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.
Winsham Primary School is a very small Somerset primary in the village of Winsham, near Chard, with places from age 2 through to Year 6. The scale matters. With a published capacity of 57 pupils, this is the sort of school where adults know families quickly, routines are consistent, and younger children often learn alongside older role models.
The school also runs Seedlings, its on-site pre-school, which offers sessions for 2, 3 and 4 year olds, with options that include morning sessions and longer sessions that cover lunch. This makes Winsham attractive to families who want continuity from early years through Reception and beyond.
Academic outcomes data is limited in the available headline summaries for this school, so the most reliable public picture comes from curriculum detail and the most recent inspection evidence. Leadership is structured within a trust model, with a named headteacher and an on-site Head of School role, which is common in small primaries that share expertise across multiple schools.
This is a Church of England primary, and the school’s identity leans into that rather than treating it as a label. The vision language on the website focuses on curiosity, community, stewardship, hope and aspiration, plus the practical virtues of resilience and reconciliation. That gives a good clue to what families can expect in assemblies, classroom language, and how behaviour is framed.
A house system helps create belonging across such a small cohort. Houses are named after four trees drawn from the Bible, Cedar, Oak, Myrtle and Olive. Children helped choose them, and the symbolism is used to underline that each house is distinct but equally valued. In a small school, this sort of structure can do a lot of heavy lifting socially. It gives pupils a broader peer group beyond their class, and it gives staff an easy framework for recognising effort and contribution across the school.
The most distinctive cultural thread in publicly available evidence is the emphasis on pupil agency and participation. Pupils have been involved in shaping the school’s vision and in practical decisions such as the house tree choices, and they have formal opportunities to represent peers, including through a school council. In a primary of this size, these mechanisms tend to feel more immediate than they can in larger settings, because pupils can see the results quickly.
Outdoor learning also appears as a genuine feature, not a generic marketing line. A specific example described in inspection evidence is a curriculum project that used an art link to prehistory, including creating wattle and daub walls inspired by nature. That points to a school that tries to make learning concrete and memorable, especially for younger pupils who learn best through hands-on experiences.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (1 to 2 November 2023) judged the school Good across all graded areas, including early years provision.
Published, comparable key stage outcome metrics are not prominent in the available headline results for this school, so parents will get a more accurate read by focusing on three things: how strong the curriculum sequencing is, how reading is taught from the start, and whether the school can explain progress clearly for mixed-age classes and small cohorts.
On the strongest point, early reading comes through clearly. Children begin learning to read as soon as they enter Reception, starting with books that closely match the sounds they have learned, and then moving on to texts designed to build fluency once accuracy is secure. This “keep the book matched to the phonics” discipline is one of the best predictors of children becoming confident readers, particularly in a small school where consistency matters.
The main academic area flagged for improvement is curriculum precision in some subjects. Where curriculum planning is well sequenced, pupils learn in depth. Where it is less precise about what should be learned and by when, pupils do not build detailed knowledge and skills as consistently. The practical implication is that families with children who thrive on clear structure will want to ask how subject leaders have tightened up knowledge progression, especially in foundation subjects, since the inspection.
Winsham’s curriculum messaging focuses on high-quality talk, literature and oracy, alongside daily opportunities for structured discussion. The English page explicitly positions reading, writing and spoken language as central, and that aligns with the inspection picture of strong early reading routines.
Teaching quality is described in public evidence as clear and responsive. Teachers present information clearly, check understanding effectively, and correct misconceptions promptly when needed. In a small primary, this matters even more than usual because pupils can have fewer same-age peers to learn alongside, so the adult’s modelling and feedback loop plays a bigger role.
Early years is worth separating out, because Winsham offers provision from age 2. Seedlings describes an approach rooted in a play-based curriculum and the Curiosity Approach, with an emphasis on child-led learning and a carefully prepared environment that supports children to make choices and investigate independently. The school also highlights that Reception-age children work alongside Year 1 and 2 pupils within Lily Class, and that younger children benefit from older pupils modelling learning behaviours. This mixed-age structure can be a real strength when it is well managed. It often accelerates language, independence and social maturity, but it requires clear routines and careful differentiation.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a small village primary, transition is usually shaped by local geography and Somerset’s coordinated admissions for secondary transfer. Families should expect a mix of destinations, typically including local mainstream secondaries within reasonable travel distance, with the precise pattern varying year to year depending on cohort preferences and available places.
What Winsham can control is the quality of transition preparation. A good question for prospective parents is how Year 6 builds secondary readiness in a mixed-age context, including study habits, independence, and confidence in reading and mathematics.
For children starting in Seedlings, there is also an earlier transition to consider. The school encourages continuity from pre-school into Reception, and because provision sits within the same overall setting, it is often easier to manage gradual familiarisation, relationship building and routines than it can be when nursery and primary are separate.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Somerset, not handled as a stand-alone school application. For September 2026 entry, the Somerset primary application window opened on 29 September 2025, with a closing date of 15 January 2026. Outcome emails and letters are issued on 16 April 2026, and the appeal deadline for those notified on that date is 18 May 2026.
