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.
Parents considering an infant school often ask two practical questions. First, does it build early reading quickly and confidently. Second, does it send children to junior school ready for the step up. Here, both themes come through consistently, with a strong focus on phonics and vocabulary, plus structured expectations that help even very young pupils manage themselves, learn in groups, and develop independence.
Admissions are competitive for Reception. In the most recent published admissions cycle there were 146 applications for 83 offers, indicating sustained demand. The good news is that the school is not trying to do everything at once, it concentrates on getting the early years and key stage 1 fundamentals right.
The tone is purposeful, warm, and structured. Children are expected to behave well and contribute to the life of the school, but the methods are age-appropriate and explicitly taught. A useful example is the way values are made practical through routines and language that children can remember and repeat, so expectations do not rely on guesswork or adult mood.
A distinctive feature is the use of named spaces and simple systems that help children regulate. The Ofsted report describes children using class “contemplation stations” and a “cosy corner” to manage their own behaviour, which signals a setting that teaches self-control rather than defaulting to sanctions.
The school’s values are presented as concrete habits, not abstract slogans. The same Ofsted report points to pupils being proud of recognition linked to values, and to older children supporting younger ones at key moments of the day, such as lunchtime routines. That combination, high expectations plus practical kindness, tends to suit children who respond well to clear boundaries and a calm pace.
Because the school is an infant setting, it does not publish key stage 2 outcomes. That changes what “results” means for parents. The right lens here is early reading, core knowledge, and readiness for junior school.
The latest inspection commentary describes outcomes at the end of key stage 1 as extremely strong, with pupils leaving at the end of Year 2 ready for the next stage. That aligns with a curriculum model that is carefully mapped, with deliberate sequencing from Nursery into key stage 1.
It is also worth noting what is not present in the performance results for this school. The absence of the usual primary performance fields is consistent with an infant school structure rather than a sign of low performance. The more helpful indicators for families are the school’s approach to phonics and reading, plus the way staff build vocabulary across subjects so that children can talk about their learning, not just complete tasks.
If you are comparing multiple local options, a useful tactic is to check how each school teaches early reading, how quickly it identifies children who fall behind, and how it supports them to catch up. Here, that “catch up quickly” expectation is explicit in the inspection narrative.
The strongest thread is early language and reading. The inspection report describes staff seizing small moments to build communication and language in early years, and it emphasises purposeful learning activities across both indoor and outdoor environments. The implication for families is that the school day is designed to use time well, which matters in an infant setting where attention spans are short and routines carry a lot of learning weight.
Curriculum design is unusually specific for this phase. The report describes “golden threads” that begin in Nursery and build through key stage 1, with carefully chosen knowledge and vocabulary that pupils are expected to remember. A concrete example given is early learning about kings, queens and castles, later building into learning about monarchy in history. For parents, the practical payoff is that children are less likely to experience topics as disconnected activities, they are more likely to recognise patterns and revisit ideas.
Reading for pleasure is treated as a daily habit, not a bolt-on. The inspection report references Friday book club and a deliberate approach to choosing books, poems, and the vocabulary pupils are expected to learn from them. The school’s phonics information also points to a structured approach via Supersonic Phonic Friends, continuing into Year 2 with spelling rules to support reading and writing.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as thoughtful and precise, with adaptations made so that pupils with SEND learn successfully. The implication is that the school aims to keep children in the main flow of learning wherever possible, while still being specific about barriers and support plans.
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 school’s age range makes transition planning especially important because families need to plan for the move to junior school at the end of Year 2.
The school states that the vast majority of pupils move on to Wendover Church of England Junior School, and it describes itself as a linked school. Parents still need to apply for a Year 3 place through Buckinghamshire Council rather than assuming an automatic transfer.
In practical terms, this means two application moments. The first is Nursery or Reception entry into the infant school. The second is junior transfer. Families who value continuity should read the junior transfer guidance early, because timing and proof-of-address requirements can influence allocation. Buckinghamshire’s published timeline makes clear that the junior transfer sits within the same main-round admissions cycle as Reception entry.
Reception entry is coordinated by Buckinghamshire, and the school directory lists an admission number of 90 for Reception in September 2026.
Demand is meaningful. admissions cycle, there were 146 applications and 83 offers for the entry route captured, a ratio of 1.76 applications per offer. That level of demand usually means allocation comes down to the published oversubscription criteria rather than informal factors. If you are shortlisting, it is sensible to treat this as a school where having a realistic Plan B matters.
For the September 2026 main round in Buckinghamshire, applications opened on 05 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026. The county guidance also indicates acceptance is typically required by 30 April.
