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.
Offa’s Mead Academy serves families in Sedbury, Beachley and nearby Chepstow, and its size is part of the story. With 141 pupils on roll at the time of the latest full inspection, it is noticeably smaller than many primary schools, which can translate into a more familiar feel and quicker communication between home and school.
The academy sits within Lift Schools, and the trust language shows up in everyday messaging, including the four maxims, Be unusually brave, Discover what’s possible, Push the limits, Be big-hearted. For local families, it is also a practical choice: the school highlights Wyedean School and Sixth Form Centre as a nearby secondary option and references shared activities.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (October 2022) judged the school Good overall, with Early years provision Requires Improvement. That combination matters for parents of Reception children, because it points to broadly positive practice across the school while keeping Reception development firmly in the improvement spotlight.
A school’s character is often easiest to understand through what it prioritises. Here, the emphasis is on creating “remarkable” learners, coupled with a strong home school partnership message and a deliberate focus on pupils feeling valued and respected. The principal, David Wayland, signs the welcome message and is also listed as the designated safeguarding lead, which signals that safeguarding leadership sits at the centre of the senior role.
The formal inspection evidence adds useful texture. Pupils were described as respectful and well behaved in lessons, with low-level disruption characterised as rare. Social times were portrayed as purposeful and calm, and pupils reported confidence that staff would act quickly if bullying occurred.
Local context matters too. The inspection notes that around 30% of pupils are drawn from a local Armed Forces barracks. In practical terms, that can mean pupil mobility, parental deployments, and a community that benefits from predictable routines and sensitive pastoral systems. When a school serves both settled local families and service families, consistency is not a luxury, it is part of what helps children thrive.
A final point on identity: the academy’s roots predate its current status. Local Gloucestershire records indicate Offa’s Mead County Primary School opened in 1967. The academy itself opened in September 2012, which is the point at which the current institution began operating under its academy arrangement.
This review does not lean on a headline Key Stage 2 outcomes comparison, because a like-for-like set of current performance metrics is not available for this school. Instead, the most reliable current benchmark is the latest full inspection and the concrete curriculum evidence the school publishes.
The October 2022 inspection outcome was Good, with sub-judgements of Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management, plus Requires Improvement for early years provision.
What that means for families is straightforward:
If your child is entering in Years 1 to 6, the school’s overall educational picture is assessed as securely positive, with strengths that include behaviour, personal development, and safeguarding culture.
If your child is entering Reception, it is worth paying particular attention to how early years practice has developed since 2022, because early years was the one area singled out for improvement.
Parents comparing local schools can also use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to line up options across the local area using consistent measures, rather than trying to reconcile different headline claims.
The inspection evidence points to a curriculum that has been shaped using trust support and guidance, with trustees checking the impact over time. The strongest way to interpret that is as an intentional approach to coherence, where subject planning and sequencing is treated as a whole-school priority rather than something left to individual classes.
There are also clear improvement signals. The school was asked to ensure that, in some foundation subjects, teaching consistently helps pupils build on prior knowledge so that key concepts are retained over time. For parents, that is a useful question to explore at open events or during conversations with staff: how does the school help pupils revisit, practise, and remember learning in subjects beyond English and mathematics?
Early reading is a particular point of inspection focus, with inspectors listening to pupils read. That matters because, in a small primary, early reading is often one of the biggest levers for later confidence and independence across the curriculum.
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 school, the most relevant destination question is transition to Year 7. Offa’s Mead Academy explicitly signposts Wyedean School and Sixth Form Centre as a nearby secondary choice and references joint activities. For families, this is not just about geography. It suggests an existing relationship that can make transition feel less daunting, especially for pupils who benefit from familiarity and structured handover.
As always, secondary destinations can vary from year to year depending on parental preferences and admissions outcomes, but the school’s own messaging makes Wyedean an important part of the local pathway.
Offa’s Mead Academy is a state-funded primary, so there are no tuition fees.
For Reception entry, the academy has a published admission number of 30 pupils per year. Applications are coordinated through Gloucestershire’s local authority arrangements, using the common application process rather than applying solely to the school.
If the school is oversubscribed, the admissions policy sets out priority in this order: children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, then looked after and previously looked after children, then siblings, then distance, with random allocation used as a tie-breaker for the final place (except where twins or multiple births apply).
Demand indicators suggest a straightforward picture for the most recent recorded primary entry route: 23 applications and 23 offers, described as fully subscribed. That implies there was not an excess of applicants over places in that cycle, but demand can shift quickly year to year, particularly in border communities and areas with changing housing patterns.
100%
1st preference success rate
15 of 15 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
23
Offers
23
Applications
23
Gloucestershire’s published timeline for children starting school in September 2026 includes:
Applications open from November, with online applications available, and the closing deadline at midnight on 15 January 2026.