The school’s own admissions page mirrors this structure and directs families to the local authority route for Reception entry. It also notes that in-year applications, for example moving into the area mid-year, are handled by contacting the school directly.
Demand data for Reception entry indicates that places can be competitive in some years, even at this very small scale. In the most recent published admissions snapshot there were 8 applications for 6 offers, which is consistent with an oversubscribed position. For families considering a move, the key practical step is to ask for the most recent catchment and allocation information and to understand how distance and any priority criteria have played out recently. (No furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is available in the provided admissions snapshot for this school, so parents should rely on Somerset’s published criteria and the school’s own admissions documents.)
For pre-school places in Seedlings, the admissions route is direct contact with the school rather than the local authority portal. This is typical, and it usually allows for a visit and discussion of the child’s needs and session pattern before a place is agreed.
Applications
8
Total received
Places Offered
6
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
A small school’s pastoral strength often comes from two things: consistency and visibility. Winsham’s public safeguarding messaging emphasises welfare and a supportive environment, and the inspection evidence highlights pupils’ respect for difference and an inclusive feel.
Inspectors also stated that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The school also builds emotional literacy into the curriculum from early years onwards, with structured opportunities for children to talk about emotions and develop confidence in managing feelings. In practice, this tends to show up through calm routines, explicit vocabulary for emotions, and adults who intervene early when small issues begin to grow.
For parents of children who need additional support, the most useful next step is to look at the school’s SEND information and ask how support is staffed in such a small setting, especially where mixed-age classes can create a wider range of starting points in the same room.
Extracurricular provision at Winsham is shaped by the same small-school reality: the offer changes term by term, and clubs tend to be built around staff strengths and local opportunities. The school’s clubs page describes a rotating programme, with examples including Gardening, Craft, Construction and Music. The important point here is not the exact list, which can change, but the intention: a broad spread that goes beyond sport-only or homework-only models.
A distinctive example from inspection evidence is the “creative thinkers” club, plus opportunities for pupils to sing together and share artwork at local events such as a horticultural show. The implication for families is that this is a school that tries to make enrichment accessible, including by planning to reduce barriers to participation.
Outdoor learning, mentioned earlier, also functions as enrichment. In a village setting, the ability to use the local environment to make curriculum content tangible can be a major advantage, particularly for younger pupils and for children who learn best through doing rather than only through worksheets.
The school day runs from 8.50am to 3.15pm, with gates and doors opening at 8.50am. Morning session is 8.50am to 12pm, and afternoon session is 1pm to 3.15pm, with a lunch break from 12.00 to 1.00pm.
The school publishes practical drop-off and pick-up arrangements, including different collection points for younger pupils and Key Stage 2, and guidance on parking and safety around Pooles Lane.
Wraparound care is not clearly detailed in the publicly accessible pages reviewed here. Families who need breakfast or after-school provision should ask directly what is available, what hours are covered, and whether provision runs every day or only on certain days.
For visits, the school invites parents to arrange a tour during the school day via the school office.
Very small cohort sizes. A tiny school can be brilliant for individual attention and stability, but it can also mean fewer same-age peers and less breadth in friendship groups. This suits some children very well and feels limiting for others.
Curriculum sequencing still matters. The school’s strongest subjects show clear progression and depth, but public inspection evidence also flags that some subjects needed sharper definition of what pupils should learn and when. Ask how subject plans have been refined and how leaders check that knowledge builds year on year.
Leadership structure is trust-based. Public information points to a headteacher role within the wider trust and an on-site Head of School role. Families who value continuity should ask how decision-making works day to day, and who leads each phase, including early years.
Admissions can still be tight. Even small village schools can be oversubscribed in some years. For Reception 2026 entry, work to Somerset’s timelines and make sure you understand the oversubscription criteria and what it means in practice for your address.
Winsham Primary School will appeal most to families who want a small, community-rooted Church of England primary with early years on site and a curriculum that puts reading, language and hands-on learning front and centre. It suits children who do well with close adult support, clear routines, and mixed-age social learning. The main decision points are whether the small-scale peer group is right for your child, and whether the practicalities of wraparound care and admissions priority line up with your family’s needs.
Winsham Primary School was graded Good at its most recent inspection in November 2023, including Good for quality of education and early years. The school’s strongest public evidence is around early reading routines, clear teaching, and an inclusive culture.
Reception places are allocated through Somerset’s coordinated admissions process, using published oversubscription criteria. The school also provides a catchment map and admissions documents on its website. Because allocation outcomes can vary each year, it is best to check Somerset’s current guidance and confirm how distance and priorities applied in the most recent allocation round.
Yes. The school runs Seedlings, offering provision for 2, 3 and 4 year olds, including daily session options and access to eligible early years funded hours.
Doors open at 8.50am and the school day ends at 3.15pm. Families should also check directly about any breakfast or after-school provision, as wraparound details are not clearly published in the main pages reviewed.
Applications are made through Somerset’s primary admissions portal. For September 2026 entry, the application window opened on 29 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with outcomes issued on 16 April 2026.
Get in touch with the school directly
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