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.
This is a maintained infant school for ages 3 to 7, with nursery classes and a deliberately early years shaped ethos. The school’s own language is about building learning behaviours as much as covering content, using its “Learning Heroes” characters to give very young pupils a shared vocabulary for perseverance, collaboration, and curiosity.
The most recent Ofsted inspection, dated 28 to 29 September 2022, confirmed the school continues to be Good.
For families, the key headline is demand. The latest available admissions figures show 99 applications for 63 offers for the main entry route, so entry can be competitive even at this early stage.
The overall feel is structured, routines first, with strong emphasis on making school predictable for young children. External review evidence points to calm movement around school, clear behaviour expectations, and a shared system that pupils understand quickly, including a traffic light approach to behaviour and reading incentives such as “golden tokens”.
A distinctive feature is the Learning Heroes framework. Rather than relying on abstract values statements, the school uses named characters such as Behaviour Buddies and Curriculum Companions so pupils can talk about what good learning looks like in age appropriate terms. For parents, that typically translates into fewer daily battles about basics like listening, turn taking, and staying on task, because the language is consistent across classrooms and adults.
Leadership is long established. The headteacher is Fiona Cowan, listed on the Department for Education’s official records register.
As an infant school, the most meaningful academic story is early reading and the foundations that support later Key Stage 2 success at junior school. The 2022 inspection evidence highlights phonics as well taught, with staff training and early identification when pupils start to fall behind.
There is also a specific improvement point that matters to parents of early readers. In a small number of cases, the books pupils take home were not closely matched to the sounds they had already been taught, which can slow early fluency. The practical implication is worth asking about: how the school checks decodability of reading books, and what the current home reading scheme looks like.
If you are comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool can still be useful here, particularly for viewing nearby schools side by side when published measures differ by phase and age range.
The curriculum is described in official evidence as well planned and sequenced, with clear explanations and teachers checking misconceptions as they arise. That tends to matter more than any single scheme at this age, because success is often about consistency and clarity across classrooms.
Early reading is a visible priority. Formal evidence points to quiet reading spaces across the site and a “book shed” used at breaktimes. The school also publishes phonics content for families, including references to Monster Phonics as a way of supporting vowel phonemes and spelling patterns in Key Stage 1.
Support for pupils with SEND is described as strong in day to day practice, with an identified administrative weakness: detailed records, but information not always communicated efficiently enough to ensure support is implemented quickly in every case. For parents of children needing adjustments, this is a sensible discussion point: who the key contact is, how strategies are shared with all adults, and what happens if support needs to change mid term.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Children usually move on at the end of Year 2, so the next step is choosing a junior or primary school route for Key Stage 2.
Local families commonly consider nearby options such as Bolsover Church of England Junior School for Years 3 to 6, alongside other schools available through the Derbyshire County Council admissions system.
A practical approach is to treat Year 2 as the moment to get serious about Key Stage 2 fit, including travel time, wraparound needs, and the style of teaching that will suit your child as expectations ramp up.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
For Reception entry, applications are coordinated by Derbyshire. For the 2026 to 2027 academic year timeline, Derbyshire states that applications open 10 November 2025 and the closing date is midnight on 15 January 2026. Offers are issued on 16 April 2026, with appeals deadlines and hearings dates published alongside.
The demand picture in the latest available admissions data is straightforward: 99 applications for 63 offers, and the route is described as oversubscribed. That is enough to justify early planning, especially if you are choosing between several infant or primary options.
Nursery admissions are handled directly by the school rather than through the local authority process, with the school website indicating a waiting list approach.
Families shortlisting multiple schools may find the Saved Schools feature useful for keeping track of admissions steps and visit dates in one place.
100%
1st preference success rate
62 of 62 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
63
Offers
63
Applications
99
Pastoral structures are visible on the school website, including a designated safeguarding team and multiple DSL roles listed by name. The school also communicates a specific mental health and wellbeing strand, including its SMILERS page aimed at supporting children and families.
Safeguarding arrangements were judged effective at the 28 to 29 September 2022 inspection.
For infant age pupils, enrichment that is genuinely age appropriate usually matters more than having a long list of clubs. The external review evidence points to pupils experiencing a “wide range of experiences and activities”, with specific examples including clubs such as Boogie Bounce and Little Dragons, which signal a focus on movement, coordination, and confidence building rather than only traditional team sports.
Reading culture also extends beyond lessons. The inspection report references reading incentives and spaces that make books part of daily routines, including breaktime use of the book shed.
The school’s own calendar suggests a steady rhythm of community events and themed weeks across the year, with items such as Children’s Mental Health Week and online safety day appearing in the diary.
The published school timetable states registration at 8.45am and hometime at 3.15pm, totalling 32.5 hours per week. Drop off and pick up arrangements differ by year group, with separate gates and handover routines.
Wraparound care is offered via a local childcare provider based in the school hall, and the school also references a breakfast club option running 7.00am to 8.45am.
For transport and parking, the school states its turning circle has been closed to the public for safety at drop off and pick up, and it references permission for families to use a nearby supermarket car park at peak times to reduce congestion.
Oversubscription pressure. With 99 applications for 63 offers in the latest available data, there can be competition for places. Have a Plan B you would still be happy with.
Early reading consistency. The 2022 inspection evidence flagged that a small number of home reading books were not perfectly matched to taught sounds. Ask what has changed, and how book matching is checked now.
SEND communication. Support is described as positive, but record sharing was identified as an area to tighten so strategies are implemented promptly in every case. Parents of children with additional needs should clarify who coordinates support day to day.
Drop off logistics. Separate gates and a closed turning circle can make mornings smoother once routines are learnt, but can feel strict at first. It is worth factoring in the practicalities if you are juggling multiple drop offs.
This setting suits families who want a structured start to school, with an explicit focus on early reading, consistent routines, and a shared language for learning behaviours. It is also a good fit for parents who value clear systems around wellbeing and safeguarding, and who want wraparound options on site via external provision. The main hurdle is admission, so it works best for families who can engage early with Derbyshire’s timeline and keep alternative options live until offers day.
The latest inspection, dated 28 to 29 September 2022, confirmed the school continues to be Good, with strengths including phonics and a well sequenced curriculum. It is sensible to ask about the two improvement points raised in that report, especially around matching reading books to taught sounds and communication of SEND support.
Reception places are coordinated by Derbyshire County Council. For the 2026 to 2027 academic year, applications open 10 November 2025 and close at midnight on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Nursery admissions are managed directly by the school, not through the local authority process. Families usually join a school waiting list and then receive joining information from the setting.
The published timetable lists registration at 8.45am and hometime at 3.15pm. Drop off routines vary by year group, so it is worth checking which gate applies for your child.
The school references a breakfast club option running 7.00am to 8.45am, and before and after school care delivered by a local provider using the school hall. Availability can change, so confirm current places and booking arrangements directly.
Get in touch with the school directly
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