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 larger-than-average infant and nursery setting for ages 3 to 7, with a clear focus on early reading, language, and a curriculum designed to build knowledge steadily from Nursery through to Year 2. Pupils generally enjoy school and feel safe, with adults positioned as approachable and consistent.
Leadership continuity matters at this age. The current headteacher is Melanie Castle, appointed in September 2018 (initially part-time, moving to full-time in January 2019). The latest inspection judgement is Good, and safeguarding is recorded as effective.
For families weighing up local options, the school’s admissions demand is real: recent applications data shows 90 applications for 64 offers for Reception entry, a ratio of 1.41 applications per place. (These figures reflect the latest available admissions snapshot.)
Pupils are described as happy in school and clear about where to go for help if they are worried. The adult-child relationships are consistently framed as caring and positive, and that matters in an infant school where confidence and routine drive learning as much as phonics does.
There is also a strong “pupil voice” thread for such a young age range. Roles like library and assembly monitors are part of daily life, and the school council is positioned as more than symbolic, including involvement in selecting resources for the early years playground. This kind of participation typically translates into better self-management for pupils, and a calmer baseline for classrooms.
One atmosphere note worth taking seriously is attendance. The most recent inspection highlights that a small but significant group of pupils miss too much school, and that this can show up as gaps in knowledge and weaker peer relationships. For parents, the implication is practical rather than moral: if your child is prone to anxiety or frequent absence, ask specifically what the school does to support re-entry and routines after time away.
This is an infant school, so it does not have Key Stage 2 outcomes, GCSEs, or A-level results. The most useful official evidence is therefore curriculum quality, early reading strength, and how well pupils are supported to keep up.
The curriculum is described as ambitious and constructed so that Key Stage 1 builds on early years learning. Science is used as a concrete example, with regular opportunities for pupils to handle equipment and build investigative habits early.
Early reading is a clear strength. Phonics is reported as consistent and taught with confidence, and books are matched to pupils’ phonics knowledge so that practice time reinforces taught content rather than undermining it.
The main academic development point is reading fluency. The inspection notes that approaches to building fluency are not yet consistent enough, which can slow progress for some pupils even when decoding is secure. For families, this is a good “ask on your visit” topic: what does fluency practice look like day-to-day, and how is it adapted for pupils who decode accurately but read slowly?
The teaching picture is best understood as a sequence: language first, phonics next, then broader curriculum knowledge layered in. In early years, adults are described as actively modelling language and communication, which builds confidence for children to talk to peers and adults, and to explain what they have done.
SEND support is described as effective, with adults using small-group and one-to-one time to prevent pupils falling behind. The key mechanism here is familiar: adults know pupils well, adapt activities quickly, and use relationships to reduce friction so learning time stays productive.
A practical example of curriculum intent translating into classroom practice comes from science in early years, where children used magnifying glasses to examine plants and were supported to use precise vocabulary such as stem, roots, and petals. The implication for parents is that “knowledge-rich” does not mean formal or dry in the early years, it can mean hands-on learning with careful adult language.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The core transition here is from Year 2 to Year 3, because pupils move on to a junior school for Key Stage 2. In North East Lincolnshire Council, this transfer is part of the coordinated admissions process: families apply during the same autumn and winter window as Reception applications, and allocations are released on National Offer Day in April.
A second “next step” happens earlier for many families: nursery to Reception. Nursery applications are handled directly by the school, and the website advises applying when children are between 2 and 2½ years old, to start when they turn 3.
Because destinations are not published as a list of named junior schools on official sources surfaced in this research, the best approach is to ask directly which junior schools are most common, and how transition support is structured for pupils who need extra reassurance.
For Reception (and in-year places in Reception to Year 2), applications go through the local authority rather than directly to the school. The published application window for September 2026 entry opens 07 November 2025 and closes 15 January 2026, with allocations on 16 April 2026.
Demand is material. The latest available admissions snapshot shows 90 applications for 64 offers, and a ratio of 1.41 applications per place, with the school marked as oversubscribed. If you are moving house, it is sensible to use the FindMySchoolMap Search to check location-based risk before committing to a plan.
