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.
This is one of those rare primaries where scale changes everything. With mixed-age classes, a strong Church of England identity, and a deliberately flexible timetable that supports learning at home as well as at school, the day-to-day experience is shaped as much by relationships as by routines. The school sits in The Moorlands Primary Federation, a small rural trust, and it caters for children from age 3 through to 11, including a pre-school offer.
Parents considering this school are usually weighing fit more than headline data. The published results for this school does not include Key Stage 2 performance metrics or rankings, so the best evidence for the educational picture comes from the most recent inspection and the school’s own published curriculum and policy approach. The latest graded inspection found the school to be Good across all judgement areas, including early years.
A distinctive practical point, admissions demand looks small in absolute numbers, but intense relative to the number of places available. In the most recent local application cycle captured 4 applications resulted in 3 offers for the Reception entry route, which is consistent with an oversubscribed micro-school rather than a lack of demand. (That is the kind of ratio where one extra family can change the outcome.)
Small schools can feel either intensely supportive or uncomfortably exposed. Here, the evidence points to the former. The latest inspection describes a culture where pupils of different ages mix readily, older pupils help younger ones, and families describe the setting as a big family. The school’s model supports pupils who may not thrive in a conventional full week pattern by combining school-based learning with learning at home for some pupils, while keeping pupils on roll and part of the daily life of the school.
Faith sits as a real thread rather than a badge. Pupils learn about and discuss different faiths and cultures, and the school uses structured activities such as “faith walks” to make this explicit and age-appropriate. The wider calendar also signals local church links, with events such as a Harvest Festival hosted in the village chapel. For families who value a Church of England ethos but want it delivered in a welcoming, outward-looking way, that balance is likely to matter.
Leadership, in schools this small, is especially visible. The school identifies Mrs Kelly Stanesby as Executive Principal, and its current staffing structure is presented as a compact team, including a named lead teacher and two class groupings. For parents, the practical implication is simple, communication is usually direct, and day-to-day decisions often involve the same small set of familiar adults.
The published performance for this school does not include Key Stage 2 outcome measures or FindMySchool ranking positions, so it is not possible to make evidence-based claims here about attainment compared with England averages for reading, writing and mathematics. That is a limitation for families who want to benchmark purely by scores.
What can be said with confidence is that external evaluation remains positive. The latest Ofsted inspection (8 and 9 November 2023) rated the school Good overall, with Good grades for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
A useful way to interpret this for a parent is to focus on the mechanisms described rather than missing headline numbers. The inspection describes a curriculum that is structured in a logical order and designed to work within mixed-age classes, with staff routinely checking learning and using trust-provided end-point assessments in subjects. Reading also appears as a clear priority, including regular access to books and structured phonics delivery.
Mixed-age teaching is the defining academic feature here, and it can be either a strength or a source of compromise depending on execution. The evidence suggests the school is deliberately building curriculum sequences that work across mixed-age groupings, with some subjects recently refreshed and still in the earlier stages of monitoring and refinement. The implication for families is that the school is in an active curriculum development phase, which can be positive if you want a setting that reflects on what works, but it also means some areas are still bedding in.
Early reading is an area where the detail is unusually concrete. The inspection notes a newer phonics approach implemented over the last 18 months at that point, staff training in the programme, and extra support for pupils who find reading more difficult. Parents are also given guidance on supporting reading at home, which aligns neatly with the school’s wider model of combining learning at home and at school.
There is also a consistent thread of learning beyond the classroom walls. The inspection describes the use of the local environment, forest school activity, and an annual outdoor week to help pupils “see wonder in the world”. That matters because, in a very small school, enrichment is not a nice add-on, it is one of the core ways you widen experiences when peer-group size is limited.
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 a primary of this size, transition is less about feeding into one dominant local secondary and more about individual pathways. Families should expect Year 6 planning to be tailored to the child’s home local authority and chosen route, especially because the school’s intake can include families travelling from further afield.
For parents, the practical takeaway is to ask early about transition support: what liaison looks like with receiving secondaries, how records and pastoral notes transfer, and how pupils who have followed a flexi pattern are prepared for a different rhythm in Year 7 if they move into a conventional full-week setting.
Admissions work on two fronts here, the main school and the pre-school offer.
The school signposts that admissions to the main school are governed by its admissions policy and reflect its religious character. As a state school, places are allocated through the local authority process for Reception entry, with the national closing date used for September starts.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Staffordshire, applications close on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026. Applications typically open on 01 November 2025.
The school’s demand indicators are small in absolute numbers but oversubscribed in status. For parents, that means you should take deadlines seriously even if the school feels “tiny and rural”; one late application can easily be the difference between getting a place and missing out.
