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 Church of England primary with nursery provision, this is a school that puts Christian vision and personal development at the centre of daily life. The current headteacher is Anne-Marie Taylor, who is also the named headteacher on the school website, and has been in post since September 2015.
Academically, the 2024 Key Stage 2 picture is a clear positive. In 2024, 73% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. Scaled scores sit above England norms too, with reading at 104, mathematics at 102, and grammar, punctuation and spelling at 103.
Demand is the other defining feature. For the most recent published admissions cycle Reception had 46 applications for 15 offers, a ratio of 3.07 applications per place, so families should assume competition and plan accordingly.
The school’s identity is explicitly Christian, and it frames the community language you will hear in policies and communications. The published aims and values lean on Mark 12:31, and translate that into themes such as courage, diligence, ambition, curiosity, respect, and the idea of flourishing as one community.
This faith character matters in practical ways. In a Church of England school, collective worship and Religious Education are part of the rhythm, and admissions criteria can include a supplementary information form depending on the year and local arrangements. The school is also clearly thinking about how nursery fits into the wider primary journey, consulting on admissions arrangements that would give specific consideration to children who already attend the nursery.
Pastoral signals from the most recent inspection are also helpful for parents trying to understand day-to-day tone. The latest Ofsted inspection (3 July 2024) kept the overall judgement at Good, with Personal Development graded Outstanding, and Early Years graded Good.
For a state primary, the most meaningful academic lens is the Key Stage 2 combined measure (reading, writing and mathematics), alongside scaled scores and higher standard indicators.
Expected standard (reading, writing, mathematics combined): 73%, compared with an England average of 62%.
Reading scaled score: 104 (England benchmark is typically 100).
Mathematics scaled score: 102.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 103.
Science expected standard: 90%, compared with an England average of 82%.
At higher standard, 21% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 8%. That is an important signal for families with children who are already working securely above age-related expectations.
Rankings should be read as a comparative indicator, not a verdict. Ranked 11,091st in England and 7th in Canvey Island for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), this sits in the band that indicates performance below the England average when viewed across all schools, even though the 2024 outcomes described above are above England averages on several key measures. This apparent tension is often about how different measures are weighted, and how results fluctuate across small cohorts, so parents should focus on the actual attainment profile and the school’s consistency over time, rather than treating any single league position as definitive.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
73.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum narrative on the school site is unusually specific, which helps parents understand what teaching looks like beyond headline results. In mathematics, for example, the school explicitly names curriculum drivers, Spirituality, Diversity, Environment and Possibilities, and links them to how lessons are planned and sequenced. It also states it uses the White Rose Maths Small Steps approach to support planning and progression.
The practical implication is a structured, mastery-informed model. Topics are taught in blocks, with planned opportunities for depth through problem-solving and investigative tasks, and an explicit emphasis on using mistakes and misconceptions as part of learning. For many pupils this supports confidence, because the route through a concept is broken down into manageable steps, while those who are ready for more challenge are pushed into richer problems rather than simply moving faster.
In Early Years, the nursery pages describe a play-based approach and a focus on prime areas of learning, particularly personal, social and emotional development, communication and language, and physical development, before extending into literacy, mathematics, understanding the world, and expressive arts and design.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because this is a primary school, the key question is transition at the end of Year 6. The local pattern in Canvey Island typically includes non-selective secondary options on the island, alongside selective pathways for families pursuing Essex grammar routes, and movement onto faith secondaries for families prioritising that ethos.
What the data can say with confidence is about the school’s preparation culture. The site navigation includes specific parent-facing content about secondary transfer and 11+ information, which is a useful signpost for families who want clarity about options and timelines.
A sensible expectation is that transition work will focus on study habits, independence, and emotional readiness, plus the practicalities of the application timetable. Families considering grammar routes should assume that tutoring culture exists around selective tests in Essex more broadly, even when primary schools themselves remain focused on the national curriculum.
The figures show Reception is oversubscribed, with 46 applications for 15 offers, and 3.07 applications per place applications per place. That is high demand in a small intake, and it means families should treat admissions as a process to manage rather than a formality.
The published admission number for 2026 to 2027 is 30, and the same official directory reports 46 applications received for September 2025, which aligns with the demand picture above.
Essex County Council states that applications for a primary (Reception) place for September 2026 open 10 November 2025 and close 15 January 2026.
National Offer Day for primary places is commonly mid-April, and some Essex schools restate this as 16 April 2026 for offers in that cycle.
Nursery is not the same as Reception admission, and attendance does not automatically guarantee a Reception place. However, the school is consulting on a proposed change for 2027 to 2028 that would explicitly include current nursery attendees within admissions considerations. Parents with younger children should watch for the final policy outcome, because that could meaningfully change how nursery links to Reception in future years.
