength is curriculum intent that stays broad, even at a small scale. Published materials emphasise discrete subject teaching and careful sequencing so children make connections across units over time.
The early years and Key Stage 1 approach is rooted in repeated practice and strong routines. The school day information explicitly references daily phonics, maths, and English, which signals a structured core alongside wider foundation subjects. The implication for pupils is a predictable rhythm, particularly helpful for young children who thrive when expectations are stable.
A second strength is the way reading culture is made tangible. The inspection evidence references a thoughtfully resourced library linked to the curriculum, and a regular Mystery Reader feature that helps keep story-time exciting and consistent. That matters because, at infant age, engagement is often the difference between a child who practises willingly and one who avoids it. The more enjoyable and routine-based reading feels, the easier home support becomes.
The main area for development identified in the same evidence base is fine-grain matching of activities to pupils’ needs in some lessons. In practice, parents may want to ask how tasks are adapted within mixed attainment groups, and how adults ensure quicker learners are stretched without leaving others behind.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The key transition is into Year 3, which is handled through Buckinghamshire Council processes for moving from infant to junior or, in some cases, to a combined school that admits additional pupils into Year 3.
For 2026 timing, Buckinghamshire publishes a clear infant-to-junior timeline. The transfer process sits alongside Reception admissions in the same winter window, with applications opening in early November and closing in mid January, and offers released on the April national offer day.
Because destination patterns vary by family preference and place availability, the most reliable planning approach is practical: shortlist potential Year 3 destinations early, check travel time at peak drop-off hours, and confirm how sibling priority and distance rules apply for each receiving school. Buckinghamshire’s school directory is the right starting point for that list-building.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Admission is coordinated through the local authority route based on where you live, and the published admission number is 15 per year group.
Demand exceeds supply in the available application data: 23 applications resulted in 11 offers, which equates to 2.09 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. This does not mean admission is impossible, but it does mean families should be realistic and apply on time with an accurate address. (Local authority rules determine how places are prioritised, commonly with looked-after children, exceptional medical or social needs where applicable, and distance and siblings within the published arrangements.)
For Reception entry in 2026, the Buckinghamshire portal window is published as opening Wednesday 5 November 2025 and closing Thursday 15 January 2026. Buckinghamshire also publishes National Offer Day as 16 April, with portal access and email notifications on that date.
If you are using distance-sensitive criteria for your wider shortlist, FindMySchool’s Map Search is a sensible way to sanity-check travel distance and likely feasibility, especially in a rural area where small mileage differences can map to meaningful drive-time.
Applications
23
Total received
Places Offered
11
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
Personal development was graded Outstanding in the latest inspection profile, and the broader evidence describes pupils learning routines quickly, showing kindness in play, and taking responsibility through pupil roles. For families, this tends to translate into a setting where social development is explicit. Children are taught how to share, take turns, and persist, rather than being expected to pick it up implicitly.
Safeguarding leadership is clearly signposted through named designated safeguarding leads and deputies in the school’s published child protection information, and the school’s safeguarding arrangements were confirmed as effective in the most recent inspection.
Support for pupils with additional needs is integrated into mainstream routines rather than treated as separate. The school sets high expectations for pupils with SEND, and leadership information shows SEND coordination sits at headteacher level, which often improves speed of decision-making when children need targeted adjustments.
Small schools can struggle to offer breadth. Here, the published clubs list suggests the opposite, with a weekly rhythm of different experiences across languages, sport, outdoor learning, and practical making.
Examples are specific and time-tabled:
La Jolie Ronde on Mondays (language learning)
S4A sports club on Tuesdays
Forest after-school club on Wednesdays
Construction club on Thursdays
Mystery club on Fridays
Forest School also appears as a distinctive element of specialist teaching in the school’s own descriptions, and inspection evidence references forest school alongside clubs and local sporting events as part of the wider opportunities programme. For pupils, the implication is a balanced week where physical activity and outdoor learning sit alongside phonics and number work. For parents, it often means children have more to talk about after school, which supports language development and confidence.
Community-facing activities also matter in an infant setting because they teach purpose and empathy in a concrete way. The published evidence base includes examples such as singing for local older residents and supporting a foodbank, which are age-appropriate ways of making “community” real rather than abstract.
The school day is published as 8:45am to 3:15pm, with gates opening at 8:40am and locking at 9am for security. Lunchtime runs from 12 noon to 1pm, with lunch eaten in the village hall.
Wraparound is available in a limited, clearly defined form. The school publishes an early drop-off provision from 8:00am to 8:45am on school days, priced at £3 per child per morning. After-school provision is structured primarily through after-school clubs that run beyond the 3:15pm finish; parents who need longer care should ask directly what is available term by term, and whether any external provider options operate on site.
Parking and travel planning matter on a village High Street. The school publishes a school travel plan and parking information section, and families should read that before committing, especially if they will be driving from outside the immediate village area.
Small cohorts. With a total intake published at 45, friendships, group dynamics, and teacher fit can feel more intense than in a larger school. This suits many children, but families of highly outgoing pupils may want to check how social variety is supported across mixed ages.
Oversubscription. Application data indicates more applicants than offers (23 applications, 11 offers). Families should apply on time and keep realistic fallback options.
Wraparound limits. Early drop-off is clearly set out, but if you need after-school care beyond club finishing times, confirm what provision exists and how places are allocated.
Year 3 transition planning. An infant school requires an additional application step for junior or combined school transfer. It is worth planning this early, particularly if you are hoping for a specific Year 3 destination.
This is a tightly-knit rural infant school with a strong inspection profile in the areas that matter most for young children, calm behaviour, personal development, and early years quality. The curriculum and weekly enrichment look purposeful rather than decorative, with Forest School and a clearly scheduled club programme adding breadth to a small setting.
Best suited to families who want a small-scale village school where their child is known well, routines are explicit, and early reading is taken seriously. The main challenge is securing a place in an oversubscribed context and planning ahead for the Year 3 move.
It has a Good overall judgement from the most recent inspection, with Outstanding grades for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision. Families who value calm classrooms, strong routines, and a clear early reading focus are likely to find it a strong fit.
Applications are made through your home local authority. For Buckinghamshire residents applying for September 2026, the published portal window runs from 5 November 2025 to 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April.
The school publishes an early drop-off option from 8:00am to 8:45am, charged at £3 per morning. After-school time is mainly structured through clubs that run beyond the 3:15pm finish, so families needing longer childcare should confirm what is available in the term they need it.
Children usually transfer to a junior school or, in some cases, to a combined school that admits extra children into Year 3. Buckinghamshire publishes an infant-to-junior timeline alongside primary admissions each year, and families should shortlist Year 3 options early and check how allocations work for their preferred schools.
The current headteacher is Mrs Laura Passenger. Publicly available information indicates leadership from January 2023, initially within a co-headteacher arrangement during that period.
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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