Pre-school entry is clearly described: children can start at the beginning of the term after their third birthday, with entry points listed as 1 September, 1 January, and the first Monday following the Easter holiday. The school also states practical readiness expectations, including being able to use toileting facilities and eat a prepared meal or packed lunch without support.
A distinctive part of this school’s offer is flexible attendance. The school describes a “flexi” pattern with three core days each week, and the inspection explains that pupils are on roll, expected to attend three core days, with a small proportion attending additional days. Parents considering this option should treat it as a formal agreement with clear expectations, not an informal arrangement.
FindMySchool tip: if you are weighing this school against a more conventional local primary, use the FindMySchoolMap Search to compare practical travel distances and routines, then shortlist using Saved Schools so you can revisit trade-offs calmly.
Applications
4
Total received
Places Offered
3
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
In a micro-school, pastoral support tends to be high-touch by design. The inspection describes staff who know pupils well, pupils who feel staff will help them if needed, and a general sense that pupils are happy and comfortable. Pupils also take on small leadership responsibilities, such as house captains or class monitors, which can be disproportionately valuable in building confidence when class sizes are small.
Safeguarding is the non-negotiable baseline for any school choice, and it is clearly addressed in the latest report: the arrangements for safeguarding are effective.
The strongest enrichment details here are specific rather than generic. A published prospectus lists clubs that have included Meditation, Sports Coaching, Chess, Boxercise, and Outdoor Genius, described as the school’s version of forest school. The inspection adds further texture, including an annual outdoor week and the use of the local environment as part of how pupils learn.
Reading enrichment is also unusually tangible for a small rural school, with a mobile library visiting every fortnight noted in the inspection. That is a practical advantage: small schools can struggle to maintain breadth of resources, so outside provision can make a real difference to choice, motivation, and habit-building.
Published information indicates a school day beginning at 8:45am and ending at 3:15pm, with early arrivals welcomed from 8:15am. A separate note in the prospectus also says that while there is not a formal breakfast club, the school can accept children from 8:00am where circumstances require it, subject to prior arrangement.
Term pattern information is published in the school calendar, including INSET days and term starts. For visits, the school invites prospective parents to arrange a look around or a taster session, rather than advertising fixed open days.
Very small cohorts mean outcomes can swing year to year. With such small numbers, group dynamics and individual needs have an outsized impact. Ask how the school handles friendship issues, mixed-age grouping decisions, and stretch for the highest attainers when the cohort is uneven.
Flexi attendance is a positive fit for some children, not a default. The model can be a lifeline for pupils building confidence in formal education, but families need to be realistic about home learning expectations and how routines will work if parents’ work patterns change.
Curriculum refinement is in progress in places. The latest inspection describes some subjects with newer curriculum approaches where monitoring is still developing. Families who prefer a settled, long-established scheme in every subject may want to ask how this has progressed since November 2023.
Formal wraparound childcare may be limited. The prospectus suggests early drop-off can be arranged, but it does not present a conventional breakfast club and after-school club model with published session times. Families relying on regular wraparound should ask directly what is currently available and how it is staffed.
This is a Good school with a highly distinctive identity: a Church of England primary that intentionally supports flexible patterns of education and makes mixed-age teaching part of the design rather than a compromise. It will suit families who want a very small setting, value close relationships, and are open to a school week that may not look like the standard model. The main question is fit, not reputation, so your decision should hinge on whether the flexi approach, the faith ethos, and the realities of a tiny cohort match your child’s needs and your family’s routine.
The most recent Ofsted inspection, carried out on 8 and 9 November 2023, judged the school to be Good overall, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. Safeguarding arrangements were found to be effective.
As a state school, Reception admissions are handled through the local authority process and the specific oversubscription criteria are set out in the school’s admissions policy. Because this is a very small rural school and families may travel, it is especially important to read the admissions criteria carefully and apply on time through your home local authority.
For Staffordshire’s September 2026 primary admissions round, applications close on 15 January 2026 and offers are issued on 16 April 2026. Applications typically open on 01 November 2025. Always confirm the latest timetable on the local authority site in case of updates.
Yes. The school offers pre-school, with entry described as starting at the beginning of the term after a child’s third birthday, and listed entry points of 1 September, 1 January, and the first Monday after the Easter holiday. Families should also note the practical readiness expectations described by the school, including independent toileting and eating.
Yes. The school describes a flexible attendance option with three core days each week, supported by learning at home on other days. Families considering this should discuss expectations and how progress is monitored across both settings.
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