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.
A village primary that combines a very small roll with an unusually structured approach to reading and writing. The latest Ofsted inspection judged the school Outstanding (inspection dates 23 to 24 January 2024; report published 07 March 2024), including Outstanding for early years provision.
Families should expect competition for Reception places. In the most recent admissions data here, there were 21 applications for 7 offers, which equates to around 3 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. The setting is mixed, ages 4 to 11, with a stated capacity of 105 pupils.
Christian distinctiveness is a real part of school life, with collective worship built into the day. Day-to-day, the website points to consistent routines, a clear reading spine, and named writing approaches, which tends to suit children who thrive on predictability and explicit instruction.
This is a small school by any measure, and that shapes almost everything. In a setting with only a handful of classes, relationships can feel close-knit, pupils are less likely to get lost in the crowd, and staff can keep a tight line of sight on wellbeing and behaviour. That said, small schools also feel “small” socially, and friendship dynamics can be more visible, which is worth weighing if your child needs lots of peer variety.
The Church of England identity is not just a label. The school timetable published on the website includes collective worship as a daily feature, which signals that spirituality and reflection are intended as part of the core experience rather than an occasional add-on.
Leadership is stable and clearly identified across official and school sources. The headteacher is Leanne Dixon.
What can be stated confidently is the current inspection outcome and its recency. The latest Ofsted inspection rated the school Outstanding overall, with Outstanding in Quality of education, Behaviour and attitudes, Personal development, Leadership and management, and Early years provision.
For parents, the practical implication is that external evaluation currently aligns with the picture of a well-run, high-expectations primary. The next step is to test fit: how your child responds to the school’s teaching routines, and whether the small-scale environment is a strength for them.
The school publishes a detailed “lesson pattern” for the day, which is more explicit than many primaries provide. Mornings start with registration and a “Do it now” task, then reading and phonics routines in Key Stage 1 and a reading plus maths focus in Key Stage 2.
Writing appears to be taught through named approaches. The timetable references “The Write Stuff” for Key Stage 2, and the literacy block includes spelling and “Demonstration Reading”. The educational implication is consistency: children who benefit from clear models, repeated routines, and strongly framed expectations often do well in this kind of environment.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a state primary, progression is usually shaped by local authority admissions, catchment patterns, and parental preference across nearby secondaries. This prompt does not include destination data for Year 6 leavers, and the school does not publish a quantified “next schools” list in the sources accessed for this review.
Practically, families should treat transition planning as a conversation to have early in Year 6, especially if you are considering selective routes, or if transport logistics to the next phase matter. In Oxfordshire, secondary transfer is coordinated through the local authority, so it is also worth checking the current admissions arrangements for your preferred secondaries alongside your primary choice.
Reception and in-year admissions are coordinated by Oxfordshire County Council, even though the school is an academy within The Mill Academy Trust.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Oxfordshire, the county’s published timeline states that applications can be submitted from 04 November 2025, the deadline is 15 January 2026, and National Offer Day is 16 April 2026.
Demand looks material relative to size. In the admissions here, Reception shows 21 applications for 7 offers, with an oversubscribed status and an applications-to-offers ratio of 3. For a small school, that can translate into real uncertainty for families who are not close to the priority boundary.
Tip: If you are shortlisting, use the FindMySchool Map Search to sense-check your practical position relative to the school, then validate the current rules and priority order via Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions materials.
Applications
21
Total received
Places Offered
7
Subscription Rate
3.0x
Apps per place
The school indicates nursery provision, and its class structure includes a named Nursery class (“Cherry”).
Because early years pricing is not appropriate to publish here, treat the nursery decision as primarily about approach and logistics: session times, availability of funded hours for eligible families, transition into Reception, and how the “key person” approach works day-to-day. For nursery fee details, use the school’s official nursery information.
In a very small primary, pastoral care tends to be relational and immediate, but parents should still look for structure: how the school responds to friendship issues, how it supports pupils with additional needs, and what the escalation route looks like.
The school publishes behaviour expectations under the heading “Ready, Respectful, Safe”, and also references pupil leadership around bullying through Anti-bullying Ambassadors. That mix of clarity plus pupil voice often works well when applied consistently.
Safeguarding is a high-stakes area. The most recent inspection provides current reassurance, and it is sensible to ask how safeguarding training, reporting, and record-keeping are organised across a small staff team.
Extracurricular life here reads as targeted rather than “everything to everyone”, which is usually the reality in smaller schools. The website points to enrichment through sport and health initiatives such as The Daily Mile, swimming, Street Dance, Boccia, and an U11 boys football strand.
Outdoor learning looks like a genuine pillar. Forest School is highlighted as a discrete area rather than a one-off activity, which can be a strong fit for children who learn well through practical exploration and controlled risk-taking.
For parents, the implication is this: the offer may be narrower in sheer quantity than at a large town primary, but the experiences that do run can feel more “whole-school”, with higher participation and more consistent staff involvement.
The school day runs from 8:40am registration to a 3:00pm finish, and the school publishes total weekly hours as 31 hours and 40 minutes.
Wraparound care is referenced on the website under after-school care, but the specific operating times and booking arrangements could not be accessed from the sources retrieved for this review. Parents who need breakfast club or reliable late pickup should confirm current provision directly with the school.
For travel, this is a village setting, so driving, walking, and rural bus options tend to matter more than rail links. Check term-time traffic patterns and parking expectations, particularly if you will be commuting onward after drop-off.
** With 21 applications for 7 offers in the admissions data here, entry can be the hardest part, especially if you are not high in the priority order.
Nursery details require due diligence. Nursery is offered, but families should verify session structure, staffing approach, and how funded hours operate for eligible children via the school’s official nursery information.
Faith character is lived, not symbolic. Daily collective worship is part of the timetable, so families should be comfortable with a Church of England ethos woven into ordinary routines.
Finstock Church of England Primary School suits families who want a small, structured primary where routines are explicit and the Church of England ethos is part of daily life. The latest Ofsted judgement is a strong external signal of quality, including in early years, which is particularly relevant if you are considering nursery into Reception.
The main challenge is securing a place in a small school with oversubscription pressure. If you are close enough to be realistically competitive, it is a compelling option for children who do best with clear expectations, consistent literacy routines, and a setting where everyone is known.
The most recent Ofsted inspection rated the school Outstanding overall, with Outstanding judgements across key areas including quality of education and early years provision (inspection dates 23 to 24 January 2024; report published 07 March 2024).
Applications are made through Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, Oxfordshire’s published timeline states applications open on 04 November 2025, the deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are released on 16 April 2026.
In the admissions data here for primary entry, the school is marked oversubscribed, with 21 applications for 7 offers, which equates to about 3 applications per place. This indicates that families should treat admission as competitive.
Nursery provision is indicated, and the school’s class structure includes a named Nursery class. Policies on Reception admission priorities and whether nursery attendance affects them depend on the published admissions arrangements for the relevant year, so parents should check the current admissions policy and Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions guidance.
The school publishes a day structure starting at 8:40am and finishing at 3:00pm, with total weekly hours stated as 31 hours and 40 minutes.
Get in touch with the school directly
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