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.
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A tiny village primary serving families on the northern edge of Carlisle, this is the kind of school where mixed-age classes and close adult relationships are not a policy choice, they are the practical reality. The published capacity is 56 and recent roll figures sit around the 50 mark, so the experience is inevitably intimate and highly personalised.
The current headteacher is Mrs Lindsey Slater, appointed in September 2023, and leadership has been building consistency since then. The most recent inspection picture is steady and reassuring, with key areas graded Good, including early years provision.
Admission is competitive for a school of this size. In the most recently reported reception admissions cycle, 16 applications were recorded for 6 offers, so demand materially exceeded places. For parents, the key question is fit. If you want a village school with a Christian character, a strong reading focus, and a deliberately sequenced curriculum that works across mixed-age groupings, it is a compelling option.
Scale shapes everything here. With around fifty pupils across the primary years, pupils learn alongside a broad range of ages, and staff know families well. That closeness tends to suit children who thrive on predictable relationships and who benefit from adults spotting small changes early, whether that is confidence, friendships, or emerging learning needs. The inspection evidence points to pupils settling quickly and building positive friendships, with strong bonds between pupils and adults across the school.
As a Church of England voluntary aided school, the faith identity is not a decorative label. The school sits within the Diocese of Carlisle and also receives statutory church-school inspection through SIAMS, with the most recent Section 48 inspection referenced as January 2023. Day-to-day, families should expect Christian values to be visible in worship patterns and the school’s way of talking about community and responsibility, while still welcoming families of different faiths or none, which is common across rural Church of England primaries.
There is also a tangible sense of a school modernising its offer while remaining rooted in place. The school website describes the building as originally built around the 1830s and later extended, which aligns with the practical needs of creating workable early years and key stage spaces within an older footprint. In a small school, that kind of adaptation matters because specialist rooms are rare; spaces often need to work hard across the week.
Finally, behaviour expectations appear clear and consistently reinforced. Pupils understand what is expected and move around the school calmly, and social times are described as cooperative and respectful. For many families, that is the real indicator of a stable school culture, not the wording of any policy.
For this school, the most helpful “results” story is less about headline percentages and more about curriculum intent and how learning is structured in a small, mixed-age setting.
External review evidence describes a rich and ambitious curriculum, planned carefully so that pupils in mixed-age classes build knowledge in a clear sequence. That matters because mixed-age teaching can be brilliant or chaotic depending on planning. Here, the intent is explicitly to avoid gaps and repetition by being very clear about what knowledge pupils should learn, and in what order.
Reading is the strongest academic through-line. Staff read to pupils often, pupils encounter a range of texts and authors, and early years children engage with familiar stories and role play linked to them. Phonics is described as systematic from the start of Reception, with books matched to the sounds pupils know and rapid support for those who find early reading difficult. The implication is a school trying to make reading automatic early, so pupils can access the full curriculum with confidence later on.
There is also a clear improvement focus. In a small number of subjects, newer curriculum approaches were described as still being embedded, and at times activities did not secure the precise knowledge leaders intended. That kind of issue is common when schools refresh curriculum materials, but it is also an honest indicator of where leaders are pushing next. For parents, it is worth asking how subject leaders are checking what pupils remember over time, and how knowledge builds across a two or three-year mixed-age cycle.
Teaching in a very small primary is as much about structure as it is about warmth. Evidence points to staff using assessment strategies well within lessons, particularly questioning, to identify gaps and address them in subsequent teaching. The practical implication is that pupils who miss a step, whether through absence or confidence, are more likely to be picked up quickly, which is a known advantage in small settings.
Early years provision is also described positively, with children working collaboratively and problem-solving through practical tasks, including building and launching rockets outdoors. This matters for families considering nursery and Reception because it suggests learning is active and purposeful rather than worksheet-led. It also implies a school that wants early years to build language, collaboration, and curiosity, not just compliance.
Special educational needs and/or disabilities support is another meaningful theme. Needs are identified quickly and accurately, the school engages with professionals and parents, and adaptations are made so pupils can access learning alongside peers. In a small school, effective SEND practice is often about deft daily adjustments rather than large interventions. Parents of children with additional needs should ask what support looks like in mixed-age classes, and how targets are translated into everyday routines.
Two further indicators point to a well-managed school. Staff wellbeing and workload were explicitly considered during curriculum change, and training has strengthened teachers’ skills and knowledge. In a small staff team, that kind of stability can be pivotal, because turnover has an outsized impact.
For most pupils, the next step is transfer to a state secondary school, with applications made through Cumberland Council under the coordinated admissions process. The specific secondary destination will depend on the child’s home address and the family’s preferences, and in rural areas the practicalities of transport can be as decisive as school type.
What this school can do particularly well, given the setting, is prepare pupils for transition through confidence, reading fluency, and the ability to learn independently in a classroom. The inspection evidence of calm movement around school, attentive listening, and positive attitudes to learning suggests pupils are likely to arrive in Year 7 able to manage routines and expectations.
If you are shortlisting, it is sensible to map likely secondary options early and think about travel time. FindMySchool’s Map Search can help families visualise realistic journey patterns and compare nearby schools, especially in rural areas where catchments and transport are decisive.
This is a voluntary aided Church of England primary where governors are the admissions authority for Reception entry, operating within the local authority’s coordinated scheme. The published admission number for Reception is 8, which is a central fact for understanding competitiveness.
In the most recently reported reception admissions cycle, applications exceeded offers, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. In practical terms, that means small shifts in local birth cohorts, in-migration, or sibling patterns can change outcomes quickly. Parents should assume that early engagement and accurate paperwork matter, and that oversubscription rules will be applied tightly because there are so few places.
