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 one-form-entry primary where the day-to-day feels carefully structured, from a clearly defined school day to well-specified wraparound care, and where Early Years is positioned as a genuine starting point rather than an add-on. The nursery starts at age 3, and the school’s own language puts learning through play and independence at the centre of that phase.
On outcomes, the latest Key Stage 2 picture (2024 results) sits above England averages on the combined expected standard measure, with 75% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 62%. Reading and maths scaled scores are also above typical benchmarks, at 105 and 103 respectively. The school’s FindMySchool primary ranking places it in the lower-performing band nationally, so families should read the data as mixed rather than uniformly strong, with some areas outperforming national norms and others needing context.
Demand for Reception places looks high for a small intake. In the most recent admissions, there were 70 applications for 26 offers, which equates to 2.69 applications per offered place. That level of competition means that understanding the Staffordshire process and timelines matters, especially for families aiming for a September start.
Leadership is current and clearly signposted. The headteacher is Mr J Edwards, and the most recent published inspection documentation states he took up the post in November 2023.
The school presents itself as a close-knit, one-form-entry setting, with pupils moving through Nursery to Year 6 under one roof. That scale can be a real advantage for families who value continuity, as routines, expectations, and key staff are easier to know well over time. It also tends to mean each year group is a single cohort socially, which suits many children, but can feel limiting for pupils who thrive on a wider peer group.
External commentary and the school’s own published narrative converge on an atmosphere that prioritises calm, safety, and adults being visible and approachable. Pupils are described as happy and proud of their school, with staff framed as caring and consistently available when pupils have worries. That emphasis matters in a primary context because it affects the small, everyday behaviours that shape learning, such as how readily pupils ask for help, how confidently they attempt challenging work, and how quickly issues are resolved before they escalate.
The school sits within the REAch2 Academy Trust, which can influence the “how” of school life, including shared policies, professional development structures, and trust-wide enrichment. Trust membership is not automatically a guarantee of a particular style, but it does usually mean there is external capacity around leadership, governance, and school improvement when staffing changes occur.
Early Years appears to be a defining pillar. The school describes a typical Early Years day as active and exploratory, combining practical tasks and open-ended play with deliberate teaching and a stated focus on the characteristics of effective learning, such as thinking critically and problem-solving. For many children, especially those entering Nursery or Reception with varied early experiences, that approach can support confidence and language development as well as “learning how to learn”.
There is also a strong enrichment thread running through the trust-wide “11 Before 11” programme. The list of experiences spans practical, creative, cultural, and outdoor challenges, and the value is not the badge itself but the underlying message: primary education here is not only about tests, it is also about building habits, independence, and a sense of possibility.
For a primary school, the fairest way to read performance is to look at both attainment and balance across subjects.
In the most recent published Key Stage 2 data (2024), 75% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. That is above the England average of 62%, so on the core combined measure the school is performing strongly relative to national norms. The higher standard picture is also notable: 19.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%. That suggests a meaningful cohort of pupils are leaving Year 6 with secure mastery, not just threshold attainment. (England average figures referenced are those provided alongside the school’s data.)
Scaled scores reinforce that this is not a single-metric story. Reading is a strength on this results, with an average scaled score of 105, while maths sits at 103, and grammar, punctuation and spelling at 102. Those are all above the common reference point of 100, and in practical terms they indicate pupils are, on average, answering more questions correctly than the national “standardised” baseline.
Subject-level attainment percentages show healthy breadth. 75% met the expected standard in reading and maths, 67% in GPS, and 79% reached the expected standard in science. Those figures can matter for families whose child has uneven strengths, because a school that maintains consistency across reading, maths, and wider curriculum subjects often has clearer curriculum sequencing and stronger checks for gaps.
The tension is in how these outcomes translate into comparative ranking. The school is ranked 10,526th in England for primary outcomes on the FindMySchool ranking model, and 6th locally within Burntwood. These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings built from official data, and the national position places the school in a below-average national band. The practical implication is that, while the core attainment measures look strong in this snapshot, the school’s wider comparative profile suggests families should ask targeted questions about consistency across year groups, the stability of cohorts, and how the school supports pupils who are not already secure in basic literacy and numeracy by Key Stage 2.