Offers released on 16 April 2026, with replies due by 23 April 2026.
Because the current date is 06 February 2026, the on-time deadline has already passed for September 2026 entry. Late applications are still possible through the local authority process, and in-year admissions follow a different route.
Families considering applying in future years should expect a similar pattern, with the deadline typically in mid-January and offers in mid-April, but should always verify the exact dates on the Gloucestershire admissions pages.
100%
1st preference success rate
15 of 15 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
23
Offers
23
Applications
23
Safeguarding is the clearest hard-edged indicator in the inspection evidence, and it is positive. Inspectors stated that safeguarding arrangements are effective, and described a strong safeguarding culture, with staff training and trust checks supporting recruitment processes.
The same evidence base points to pupils understanding what bullying is, saying it does not happen, and reporting confidence that staff would deal with it quickly if it did. For parents, the practical implication is to ask how the school maintains that confidence as cohorts change, and how it tracks low-level unkindness before it becomes something bigger.
SEND support is also described as effective, with careful identification of needs and curriculum adaptation so pupils can access learning. In a small primary, this can be a real strength when it translates into consistent adult knowledge of a child’s profile and a joined-up approach between class staff and leadership.
The school runs a daily after-school wraparound club called Tea Birds, positioned as practical provision for working parents and carers. It operates Monday to Thursday from 15:10 to 18:00, with a published cost of £7.50 per child per day, and includes snacks.
Alongside wraparound, the school also publishes specific activity clubs. The current examples include:
Year 3 and 4 Football Club (Tuesdays, 15:15 to 16:15)
Year 5 and 6 Girls Football (Wednesdays, 15:15 to 16:15)
Year 5 and 6 Boys Football (Fridays, 15:15 to 16:15)
The value here is not the sport itself, it is what structured clubs do for primary-age children: routines after the bell, supervised time with peers across the year group, and a route for confidence-building outside the classroom. For families with tight childcare logistics, Tea Birds is also a meaningful practical differentiator.
Breakfast provision is also described, with booking required via the school office and a focus on healthy options before the day begins.
The school publishes a detailed school-day schedule. Reception opening hours are stated as 08:00 to 15:30, with the school day beginning between 08:30 and 08:40, playtime 10:30 to 10:50, lunchtime 12:30 to 13:20, and wraparound running 15:10 to 18:00.
For wraparound care, Tea Birds runs Monday to Thursday, and breakfast club is available with advance booking.
On transport, Gloucestershire highlights that some families may qualify for help with school transport costs, and notes a deadline of 31 May 2026 for submitting transport applications for September 2026, to allow arrangements to be made.
Reception improvement focus. Early years provision was rated Requires Improvement in October 2022, while the overall judgement was Good. For Reception families, it is sensible to ask what has changed since then, particularly around practice opportunities that prepare children for Year 1.
Small-school dynamics. With 141 pupils on roll at the time of the last inspection, year groups can feel more intimate, which many families love. It can also mean friendship dynamics are more concentrated, so behaviour systems and staff responsiveness matter even more.
Wraparound costs. Tea Birds is a clear practical support for working families, but the published daily cost of £7.50 can add up across the week. For some families, this is still excellent value, for others it is a budget factor to plan for.
Community mix. With a notable proportion of pupils linked to the local Armed Forces barracks, cohorts may include children experiencing mobility or family disruption. This can enrich the community, but it also places real weight on consistent pastoral practice.
Offa’s Mead Academy is a compact primary with clear local roots and a credible external judgement of Good in its most recent full inspection. It suits families who value a smaller setting, a calm behavioural culture, and practical wraparound options that extend the day for working parents. For Reception families, the key question is the pace of early years improvement since 2022, because that is where the strongest development focus sits.
The most recent full inspection in October 2022 judged the school Good overall, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. Early years provision was rated Requires Improvement, so Reception families should explore how practice has developed since then.
Reception places are allocated through Gloucestershire’s coordinated admissions process, using the local authority application route. The typical timeline is applications from November to mid-January, with offers released in mid-April.
The school runs Tea Birds, a daily after-school wraparound club for working parents and carers, Monday to Thursday, and also offers breakfast club with booking required. Families should check current availability and booking arrangements directly with the school office.
The academy’s published admission number is 30 for Reception. If applications exceed places, the policy prioritises looked after children, siblings, then distance, with a random allocation tie-breaker if needed for the final place. Recent demand can vary year to year, so it is worth checking the local authority’s admissions information for the latest pattern.
The school highlights Wyedean School and Sixth Form Centre as a nearby secondary option and references shared activities. Families should still shortlist several secondary preferences, as admissions outcomes depend on the wider local pattern in a given year.
Get in touch with the school directly
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