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 rural village primary with a distinctive structure: pupils learn alongside other small schools in the The Woodland Federation of Peak District Schools on two weekly “Together Days”, which expands social mix and specialist teaching while keeping the feel of a very small school for the rest of the week. The school is Church of England and voluntary controlled, with a published admission number of 10 for Reception.
The May 2023 Ofsted inspection judged the school Good overall, with Early Years requiring improvement. For parents, that combination often reads as a school with strong relationships and culture across the main school, plus a clear improvement focus in Nursery and Reception documentation and planning.
This is a very small setting. The school has a capacity of 70, and the May 2023 inspection recorded 28 pupils on roll at the time. That scale shapes everything: classes are mixed-age, staff know children exceptionally well, and opportunities are created through federation collaboration rather than through multiple forms of entry.
Small schools can feel either limiting or intensely supportive. Here, the official picture is of a happy, community-rooted school with close relationships between pupils and staff, and a deliberate effort to connect children to something bigger through the federation model. Together Days are described as a core part of identity, strengthening community and broadening learning experiences.
The school’s Christian character is expressed through federation values that are written into policy and day-to-day language. The SMILERS framework (Spirituality, Motivation, Individuality, Lifelong Learning, Equality, Respect, Supportiveness) is used to describe how the school wants children to develop socially and academically. For families who value a Church of England context without a heavy “one size fits all” approach, this style of values-led language can be reassuring.
Because the school is tiny, peer dynamics matter. The advantage is that staff can spot worries early and intervene quickly. The trade-off is that friendship groups are smaller, and your child’s experience can be more sensitive to cohort mix in any given year. That is normal for very small village schools, and it is worth discussing with staff when you visit.
This profile is best understood through curriculum intent and inspection evidence rather than headline performance tables. Small cohorts can lead to suppressed or volatile published outcomes in some years, so it is sensible to ask how progress is tracked internally, how reading is assessed termly, and what interventions look like for pupils who need extra support.
The May 2023 inspection evidence points to an ambitious curriculum with structured subject plans, regular staff training, and teaching that checks what pupils know and remember. Pupils were able to recall specific knowledge from history topics, and trips were used to deepen learning, including a visit to a Roman fort in Chesterfield.
If you are comparing local primaries, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you line up different schools’ published outcomes and context side by side, which is often more useful than looking at a single number in isolation.
The most distinctive feature is the rhythm of the week.
Core days (Tuesday to Thursday) are presented as the main academic spine, covering English, maths, geography, history, art, design technology and PSHE.
Together Days (Monday and Friday) are where the federation structure adds value. On these days, pupils join with children from the other federation schools for subjects such as PE, music, computing, languages and woodland learning (including STEM). In a tiny school, this model can be a practical way to deliver specialist teaching and broaden collaboration without losing the benefits of a small base.
In mathematics, the school describes a mastery approach, with units studied for longer and in greater depth. For many pupils, mastery teaching is helpful because it prioritises secure understanding and reduces the sense of racing through content. For some, it can feel repetitive if they are ready to accelerate, so a good question to ask is how extension and challenge are handled within mixed-age classes.
Reading is clearly prioritised. The May 2023 inspection describes phonics resources matched appropriately to pupils, rapid identification of children who fall behind, and swift catch-up support. That matters in a small school because gaps can show quickly, and the ability to respond quickly is a real strength of scale.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For rural Derbyshire families, transition is usually about choosing the right secondary “normal area” school and understanding transport realities.
A Derbyshire school cluster profile (published for 2016) lists Hope Valley College and names Great Hucklow CE Primary as one of its primary feeders. That is a useful pointer, but patterns can change over time with parental preference and admissions rules, so parents should also check Derbyshire’s normal area secondary school finder for their specific home address.
Transition preparation is described at federation level as a structured programme with feeder settings, including sharing information with secondary leaders and visits for Year 6 pupils to their Key Stage 3 setting during the final term. For families new to the area, it is worth asking which secondaries the most recent Year 6 cohorts have moved on to, and how the school supports pupils who are anxious about the change.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees.
The school offers nursery provision from after a child’s third birthday, and notes that nursery places are not restricted to the normal catchment. Where demand exceeds places, the policy states that nursery places are allocated by date of birth order and number of sessions applied for, and that admissions and appeal rules for statutory schooling do not apply to nursery. Applications are made directly to the school.
Nursery fees vary and can change, so use the school’s official information for current pricing. Eligible families can access 15 or 30 hours of government-funded early education.
For Reception, the local authority is responsible for general arrangements in Derbyshire for voluntary controlled schools. The school’s published admission number is 10. Oversubscription criteria follow the Derbyshire framework, with priority for looked-after children, then normal area and siblings, and for voluntary controlled church schools a criterion exists for parents requesting a place on religious grounds, with distance used as a tie-break where needed.