Nursery admissions sit slightly differently. The school newsletter guidance indicates that Nursery applications for September 2026 can be made directly with the school, with places allocated around mid April, and that open mornings have been used as part of the information process. Because open event dates change year to year, it is best to treat November as the typical window for Nursery and Reception open events, then confirm the current dates with the school.
Parents comparing options can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check practicalities such as travel time and day-to-day feasibility, especially if you are balancing multiple nurseries, childminders, or wraparound arrangements.
Applications
146
Total received
Places Offered
83
Subscription Rate
1.8x
Apps per place
Pastoral support at infant level is often about prevention: predictable routines, consistent language, and a curriculum that teaches social behaviour directly. A good example here is the way “Move” lessons are described as teaching values and expectations explicitly, so that behaviour is framed as a learnable skill rather than a personality trait.
There is also a strong emphasis on wider development and safety education. The Ofsted report references annual health and safety weeks that cover online safety in an age-appropriate way, supported by community input such as visiting speakers. For families, this can be reassuring because it shows safeguarding themes being taught proactively rather than raised only when something goes wrong.
The safeguarding picture is straightforward. The latest Ofsted inspection confirmed safeguarding arrangements as effective.
Leadership roles are also clearly signposted in the school’s published safeguarding information, including designated safeguarding responsibilities within the senior team.
The enrichment offer is unusually broad for an infant school, with clubs that combine creative, practical, and physical options. The school’s extracurricular page lists clubs that often include French, Art and Craft, Rock Steady, Singing, Yoga, Tennis, Knitting, Gardening, Lego Club, Story Club, Street Dance, Football, Gymnastics, and Octagon Club. The implication for parents is that enrichment is not limited to sport, it also includes language, music, and hands-on making, which can be important for children whose confidence grows through doing rather than sitting still.
Two examples illustrate how this complements the core curriculum. Gardening and Lego Club both reinforce early science and design habits, planning, building, observing, then describing what happened, which links back to the school’s emphasis on vocabulary. Rock band activity, referenced in the inspection report, adds structured collaboration, turn-taking, and listening, all of which are foundational skills at this age.
If your child is cautious in new groups, clubs such as Story Club or Art and Craft can provide a softer entry point than competitive games, while still building social confidence. For more energetic children, gymnastics and football can take the edge off the late afternoon, which often improves evening routines at home.
Doors open at 8.45am and the school day ends at 3.15pm, with a structured rhythm including a morning break and a staggered lunch period.
Wraparound is available. The school’s extended services information states that Breakfast Club and After School Club are provided for children attending this school and the linked junior school, overseen by the extended services manager.
Travel planning is given real attention. The school promotes walking, scooting, and cycling, and it references a local travel plan map highlighting walking zones and Park and Stride points. For families living close enough to consider active travel, that sort of structure can make mornings calmer and reduces the “parking scramble” effect that can dominate infant drop-off.
Infant-only structure. Children leave after Year 2, so families need to plan for the junior transfer process and timings, rather than assuming continuity without an application.
Competition for Reception places. Recent demand data shows more applications than offers, so it is sensible to shortlist with oversubscription criteria in mind and keep a realistic alternative in view.
Headship transition timing. Current leadership is clearly named, but public sources do not set out a start date, so families who place weight on leadership continuity may want to ask directly about the recent transition and what has stayed consistent.
This is a high-demand infant school that concentrates on the fundamentals, early language, reading, behaviour, and confidence, then sends children on to junior school well prepared. The approach is structured without feeling rigid, and enrichment is broader than many schools at this phase.
Best suited to families who want a calm, values-driven start to schooling, with strong early reading practice and clear routines that help young children manage themselves. The limiting factor is usually admission rather than the educational offer, so a careful shortlist strategy helps.
It is rated Good and the most recent inspection describes a setting with very strong early years practice, confident behaviour, and a well-sequenced curriculum through Nursery, Reception, Year 1, and Year 2. It also notes that evidence suggests the school could be judged at a higher grade at a future graded inspection.
Reception applications are coordinated by Buckinghamshire. For the September 2026 main round, applications ran from early November to mid January, with offers issued on 16 April and acceptances typically due by the end of April.
Yes, it serves Nursery-age children as part of its 3 to 7 age range. Nursery applications for September 2026 are described as being made directly to the school, with allocations around mid April, and open events typically occurring in the autumn term.
The school states that the vast majority of pupils move to Wendover Church of England Junior School. Parents still need to apply for a Year 3 place through Buckinghamshire’s admissions process.
Breakfast Club and After School Club are provided for children attending this school and the linked junior school. Families should check current session times, availability, and booking arrangements directly with the provider.
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