A brand new First School that is trying to do two things at once: build a strong early years and primary offer for local families, and use its building and day to day routines as a live sustainability curriculum. Buntingford First School opened in September 2023 and is part of Scholars’ Education Trust.
The headline context is that the school is still establishing itself. With capacity for 330 but a roll of 123, it has room to grow. That matters for parents because smaller cohorts can mean a calmer feel and more adult attention, but it can also mean fewer established traditions and a timetable that changes more year to year as the school scales.
Leadership is clearly positioning the school around three curriculum drivers: technology, wellbeing, and sustainability. The headteacher is Vikki Johnston. Ofsted has not yet published an inspection report for the school, which is common for newly opened schools.
The strongest differentiator is the “new school” character in the literal sense: new staffing structures, new routines, and a building designed around modern environmental standards rather than retrofitted over decades. The published vision emphasises knowing children as individuals and building a child centred culture, with curriculum planning shaped by first hand learning experiences.
Because the school is part of Scholars’ Education Trust, families should expect trust wide priorities to show up early, particularly around staff development and shared practice. The recruitment materials describe cross trust peer reviews and joint professional development, plus trust level pupil conferences that include workshops on themes such as sustainability and anti bullying. In practical terms, that can translate into consistent classroom routines and a clear behaviour approach as the school grows.
The age range is 2 to 9, so the atmosphere is shaped by early childhood and lower primary needs. The school is set up for nursery through Year 4, which is typical for a First School in a three tier area. For families with younger children, that can feel simpler because siblings can often be on one site during the early years, and routines can be aligned across nursery, Reception and Key Stage 1.
It is still possible to make some grounded inferences about priorities from what the school itself and its partners have published. The curriculum drivers repeatedly referenced are technology, wellbeing and sustainability, suggesting that enrichment and real world context will be part of the learning model rather than an occasional theme week.
When comparing local options, families may find it helpful to use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages to view verified performance measures side by side for nearby First and Primary schools, particularly if you are weighing an established school with a long data trail against a newer school with a developing profile.
The school’s stated approach puts practical, hands on experiences at the centre, with learning designed around first hand experiences and a strong emphasis on developing skills for a changing world. That is a broad promise, so the best way to test it is to ask very specific questions at open events or tours, for example:
How early reading and phonics are taught, and how progress is checked
How mathematics fluency is built and practised across week to week lessons
What “technology” means in day to day classrooms at nursery, Reception and Key Stage 1
How sustainability is taught as knowledge, not just as values
One advantage of the net zero build is that the building itself can be used as a teaching tool. The published project description references design choices intended to support air quality and reduce overheating, which can be linked to science, geography, and everyday wellbeing routines in an age appropriate way.
Buntingford sits within a three tier structure, where children typically move from First School to Middle School at Year 5, then on again later. In practical terms, that means your planning horizon is shorter than in a standard 4 to 11 primary, so it is worth understanding transition arrangements early.
Locally, Edwinstree Middle School is a Year 5 to Year 8 setting, and its published admissions information explicitly references the September 2026 process for children in Year 4 in First Schools. Families considering Buntingford First School should look at Middle School admissions criteria alongside First School admissions, particularly if you are moving into the area and trying to map a multi stage pathway.
This is a state funded academy with places managed through Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions processes, but the school is its own admissions authority for Reception entry rules. The Published Admission Number is 60.
Demand looks real. provided, Reception entry shows 103 applications for 37 offers, which indicates oversubscription. Hertfordshire’s directory also shows recent years where applications exceeded offers, for example 104 applications and 38 offers in 2025, and 88 applications and 33 offers in 2024.
The local authority timetable for September 2026 entry is clear:
Applications open 03 November 2025
Deadline 15 January 2026
National allocation day 16 April 2026
Acceptance deadline 23 April 2026
If you are trying to judge your chances, it is sensible to check the school’s admissions rules carefully and use the FindMySchool Map Search tools to understand how your home location relates to local boundaries and priority categories. Even in areas where distance is not the only rule, knowing your position helps you plan realistically.
Applications
103
Total received
Places Offered
37
Subscription Rate
2.8x
Apps per place
The school positions wellbeing as a core driver rather than an add on, and links it to both curriculum and daily routines. That is promising, but with a young school it is worth asking how wellbeing support is operationalised: who leads it, what training staff receive, and how the school works with families when children are dysregulated, anxious, or struggling socially.
Because the setting includes nursery age children as well as pupils up to Year 4, pastoral work tends to be most effective when it is joined up with clear communication to parents and consistent routines across the week. When visiting, ask to see how behaviour expectations are taught in the early years, and how staff respond consistently across classes.
Specific enrichment that has been explicitly published includes Forest School as part of the outdoor offer, plus a rooftop outdoor classroom and multiple play areas designed into the site. Those features matter because they support learning that younger children access best: language development through shared experiences, early science through outdoor observation, and wellbeing routines built around fresh air and movement.
Sustainability is framed as something that should “permeate through the curriculum”, and the building’s design choices are described in enough detail to support practical projects, for example energy, heat, air movement, and materials. For families who care about environmental literacy, the key question is whether this becomes a sequence of knowledge and skills across year groups, rather than a slogan.
The school is on London Road and is described as being adjacent to The Bury football ground, with car parking shared with Bury Football Club. Public transport access in the recruitment pack references local bus connections, and families who drive will want to understand drop off and pick up arrangements given the shared parking context.
Wraparound care, including breakfast and after school provision, is not clearly detailed in the official sources accessible for this review, so parents should confirm current arrangements directly with the school before relying on them for workday planning.
Nursery funding and early years sessions vary by entitlement and age. For nursery fee details, use the school’s official nursery information.
No Ofsted report yet. Ofsted does not yet show a published inspection report for the school, so external evaluation is limited at this stage.
A young school means changing systems. Policies, staffing structures, and enrichment often evolve quickly in the first few years. That can be exciting, but it can also mean less predictability year to year.
Competition for places. Application totals have exceeded offers in recent years, so families should read the admissions rules carefully and plan early.
Three tier transition. Moving on at Year 5 is a key part of local planning, so it is worth researching Middle School pathways alongside First School entry.
Buntingford First School is a distinctive new entrant: a First School deliberately built around sustainability, with curriculum drivers that include technology and wellbeing, and a modern site designed to support outdoor learning. The limiting factor is that it is still early in its lifecycle, with no published Ofsted report yet and a shorter public track record than established local alternatives.
Who it suits: families who like the idea of a newer school with a clear environmental and future facing emphasis, and who are comfortable evaluating quality through leadership, culture and day to day practice rather than a long run of published outcomes.
The school has a clear, published vision and is part of Scholars’ Education Trust, with an emphasis on technology, wellbeing and sustainability. Ofsted does not yet show a published inspection report, which is common for a school that opened recently, so visiting and asking detailed questions about teaching, behaviour and support is especially important.
Hertfordshire’s coordinated timetable for September 2026 entry shows applications opening on 03 November 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026 and the response deadline on 23 April 2026.
Recent figures indicate demand above available places. The Hertfordshire directory shows 104 applications for 60 places in 2025, with 38 offers made. for Reception entry also shows an oversubscribed picture.
Yes, the school is a First School with nursery provision, serving ages 2 to 9 overall. Nursery fee details vary and should be checked via the school’s official nursery information.
In Buntingford’s three tier structure, children typically transfer to Middle School at Year 5. Edwinstree Middle School describes itself as covering Years 5 to 8 and references the September 2026 process for children in Year 4 at First Schools.
Get in touch with the school directly
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