Nursery entry is different. It is school-led rather than local-authority coordinated, with set session times published, and funded hours available for eligible families. (For nursery pricing, use the school’s official information directly.)
Applications
90
Total received
Places Offered
64
Subscription Rate
1.4x
Apps per place
Pastoral strength is framed around relationships and routines: pupils know trusted adults, staff-pupil relationships are consistently positive, and pupils are expected to take on age-appropriate responsibilities. In an infant school, this typically shows up as fewer low-level disruptions, quicker recovery after upsets, and more learning time used well.
Personal development is also given a practical shape. Pupils are reported to have strong online safety knowledge for their age, and assemblies and lessons broaden understanding of different faiths and encourage respectful behaviour. Charity fundraising is used as an example of how pupils contribute beyond themselves.
Attendance is the watchpoint. The inspection is explicit that pupils who miss too much school can fall behind and struggle socially. If you already know attendance may be a challenge for your child (health, anxiety, family circumstances), ask about the school’s step-by-step approach to rebuilding habits after absence.
Enrichment is not an afterthought. The school publishes a broad menu of clubs across the year, including Choir, Computing, Cooking, Drama, Gymnastics, Skipping, Forest School, Makaton, and Science. The practical implication is that pupils can try a mix of creative, physical, and skills-based activities early, which often helps children find “their thing” before confidence dips in later key stages.
The experiences programme is also unusually detailed for this phase. Examples include a fire engine visit and chicks hatching in Nursery, local area walks and allotment visits in Reception, a samba band and a Victorian school visit in Year 1, and trips such as Lincoln Castle and a visit linked to Royal National Lifeboat Institution in Year 2, alongside time at Cleethorpes Beach.
For parents, the “EEI” takeaway is straightforward. Example: a samba workshop. Evidence: it is explicitly listed as part of Year 1 experiences. Implication: pupils get structured opportunities to build rhythm, listening, turn-taking, and performance confidence long before formal music tuition becomes a barrier.
The school day timings are published clearly: doors open at 8:40am, registration is 8:45am, and pick-up starts at 3:15pm.
Breakfast club is available in the morning, run in the school hall, with arrival from 8:00am to 8:25am and no advance booking required. Details of after-school wraparound beyond clubs are not consistently published in the sources accessed here, so families should ask directly what is available on each day of the week.
Uniform expectations are also set out in a practical list, including sensible guidance on footwear.
Attendance sensitivity. The inspection highlights that some pupils miss too much school, and this can create learning gaps and social difficulties. If your child has a history of absence, ask how the school rebuilds routines and learning quickly.
Reading fluency development. Phonics is consistent, but reading fluency approaches are not yet fully consistent across the school. Ask what targeted fluency practice looks like, especially for pupils who decode accurately but read slowly.
Competition for Reception places. Recent data shows more applications than offers. If you are relying on a place here, use FindMySchool’s Map Search and keep realistic contingency options.
Infant-to-junior transfer is a second admissions moment. Families need to apply again for Year 3 junior school places, with the same core application window as Reception entry in North East Lincolnshire.
A Good-rated infant and nursery school with strong early reading foundations, a curriculum designed to build knowledge coherently, and a notably detailed enrichment and experiences calendar for this age range. It suits families who want a structured start, clear routines, and frequent “real world” learning experiences, and who can support consistent attendance. The main challenge is securing admission at the key entry points, especially Reception.
It is rated Good in the latest inspection, with positive evidence around pupils feeling safe, strong relationships, and an ambitious curriculum. The same report also identifies specific improvement priorities, including a more consistent approach to reading fluency and tighter curriculum precision in a small number of subjects.
Applications are coordinated by North East Lincolnshire Council. The published window opens 07 November 2025 and closes 15 January 2026, with allocations released on 16 April 2026.
Yes, nursery applications are handled directly by the school. The website advises applying when children are between 2 and 2½ years old, ready to start at age 3, and notes that funded hours are available for eligible families.
Doors open at 8:40am, registration is at 8:45am, and pick-up begins at 3:15pm.
The school publishes a varied club menu across the year, including Choir, Computing, Cooking, Drama, Gymnastics, Skipping, Forest School, Makaton, and Science.
Get in touch with the school directly
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