For September 2026 entry in Derbyshire, Derbyshire’s coordinated primary admissions timeline states: applications open 10 November 2025, close at midnight on 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Recent admissions data indicates the school was undersubscribed for Reception entry, with 4 applications and 4 offers recorded, and an applications-to-offers ratio below 1. This is consistent with a small rural school where places can be available, but year-to-year demand can still fluctuate.
If you are moving house and want to understand how realistic a place is, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your exact distance to the school and compare with local patterns, then confirm the latest position with Derbyshire’s admissions team.
Applications
4
Total received
Places Offered
4
Subscription Rate
0.4x
Apps per place
Small schools can deliver pastoral care through relationships rather than through layers of staffing. The inspection evidence emphasises pupils’ enjoyment of school, strong collaboration in class, and staff who understand pupils well, including those who are disadvantaged and those with special educational needs and disabilities.
Behaviour expectations appear clear and consistently applied. The report describes low-level disruption as rare, a calm and relaxed atmosphere, and a behaviour system that pupils recognise and respond to. Bullying is described as uncommon, with pupils confident that staff would respond if it occurred.
Inspectors also stated that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The federation model is the main extracurricular engine.
The school sits in a woodland environment that is explicitly referenced as being used to enhance the curriculum, including bringing science learning to life each week. For many children, this kind of outdoor learning is not just a “nice to have”, it can be a powerful motivator for writing, vocabulary, observation skills and teamwork.
Music and PE are highlighted as federation-together subjects, helping pupils work in larger groups and mix with a wider peer set. In a small village school, that can be the difference between occasional enrichment and something that feels like a regular part of the week.
The school lists Film Club, Art Club and Sport Club running on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. These are the kinds of clubs that suit a small setting: practical, accessible, and easy for children across ages to join.
Trips and local activities also play an important role. The May 2023 inspection notes regular trips to enhance learning, and gives examples of community-linked experiences such as a farm visit focused on understanding hazards.
The school day is structured differently across the week to support federation travel. Tuesday to Thursday runs 8:45am to 3:15pm, with doors opening at 8:35am. Mondays and Fridays are Together Days, pupils are asked to be in by 8:30am, and the day ends at 3:45pm.
Wraparound care is a clear practical strength for a small rural school. Breakfast club runs from 8:00am and is free. After-school provision runs Tuesday to Thursday until 4:15pm for £1.50 per child, with an option to extend to 6:00pm for £6 per child.
Travel is typically car-led for many families in this area, and Together Days rely on transport arrangements between federation sites. Ask how those logistics work for your child’s age group and whether siblings are on the same pattern.
Early Years improvement focus. The school was rated Requires Improvement for Early Years in May 2023. This mainly affects Nursery and Reception, so ask to see early years curriculum planning and how progress is recorded and checked.
Very small cohorts. Small numbers can be brilliant for individual attention, but cohort mix matters more. It is worth asking how mixed-age classes are structured, and how the school maintains challenge for high attainers alongside support for pupils who need more help.
Faith criteria can apply. As a voluntary controlled Church of England school, there is an admissions criterion for parents requesting a place on religious grounds if the school is oversubscribed. Families who want a strictly non-faith route should read the Derbyshire oversubscription criteria carefully.
Federation travel days. Together Days add breadth, but they also add logistics. Clarify pick-up, drop-off, and how transport operates, especially if you have childcare constraints.
This is a small, community-oriented primary with a genuinely distinctive model: federation Together Days that widen peer group and specialist teaching, plus woodland learning that is used as a regular curriculum tool. The overall Ofsted judgement is Good, with a clear target area in Early Years that parents should explore closely.
Who it suits: families who value a small-school feel, strong relationships, outdoor learning, and practical wraparound care, and who are comfortable with a Church of England setting. The best next step is a visit that focuses on early years practice, mixed-age teaching, and the day-to-day logistics of Together Days.
It was judged Good overall at the May 2023 inspection, and the report describes a happy school with positive relationships, strong reading foundations, and calm behaviour. Early Years was the one area graded Requires Improvement, so parents of Nursery and Reception children should look closely at that phase.
Applications are made through Derbyshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, Derbyshire states applications open 10 November 2025, close at midnight on 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The admissions policy notes that children are entitled to 15 or 30 hours of government-funded nursery education for eligible families, and the school offers nursery places from after a child’s third birthday. Nursery fees can change, so check the school’s official information for current costs.
Together Days run on Mondays and Fridays, when pupils from the federation schools learn together. The school describes these days as covering subjects such as PE, music and woodland learning, which helps broaden social mix and specialist teaching beyond what a very small school can usually offer.
A Derbyshire school cluster profile lists Great Hucklow CE Primary as a feeder to Hope Valley College, but transfer patterns can change. It is sensible to confirm your normal area secondary school through Derbyshire’s finder and ask the school where recent Year 6 cohorts have moved on to.
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