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 primary where the day is run with calm consistency, and where expectations are set early for both learning and behaviour. Willingham Primary School sits in a large village north west of Cambridge, and serves pupils aged 4 to 11. Miss Mona Paalanen is the current headteacher.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (14 and 15 June 2023) confirmed the school continues to be Good. In classroom terms, that translates into clear routines, strong behaviour systems, and a curriculum that aims to build secure foundations from the early years onwards. The school also runs a structured after school club, including a meal, which is unusually helpful for working families.
Academically, the KS2 picture is steady rather than headline grabbing. In 2024, 65% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 15% reached greater depth across reading, writing and maths, compared to the England average of 8%.
Willingham feels like a school that takes pride in belonging. The school’s own history page grounds that sense of continuity in local detail, from a first village school founded in 1593, through an 1856 predecessor, to the present school building built in 1975, with an educational trust still able to release grants for local educational purposes. Even if parents are focused on the present day, this long thread matters because it often correlates with stable governance and a community that knows the school well.
Day to day, expectations are explicit. Pupils are expected to settle quickly at the start of the day, understand routines, and take responsibility for their behaviour and roles. Leadership opportunities are baked in, including house captains and school council, alongside practical responsibilities for younger children. That kind of structure often suits pupils who like to know where they stand. For children who need strong boundaries, it can be a positive, predictable environment.
Pastoral culture is not only about “being kind”, it is supported by systems and named roles. The safeguarding structure published on the school site shows a clear safeguarding team, including deputy designated safeguarding leads spanning senior leadership, SEND, emotional support, and wraparound provision. For parents, this matters because the people who see children in different contexts, class, lunchtime, after school club, are part of the safeguarding net.
This is a mainstream state primary, so the most meaningful academic datapoints are KS2 outcomes and scaled scores.
In 2024, 65% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The England average in the same measure is 62%. At the higher standard, 15% of pupils achieved greater depth across reading, writing and maths, compared to an England average of 8%.
Scaled scores indicate where the year group sits relative to the national benchmark of 100:
Reading scaled score: 106
Maths scaled score: 101
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 104
(Scaled score values are from the FindMySchool results.)
The profile suggests that reading is a relative strength, maths is around the national midpoint, and writing depth is more limited. Greater depth writing is 2%, which is low, and is worth noticing if you have a child who is already writing well beyond age expectations and needs consistent stretch.
Based on the same official performance results, the school is ranked 10,177th in England for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), and 67th in the Cambridge local area list. This places performance below England average in relative ranking terms, even though the combined expected-standard percentage is slightly above the England average.
That apparent tension is normal. Rankings compress a lot of detail into one position, and in high-performing regions, small differences can shift rank materially. Parents should treat it as directional context, then look at the individual measures, especially if they are comparing a shortlist.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
65.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum intent is explicitly knowledge-rich and subject-based, with an emphasis on giving pupils a head start for transition to secondary school. In practice, what matters for families is whether that intent shows up as coherent sequencing and strong classroom explanation.
The most recent inspection evidence supports that in most subjects the curriculum is organised and ambitious, with staff clarity about what pupils should learn from the early years onwards. It also flags a specific development point: in a minority of areas within early years, planning does not always make the progression into Year 1 as clear as it could be.
Reading is treated as a core priority from the start, with phonics taught accurately and extra support deployed quickly for pupils at risk of falling behind. For parents, that usually means fewer children drifting quietly, and more confident decoding by the end of Year 1.
SEND is described in inspection evidence as being supported through resourcing and planning that helps pupils access the same curriculum as their peers, with individualised adaptations where needed. If you are looking for a mainstream primary that aims to keep children included in core learning rather than separating them early, that is a reassuring signal.
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 village primary, “where next” is about the transition to local secondary schools and how well pupils are prepared socially and academically for that step.
A key local destination is Cottenham Village College. Cambridgeshire’s directory information describes Cottenham Village College’s catchment area as including the primary areas of Cottenham, Waterbeach and Willingham. That does not guarantee a place, but it is a useful starting point for families trying to understand likely pathways.
Within the primary phase, preparation for transition is not only academic. The school’s wider development offer, leadership roles for pupils, and emphasis on routines all help Year 6 pupils manage the increased independence expected at secondary level. Some governing body documentation also references coordination around secondary transition days with local secondaries for the 2025 to 2026 intake.
If your child is likely to consider selective or specialist routes at 11, those decisions sit outside what most primaries can formally control. What Willingham can control is strong literacy foundations, calm behaviour norms, and opportunities for responsibility, which tend to support transition well.
Willingham Primary School is a Cambridgeshire local authority controlled community school, so Reception admissions are coordinated through Cambridgeshire County Council rather than directly with the school. The school publishes a PAN of 60 per year group.
For September 2026 entry, the Cambridgeshire First Steps booklet sets out the countywide timeline:
Applications open from 11 September 2025
National closing date: 15 January 2026
National offer date: 16 April 2026
Demand is described as oversubscribed in the most recent admissions, with 77 applications for 61 offers (Reception entry route), which equates to roughly 1.26 applications per place. That is competitive but not at the extreme end for the Cambridge fringe, and it usually means realistic chances for families in catchment, while still requiring careful planning.