The oversubscription criteria, in priority order, place children looked after by a local authority and those previously looked after first, then children with significant physical or medical needs where travel to another school would be disadvantageous (with professional evidence), then children with a sibling at the school within catchment, then children living in catchment, then siblings outside catchment, then other children outside catchment. Where a tie-break is needed, distance is typically used, measured from the centre of the child’s address to a common point on the school site using the local authority’s mapping system.
For September 2026 entry, the admissions policy states the local authority closing date was 14 January 2026, with parents advised of allocations in April. For families looking beyond that cycle, the key message is to expect a similar rhythm each year, with deadlines typically in mid-January and offers in April. Always confirm the live dates with the local authority in the relevant year, as timings can shift.
Nursery provision is available and is part of the school’s age range. The admissions policy is explicit that a nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place, and parents must make a separate application for Reception. This is important because some families mistakenly assume nursery is an automatic pathway into the main school.
The same policy also notes deferred admission options for Reception-age children, including part-time attendance until compulsory school age, with guidance on deferring to later terms depending on the child’s birthday. Families considering deferral should discuss it early, because small schools have limited flexibility in class organisation.
100%
1st preference success rate
6 of 6 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
6
Offers
6
Applications
16
The school’s size is its pastoral engine. When staff teams are small and pupils are known well, pastoral support often looks like continuous low-level monitoring rather than formal interventions. Evidence indicates pupils are confident that staff will listen and support them if worries arise, and that positive adult-pupil bonds are a consistent feature across ages.
Behaviour norms appear clear and understood. Pupils are eager to meet expectations, listen attentively, and conduct themselves calmly around the school. For parents, that usually translates to fewer “grey areas” where children feel unsure about boundaries, which is often what unsettles younger pupils and those who find social cues hard to read.
The second key theme is inclusion. Pupils with SEND are identified accurately, and adaptations are made so they can access the curriculum alongside peers, with the school working closely with parents and other professionals. That is a practical reassurance for families who want a mainstream setting that still takes additional needs seriously.
The latest Ofsted inspection confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
In a small primary, enrichment is rarely about the sheer number of clubs, it is about whether the opportunities feel real and accessible to every child. Here, pupils are described as enjoying experiences beyond the academic curriculum, including after-school football and baking. Those examples are useful because they show a blend of physical activity and practical, hands-on learning, rather than a narrow focus on performance.
Trips and wider experiences are another strength. Pupils broaden experiences through visits to cities and theatres, and pupils recall seeing the Palace of Westminster during a trip to London. For many rural families, that kind of exposure is not a luxury, it is a core part of building cultural and civic understanding.
The school’s approach to inclusion also shows up here. Pupils with SEND are supported to develop interests through activities including horse riding. In mainstream primaries, it is easy for enrichment to become quietly selective. This points to leaders actively working against that drift.
There are also glimpses of community-linked enrichment. A recent external project example involves career-themed workshops supported by National Grid, where pupils engaged in engineering-themed activities. Even if this is occasional rather than routine, it signals a school willing to draw on local and national partners to add relevance to learning.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual extras, uniform, trips, and any optional clubs or music tuition.
The school operates before- and after-school clubs, which is particularly valuable for working parents in rural areas. Precise start and finish times for the school day, and the detailed wraparound timetable, are not captured in the accessible official sources used for this review, so parents should check directly with the school for current hours and booking arrangements.
For travel, most families will rely on car transport and local rural road routes into the village. When shortlisting, it is worth sanity-checking winter travel times and contingency plans, as rural journeys can be disproportionately affected by weather and road conditions.
Very small cohorts. With a published Reception admission number of 8, year groups can be tiny. This suits children who prefer a close-knit setting, but it can feel limiting for pupils who want a bigger peer group or a wider range of friendship options.
Mixed-age class structure. Small schools often teach across age groups. The curriculum is planned carefully for that reality, but parents should ask how extension work and challenge are handled for the oldest pupils in a mixed-age room.
Competition for places. Oversubscription is real in a school this small, and applications have exceeded offers in the most recently reported admissions cycle. Families should approach the process with a plan, including realistic alternatives.
Faith character. As a Church of England voluntary aided school within the diocese, Christian worship and values are part of school life. Families should consider whether that is a positive, a neutral, or a tension point for them.
This is a small rural primary where relationships, calm behaviour expectations, and a reading-led academic culture are central. The strongest evidence points to pupils feeling secure, learning well across subjects, and accessing a curriculum designed explicitly to work in mixed-age classes.
Best suited to families who want a village-scale Church of England school with nursery provision and a close-knit feel, and who are comfortable with small cohorts and the practicalities of rural travel. The main challenge is admission, because demand can quickly exceed the very limited number of places.
The latest inspection evidence is positive. In October 2024, key judgements were graded Good, including quality of education and early years provision, and the review describes strong relationships, calm behaviour, and a clear focus on reading and phonics.
The admissions policy refers to a defined catchment and notes that a map is available in school. Where places are oversubscribed, distance can be used as a tie-break depending on the category, measured through the local authority mapping system.
Reception entry is coordinated through the local authority, with governors acting as admissions authority within that scheme. For September 2026 entry, the policy states a closing date of 14 January 2026 and indicates allocations are communicated in April.
No. The admissions policy is explicit that a nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place, and a separate Reception application is required.
The October 2024 inspection report states that the school operates before- and after-school clubs. Parents should check directly with the school for current hours, places, and booking arrangements.
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