For parents comparing options, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help contextualise these mixed signals, showing how local schools’ attainment, scaled scores, and higher standard rates sit side-by-side, rather than relying on one headline number.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
75%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum story here is best understood as two layers: foundations in Early Years, and then a structured primary phase aimed at securing literacy and numeracy while keeping breadth.
In Early Years, the school describes learning as hands-on and active, with children regularly painting, digging, planting, creating, and exploring. That is not just “nice to have”. Those activities, when well planned, build fine motor control for handwriting, vocabulary and narrative through role play, and early scientific thinking through observation and prediction. The stated emphasis on independence and lifelong learning suggests the school is aiming for pupils to become self-managing relatively early, a trait that often pays off in Key Stage 2 as content becomes denser.
Reading is positioned as a central priority, described by the school as a gateway to the wider curriculum. The school explicitly frames reading as including both decoding and comprehension, which is important because schools sometimes over-focus on one at the expense of the other. A balanced approach tends to be particularly beneficial for pupils who read accurately but struggle to infer meaning, or for pupils whose spoken language is strong but whose decoding confidence lags.
The implication for families is that the school’s curriculum intent is coherent: build confidence early, then secure fundamentals. If your child is likely to need additional support, the useful questions are operational, not philosophical, for example: how quickly intervention starts, what happens if a pupil is not on track by the end of Year 1, and how the school communicates progress beyond standard reports.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the relevant destination question is transition into local secondary provision. The school is in Staffordshire, and the standard route is transfer to a local secondary at Year 7 through the local authority’s co-ordinated process.
For many families, the practical choice set will include local comprehensive secondary schools, and potentially selective options if a child sits an 11-plus style assessment where available in the wider area. The school’s enrichment approach, including structured experiences and a stated focus on independent learning, can support pupils at transition because Year 7 demands a different level of organisation and resilience than Year 6.
A helpful step for parents is to map likely secondary options early, not in Year 6. Consider travel time, friendship patterns, and how your child responds to larger settings. If you are shortlisting multiple primaries and thinking ahead to secondary, focus on consistency, attendance culture, and how confident pupils are at expressing concerns, since those traits tend to carry through into Year 7 readiness.
Reception admissions are handled through Staffordshire County Council, not directly by the school, and the school states that applications are made online between 1 November and 15 January for the main round. The school also publishes a series of open day dates across the autumn term into early January, with booking via an online form.
Demand signals in the supplied admissions results point to a competitive intake. There were 70 applications for 26 offers, and the school was oversubscribed. Put plainly, there are substantially more applicants than places in that cycle, and families should assume that criteria and timing matter.
If you are relying on distance or precise eligibility, use the FindMySchoolMap Search tool to understand your likely position relative to the school. Even where distance is not the only factor, it helps families avoid planning on a place that is statistically unlikely.
In-year admissions are also referenced by the school, with guidance signposted through the local authority. Families moving into the area mid-year should be prepared for availability to vary by cohort, and should ask directly about current year-group capacity.
100%
1st preference success rate
24 of 24 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
26
Offers
26
Applications
70
The most helpful pastoral indicators in primary are typically practical ones: who a child speaks to first when worried, how consistent adult routines are, and whether pupils can articulate what happens when something goes wrong. The published description of pupils knowing who to talk to, and feeling safe at school, suggests clear lines of support and visibility of adults.
Wraparound care is another pastoral signal, because it shows whether the school is set up to support working families without friction. Here, provision is detailed: Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am to 8.40am, and an After School Club runs from 3.20pm to 6.00pm with a two-session structure. The detail extends to food arrangements for longer sessions, which matters for pupils who struggle with hunger, tiredness, or transitions.
For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your child benefits from predictable routines, structured wraparound can reduce stress. If your child finds long days difficult, the two-session structure may allow a gradual build-up rather than jumping straight to full-length sessions.
Extracurricular life is often where a one-form-entry school can differentiate, because the cohort size limits sheer quantity, but can improve access and inclusion.