For families wanting to see the school in action, the school’s own communications show Reception tours typically running in October and November for the following September intake, with booking required. In practice, that means you should plan to visit early in the autumn term of the year before entry.
A useful way to handle this stage is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your likely distance and compare nearby alternatives side by side. It is an efficient way to avoid relying on informal local hearsay.
100%
1st preference success rate
56 of 56 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
61
Offers
61
Applications
77
Pastoral strength here is mainly about consistency. Behaviour expectations are clear, bullying is described as rare, and staff apply routines and strategies consistently. That tends to benefit two groups in particular: children who thrive on predictable boundaries, and children who can become anxious when rules feel inconsistent.
Support also extends beyond the classroom structure. The school site publishes an emotional wellbeing offer and staff roles that include an emotional support assistant, and after school provision that is integrated into school life rather than being an external add on.
The other notable point for parents is the breadth of safeguarding roles across different parts of the school day, including wraparound care. That reduces handover risk, which is where problems sometimes occur in schools with external providers.
Extracurricular life at Willingham is unusually specific, which is a good sign. Rather than “lots of clubs”, the school publishes structured programmes by term and age phase.
Sport is organised through a combination of school staff and external providers. A typical half term programme includes:
Year 1 to 6 football (Super Star Sports)
Year 5 to 6 netball (run internally)
Year 3 to 6 cricket (Super Star Sports)
Reception to Year 2 multi sports (Super Star Sports)
Year 5 to 6 tag rugby (Cambridge Rugby)
Year 3 to 6 Tri-Club (Today Triathlon)
Year 3 to 6 basketball (Super Star Sports)
There is also a clear strand of emotional support provision through structured lunchtime activities, including LEGO, board games, colouring, crafts and puzzles, explicitly listed as part of emotional support. That matters because it supports children who find the social side of playtimes harder, and can reduce low level behaviour incidents that start in the playground.
Music is another visible pillar. The school’s music development plan summary references peripatetic lessons in instruments such as drums, guitar, piano and ukulele, a dedicated music room, and a choir programme linked to Young Voices. The choir has taken substantial numbers of KS2 pupils to perform at the O2 Arena for Young Voices, which is a strong indicator of participation rather than elite selection.
For families, the practical implication is that enrichment is not an optional extra for a handful of pupils. Many children can find a place, whether through sport, music, or structured wellbeing activities.
The school day starts at 8.50am and finishes at 3.15pm, with classroom doors opened from 8.40am. The after school club runs from 3.15pm to 6.00pm during term time, and includes a meal as part of the session fee structure.
On travel, the school explicitly encourages walking as the default, and notes bike racks for those cycling. It also asks parents who drive to park considerately. For a village setting, that is not just etiquette, it can materially affect congestion and safety at drop off.
Term dates are clearly published, including Spring Term 2026 starting 6 January 2026 after a staff development day on 5 January 2026.
Relative ranking position. KS2 combined expected-standard attainment sits slightly above the England average, but the overall primary ranking position in the FindMySchool results is in the lower band nationally. This can happen when local competition is strong, but it is still worth comparing the underlying measures if you are choosing between similar nearby schools.
Writing at greater depth. Greater depth writing is low. If you have a highly able writer, ask how stretch and feedback are structured, and how frequently pupils write at length across the wider curriculum.
Early years curriculum consistency. Progression from early years into Year 1 is described as strong in most areas, but not uniform across all areas. Families with children who need especially strong early foundations may want to ask specifically what has changed since 2023.
Oversubscription is real. Demand is above capacity in the most recent Reception entry results. Plan early, use the county timeline, and do not assume that living “nearby” is enough without checking how criteria are applied year to year.
Willingham Primary School is a well organised village primary with calm routines, strong behaviour culture, and a clear push on early reading and curriculum sequencing. The enrichment offer stands out because it is specific and participation-led, from Tri-Club and tag rugby to choir at Young Voices.
Best suited to families who want a structured, predictable mainstream primary with a solid wider development offer, and who are planning admissions early enough to navigate a competitive Reception intake.
Yes. It is currently rated Good, and the most recent inspection confirmed the school continues to meet that standard. Families should expect clear routines, strong behaviour expectations, and a curriculum designed to build secure foundations for secondary transition.
In the most recent KS2 results, 65% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. Reading scaled scores are also a relative strength. The school’s overall ranking position sits lower nationally, so it is sensible to compare the individual measures if you are weighing alternatives.
Applications are made through Cambridgeshire County Council. The countywide closing date for on time applications is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The school’s published admissions number is 60 pupils per year group. Recent admissions data shows more applications than offers for Reception entry, which indicates oversubscription.
Yes. The after school club runs from 3.15pm to 6.00pm during term time, and is designed as childcare plus activities, with a meal included in the fee for the session.
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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