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 small, busy nursery and infant school where early reading, outdoor learning, and personal development are treated as core, not add-ons. With places typically oversubscribed at Reception, the practical reality for families is that timing and process matter just as much as preference. Recent admissions data shows 154 applications for 59 Reception offers, which is around 2.6 applications per place.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (22 and 23 November 2022, published 19 January 2023) confirmed the school remains Good and judged safeguarding effective.
The strongest clue to the school’s character is the language it uses repeatedly: a lifelong love of learning, and a set of shared expectations that show up across wellbeing, behaviour, and leadership roles. The site positions children as active participants in school life, not passengers. A good example is Badger Club, a pupil leadership model where a boy and a girl from each class are elected to the school council for a year, with specific duties at playtime and lunchtime, plus Year 2 responsibilities that include helping Reception children line up and move back indoors safely.
Belonging is framed as something that is taught, not assumed. The No Outsiders programme is used to help children understand diversity, equality, and different family structures through age-appropriate picture books. The point is not abstract citizenship, it is the day-to-day skill of respecting difference while still feeling secure in your own place in the group.
There is also a clear emphasis on children learning to manage themselves, emotionally and socially, in ways that are realistic for ages 3 to 7. The wellbeing approach references mindfulness techniques, a Growth Mindset framing, and PSHE Matters as the curriculum backbone for wellbeing and personal development. Philippa Smith is named as the school’s Mental Health Lead, and the school states that she has completed training for the role through Trauma Informed Schools UK.
Leadership is presented as a co-headteacher model, with Ms Philippa Smith as Co-Headteacher and Mrs Karena Moore as Co-Headteacher and Deputy Head Teacher. The school website does not clearly publish a start date for the current leadership team, so it is best to treat tenure as something to confirm directly if it matters to your decision.
As an infant school (up to age 7), there are no Key Stage 2 SATs outcomes to compare, and that changes how parents should read “results”. The right questions become: are children leaving Year 2 fluent and confident in early reading, are number foundations secure, and do children move on to junior school ready to learn independently.
Early years data that the school publishes suggests outcomes are close to wider benchmarks. For Reception, the school’s published figure for Good Level of Development is 69% for 2025, alongside a 2025 comparator of 68.3% shown on the same page.
From an evidence perspective, the more meaningful signal here is curriculum focus and implementation. Reading is described as central, with daily phonics and a structured approach to practice. Where this matters for families is consistency: children at this age benefit most when every adult uses the same routines, the same language, and the same correction strategies.
Parents comparing local options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub page to view early years and local context side by side using the Comparison Tool, particularly if you are weighing several infant schools with similar inspection judgements.
The curriculum structure is clearly explained: Early Years Foundation Stage in Nursery and Reception, National Curriculum in Key Stage 1, delivered through topics on a two-year cycle, with progression documents mapping knowledge, skills, and vocabulary across the school.
Early reading is where the school is most explicit about method. Phonics and reading are taught through Little Wandle Letters and Sounds Revised, described as a systematic synthetic phonics programme aligned to the Department for Education’s validation criteria. The school describes regular assessment and targeted intervention, with decodable reading practice sessions matched to the phonics scheme, plus a separate “love to read” book intended for shared reading at home rather than independent decoding. This is a coherent model: it separates “practice to gain fluency” from “books to build enjoyment and vocabulary”, which is exactly what most children need at this stage.
Mathematics is also described as carefully sequenced, with strong attention to vocabulary and early concepts such as counting, place value, and shapes. In classroom terms, this can look like frequent use of manipulatives and practical representations, helping children connect number to meaning rather than memorising procedures.
The main developmental edge, based on formal external feedback, is not intent but consistency across the wider curriculum. Some foundation subject plans were described as not yet implemented consistently, and leadership capacity in those subjects was flagged as an area for development. For parents, that usually translates into variation between classes or year groups in the depth of topic work outside English and maths.
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 most families, the key transition is from Year 2 into junior education. The school makes it clear that moving on to Brockwell Junior School is not automatic, and parents must apply through the coordinated local authority process when their child is in Year 2.
That matters because it shapes long-term planning. If your child’s friendship group, wraparound arrangements, or sibling logistics depend on a particular junior school, treat Year 2 as an active decision point rather than a formality. It is sensible to review junior school admissions arrangements early, and to plan school visits around Year 1 or early Year 2 so you are not rushing.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Derbyshire County Council. For September 2026 entry, the school’s admissions page states an application deadline of 15 January 2026 and an offer date of 16 April 2026. Derbyshire’s published primary admissions timeline also shows online applications opening on 10 November 2025, with the same closing date and offer date.
Demand is a defining feature. Recent admissions data shows 154 applications for 59 offers, and an oversubscription status. In practical terms, families should plan on listing multiple preferences rather than relying on a single choice, and should treat any individual year’s outcome as sensitive to local applicant patterns.