The school’s after-school enrichment offer is described as free of charge, with staff running clubs to broaden pupils’ experiences. Recent examples include Forest School, Disney Club, choir, mindfulness, and a craft club. Those are not generic tick-box activities. Forest School, for example, can build confidence and risk assessment, which often translates into improved classroom focus for children who need movement and outdoor learning to regulate. Choir supports memory, listening, and teamwork, and can be particularly valuable for pupils who gain confidence through performance in low-stakes settings.
There is also a sports strand delivered by professional coaches, rotating half-termly to expose pupils to activities beyond standard football and netball. The examples given include volleyball, football-golf, frisbee-golf, dodgeball, and archery. The implication here is breadth and novelty, which can help pupils find an activity that fits them, especially those who do not thrive in traditional team sports.
The trust-wide 11 Before 11 programme adds a different kind of enrichment. Items such as Hiking Heroes, Seeds to Supper, and Sleep Under the Stars point to outdoor learning and practical life skills, while Shake it up Shakespeare and Culture Vulture add cultural breadth. A school that consistently delivers these experiences tends to be more confident in logistics, risk assessment, and staff planning, which is often a good sign for trips, visitors, and whole-school events.
The PTA relaunch in 2023 is also a meaningful operational detail. A functioning parent group often correlates with community cohesion and a steady calendar of events that enrich school life, whether through experiences, resources, or social connection between families.
The school publishes a detailed structure for the day. For Reception to Year 6, gates open between 8.30am and 8.40am, the start of day is 8.40am, and the day ends at 3.20pm, with separate lunch timings for Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2.
Wraparound care is clearly defined. Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am, and After School Club can run until 6.00pm, with booking and operational details set out by the school.
On travel, most families will treat this as a local school in the Chasetown area of Burntwood, and day-to-day practicality will hinge on parking, walking routes, and how safe the approach feels at drop-off. If you are new to the area, it is worth trialling the journey at school-run time, not mid-morning, since congestion and crossing points can change the experience.
One-form entry social scale. A single class per year group often creates strong bonds and continuity. It can also feel limiting for pupils who would benefit from a wider peer group, especially if friendship dynamics become difficult.
Competition for Reception places. With 70 applications for 26 offers in the most recent, demand is higher than supply. Families should treat deadlines and the local authority process as important, not optional.
Performance picture is mixed. Key Stage 2 attainment in 2024 is above England averages on several measures, yet the FindMySchool national ranking band places the school below average overall. That combination makes it worth asking how consistent outcomes are across year groups, not just in a single cohort.
Long-day stamina. Wraparound care is available to 6.00pm. That is a real benefit for working families, but not every child copes well with long days, particularly in Nursery and Reception. A phased approach can help.
Springhill Primary Academy suits families who want a clearly organised, local primary with nursery provision from age 3, a structured school day, and enrichment that goes beyond the basics, including Forest School and a trust-wide experiences programme. It will particularly appeal to parents who value a smaller school feel and clear wraparound options.
The main judgement call is how you interpret the results profile. The latest Key Stage 2 attainment measures are encouraging, but the overall comparative ranking suggests it is wise to look for consistency signals, such as stability of staffing, intervention routines, and how the school supports pupils who arrive with gaps. For families who secure a place and want continuity from Nursery to Year 6, this can be a practical and grounded choice.
The school’s most recent Key Stage 2 results (2024) show 75% of pupils reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, above the England average of 62%. Reading, maths and GPS scaled scores are also above the common benchmark of 100. The broader performance profile is mixed, so it is worth looking at how outcomes vary by cohort and how the school supports pupils who need to catch up.
Reception applications are made through Staffordshire County Council, and the school states the main online application window runs from 1 November to 15 January for the normal admissions round. The school also publishes open day dates and asks families to book to attend.
Yes. The school sets out Breakfast Club from 7.30am to 8.40am and an After School Club from 3.20pm to 6.00pm, with booking through the school’s normal payment and booking process.
Clubs vary across the year, but recent examples published by the school include Forest School, Disney Club, choir, mindfulness, and a craft club. The school also describes rotating sports activities delivered by professional coaches, including options such as archery and frisbee-golf.
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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