Where distance and criteria matter, families often benefit from checking how close they are to the school gates and how that compares with recent cut-offs. FindMySchool’s Map Search is built for this kind of reality check, particularly in oversubscribed areas.
100%
1st preference success rate
14 of 14 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
15
Offers
15
Applications
46
The most recent inspection grades are a strong shorthand for what matters beyond test results. A Good overall judgement paired with Outstanding for Personal Development suggests a school that takes wider development seriously, including attitudes, community participation, and opportunities to build character.
For parents, the practical implication is that the school is likely to prioritise behaviour, relationships, and a coherent approach to personal growth, not just academic coverage. Combined with the published Christian vision language, this tends to suit families who want values-led schooling where kindness and responsibility are explicit expectations, while still keeping learning outcomes in view.
A useful sign of a school’s culture is whether extracurricular life has named, stable fixtures, not just generic claims.
From the school’s own club communications (September 2024), lunchtime clubs included:
British Sign Language Signing Choir (Years 1 to 6)
Crochet Club (Years 3 to 6)
KS1 Choir and KS2 Choir
Book and Film Club (Years 3 to 6)
Recorder Club (Years 3 to 6)
Christmas Craft Club (Years 5 and 6)
The implication is a mix of performance, creativity, and quiet-interest clubs, not only sport. For children who thrive on making, music, and small-group belonging, clubs like crochet, recorder, and book and film can be particularly protective of confidence, because they create identity spaces beyond the classroom.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Families should still budget for typical extras that apply across most state primaries, such as uniform, school trips, and optional wraparound care. Wraparound costs are published by the school (see Practical Information), and nursery fee details should be taken from the nursery information pages directly, rather than relying on third-party summaries.
State-funded school (families may still pay for uniforms, trips, and optional activities).
The school publishes clear opening times:
Gates open 8:40am
Main school day runs 8:45am to 3:15pm
Nursery day runs 8:45am to 3:05pm
Nursery timings are also stated in detail, including an 11:45am home time for morning-session children.
Wraparound provision is detailed in the school’s booking and payment guidance. The published sessions include:
Breakfast Club: 7:30am to 8:40am, £3.75
After School: 3:15pm to 5:00pm, £10
After School: 3:15pm to 6:00pm, £12
After Clubs: 4:15pm to 6:00pm, £8 (Years 1 to 6)
This is a practical advantage for working families, particularly because it includes nursery age through to Year 6 for the core breakfast and after-school sessions.
Canvey Island is typically accessed via road routes and bus links, with Benfleet often used as the main rail connection point for the wider area. For day-to-day school runs, the key question is usually walking practicality within Hilton Road and the surrounding residential streets, alongside drop-off safety and parking etiquette in peak times. (Families should check the school’s own guidance for any traffic management expectations.)
High competition for Reception places. With 46 applications and 15 offers year, demand is real. If you are relying on this school, have realistic back-up preferences ready.
Church of England ethos is meaningful. This is not a neutral-values school. Families who want a clearly Christian framework for worship and school life may find it a strong match, while those seeking a more secular experience should read the policy and worship information carefully.
Nursery to Reception is evolving. The school has consulted on giving explicit consideration to nursery attendees in future admissions arrangements. Parents with children in nursery age should monitor the final policy for the year they intend to apply.
A values-led Canvey Island primary with nursery provision, strong Key Stage 2 outcomes, and a clearly articulated approach to curriculum planning. Personal development is a standout strength in the most recent inspection profile, which will appeal to families who want character, community, and learning to move together, rather than competing priorities.
Who it suits: families comfortable with a Church of England ethos, and those who want structured teaching and a broad school experience that includes clubs and wraparound care. The main constraint is admission, competition for places is the limiting factor.
For many families, yes. The most recent Ofsted inspection (July 2024) graded the school Good overall, with Outstanding for Personal Development. Key Stage 2 outcomes in 2024 were also above England averages on several measures, including 73% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined.
Primary admissions in Essex are run through the local authority process and are typically allocated using published oversubscription criteria rather than a single simple catchment map. Families should review the school’s admissions arrangements for the relevant year and check how criteria apply to their address and circumstances.
Yes. Nursery places begin in the term after a child’s third birthday and the school states there is space for 30 children in the nursery class. Sessions include mornings and full days, aligned to the main school’s term dates.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound provision including Breakfast Club from 7:30am and after-school sessions running to 5:00pm or 6:00pm, with a specific later session for children attending clubs until 4:15pm.
Essex County Council states applications open 10 November 2025 and close 15 January 2026 for September 2026 entry. Families apply through the local authority system and should ensure any supplementary forms required by the school are completed on time.
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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