Nursery admissions are separate from Reception. The nursery page describes session structures and funding routes, which implies that parents should treat nursery entry as a direct school discussion rather than a council-coordinated process. Nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place, and parents should plan on making a Reception application through the normal route.
93.7%
1st preference success rate
59 of 63 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
154
Safeguarding is framed as part of everyday practice, with named safeguarding leads and clear reporting routes. There is also an explicit link between wellbeing and curriculum. Mental health support is described as a whole-school approach, supported by a named Mental Health Lead and a structured personal, social, health and economic curriculum through PSHE Matters, alongside techniques such as mindfulness.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as integrated into mainstream classroom life. The school describes clear identification and support processes, with parents involved throughout. For parents, the most useful next step is to read the SEN information report and ask directly how support looks in practice in your child’s year group, particularly around speech and language, attention and self-regulation, which are common needs in early years and Key Stage 1.
Outdoor learning is a distinctive pillar here, and it is described with unusual specificity. Forest School runs on the infant site, using a triangular area of the school field, with a circle seating area created as the focal point for sessions. The Forest School lead is named as Helen Pantry, and activities listed include den building, fire lighting and campfire cooking, wildlife and minibeast hunts, and practical woodland crafts such as rain chains and woodland crowns. The implication for children is not just novelty. Outdoor sessions at this age can materially improve confidence, language, and resilience, particularly for children who find indoor routines demanding.
The school also describes broader enrichment, including visits and clubs. The latest inspection report references pupils visiting Derby Open Centre and describes Forest School as a high priority for all pupils.
For structured after-school clubs, the school lists Dance Club (Tuesdays) and Tai Chi (Thursdays) for Years 1 and 2. Combined with pupil leadership through Badger Club, this creates a picture of enrichment that is deliberately age-appropriate, with short, repeatable routines rather than long lists of activities that only some children can sustain.
The published school day begins at 08.50 and ends at 15.20, with doors open from 08.40 to 08.50, and a stated weekly total of 32.5 hours.
Wraparound care is run on site. Breakfast Club runs 07.45 to 08.45 at £4 per child per day. After School Childcare Club runs daily, with options for a half session (15.20 to 16.20, or 16.20 to 17.20 after an activity club) at £4 per child per day, or a full session (15.20 to 17.20) at £8 per day. Booking is via ParentPay.
Nursery session times are also clearly set out. Part-time places are described as three-hour sessions, either 08.40 to 11.40 or 12.20 to 15.20, with full-time sessions described as 09.10 to 15.10. The nursery page also references a mix of privately funded places and places using additional childcare hours, and families should confirm the current availability and eligibility routes directly with the school.
For travel and drop-off logistics, the school explicitly asks families to park considerately and to switch off engines around the site for health and wellbeing.
Competition for Reception places. Recent admissions data shows 154 applications for 59 offers, so entry is competitive. Families should plan a realistic set of preferences and avoid relying on one option.
Nursery to Reception is not automatic. Nursery arrangements sit alongside, not inside, Reception admissions. If you want a Reception place, you still need to apply through the local authority route by the published deadline.
Curriculum consistency beyond English and maths. External review feedback points to some foundation subjects being less consistently embedded, with subject leadership development identified as a next step. This can mean uneven experiences between classes until improvements are fully established.
Wraparound costs add up. On-site wraparound is a practical strength, but regular use of Breakfast Club and After School Childcare Club brings ongoing weekly costs that families should budget for.
Brockwell Nursery and Infant School offers a purposeful early years and Key Stage 1 experience, with a clearly structured approach to phonics and reading, a strong outdoor learning identity through Forest School, and practical wraparound provision that supports working families. It suits children who benefit from consistent routines, explicit early reading teaching, and frequent outdoor learning, and it also works well for families who value a small-school feel within a busy community setting. Securing entry is where the difficulty lies, so admissions planning needs to be treated as part of the job.
The most recent inspection confirmed the school remains Good, with safeguarding judged effective. The school also sets out clear approaches to early reading, wellbeing, and outdoor learning, which are useful indicators of consistency in the infant years.
Reception applications are made through Derbyshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the published deadline is 15 January 2026 and offers are due on 16 April 2026.
No. Nursery and Reception are separate admissions routes. If you want your child to start Reception, you still need to apply through the local authority process by the published deadline, even if your child attends the nursery.
The nursery page describes part-time sessions as 08.40 to 11.40 or 12.20 to 15.20, with full-time sessions described as 09.10 to 15.10. Families should confirm current availability and options directly with the school.
Yes. Breakfast Club runs 07.45 to 08.45 and After School Childcare Club offers half and full sessions after the school day, with published daily prices. Booking is via ParentPay.
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