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.
St Michael’s Primary School and Nursery sits on Colchester’s southern edge, and its identity is tied closely to the local garrison community. Established in 1971 to serve the Montgomery Garrison Estate, it still emphasises close links with service families alongside a broader local intake.
Leadership has recently changed, with Ms Gail Morgan listed as headteacher from September 2025. That matters because the school is currently in the phase where routines, expectations, and improvement priorities tend to sharpen, especially around teaching consistency and pupil outcomes.
The most recent published Key Stage 2 picture is mixed rather than headline grabbing. In 2024, 62.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, essentially in line with the England average of 62%. Reading looks comparatively stronger, with 79% at the expected standard, while science (79%) sits below the England benchmark of 82%. Based on FindMySchool’s ranking methodology (built from official data), the school ranks 11,020th in England and 54th in Colchester for primary outcomes, which places it below England average overall when compared with other primary schools.
Admissions demand is real. For the latest Reception entry-route data, there were 55 applications for 21 offers, around 2.62 applications per place, and the school is marked oversubscribed.
St Michael’s positions itself as an inclusive community school, and that is reinforced by the language it uses publicly. The school’s day-to-day expectations are framed through a simple code, including kindness, trying your best, listening, and respect. This kind of visible “social contract” tends to suit families who want clear behaviour norms without an overly punitive feel, especially in the younger years.
There is also a distinctive strand running through the school’s service connections. The school describes long-standing Armed Forces links and maintains dedicated content around military connections, which is unusual for a mainstream primary and can help service families feel understood quickly, particularly during transitions and postings. That aspect may matter as much socially as it does practically, because pupil mobility can be a real feature in garrison areas.
The school day structure, and what it implies about organisation, is described in unusually practical detail. There are set breaktimes for Years 1 to 6 (10.20am), a clear lunch rotation by phase, and an explicit approach to drop-off and collection that prioritises parent presence in the playground to support communication. For many families, that last point is not trivial. Easy, frequent informal contact can prevent minor worries becoming big ones.
St Michael’s is a state primary with published Key Stage 2 measures, so the fairest way to read performance is through both attainment and the wider distribution of outcomes.
In 2024, 62.33% reached the expected standard. The England average is 62%, so St Michael’s is broadly in line on this headline measure.
13% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England benchmark of 8%. That suggests a smaller but meaningful group of pupils are being stretched into greater depth outcomes, even if the overall attainment picture is not yet strong across the cohort.
Reading scaled score is 105, maths 103, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 102. These are the type of “steady, slightly above” scores that often show a broadly effective core curriculum, with room to tighten consistency and reduce gaps between subjects.
Reading (79% expected) is notably stronger than maths (66%) and grammar, punctuation and spelling (58%). Science expected standard is 79%, below the England reference point of 82%. This pattern often shows that comprehension and reading culture may be a relative strength, while technical accuracy and extended writing mechanics may require more systematic teaching.
Ranked 11,020th in England and 54th in Colchester for primary outcomes, the school sits below England average compared with other primaries. This is a helpful “competitive context” signal for parents, especially in an area with many alternatives, but it should be read alongside the recent inspection grades and the reality that school cohorts vary year to year.
Inspection evidence adds important colour. The latest Ofsted inspection (14 January 2025) graded Quality of education as Good, Behaviour and attitudes as Good, Personal development as Outstanding, Leadership and management as Good, and Early years as Good.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
62.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school describes a thematic approach that is designed to motivate and connect subjects through planned links across the term. In practice, thematic models work best when subject knowledge progression is mapped carefully underneath the topics, otherwise curriculum coverage can become uneven. The Ofsted grades suggest the fundamentals are in place, with personal development an especially strong strand.
Early years matters here because the school takes children from age 3 and describes continuous provision for Reception, including indoor and outdoor learning through the day rather than a rigid break structure. That tends to suit children who learn through exploration and play-based routines, while still needing a clear runway into Key Stage 1 expectations.
A useful signpost for families is the way the school talks about safeguarding roles and leadership responsibilities. The headteacher is listed as Designated Safeguarding Lead, with named deputies and inclusion leadership also clearly signposted. This matters less as a “badge” and more as an indication that responsibility lines are explicit, which is normally associated with reliable practice.
As a community primary in Essex, transition is typically shaped by Local Authority admissions and local secondary capacity rather than a single destination pipeline. The school does not publish a specific named list of secondary destinations on its own site, so it is best to assume families move on to a range of Colchester secondary schools, with selective routes (where relevant) handled through the usual countywide processes.
What St Michael’s can realistically do well, and indicates through its emphasis on communication and inclusive practice, is support transition quality for pupils who need additional pastoral input, including those moving between schools due to family relocation. For service families, this can be as important as the destination itself.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Essex County Council rather than handled directly by the school. The school states that Essex typically sends information to parents in October of the preceding year and that applications are usually made online.
For the September 2026 intake, Essex’s published primary admissions directory states a deadline of 15 January 2026 for applications. If you are considering St Michael’s, it is worth working backwards from that date and planning visits early in the autumn term, particularly if you expect the year to be oversubscribed.
Demand indicators support that. The latest entry-route figures provided show 55 applications and 21 offers, which is around 2.62 applications per place, and the school is marked oversubscribed. Where distance offered data is not available, the practical implication is simple: you should treat proximity as important, but verify the current year’s allocation rules and how they apply to your address.
100%
1st preference success rate
21 of 21 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
21
Offers
21
Applications
55
Pastoral language is a visible priority on the website, with a specific wellbeing section that frames emotional health as “everybody’s business” and signals support for pupils, families, and staff. This aligns well with the inspection profile, where personal development was graded Outstanding in January 2025.
The school also highlights inclusion strands such as young carers support, which is a meaningful differentiator in a mainstream primary because it acknowledges a group of pupils who can face hidden barriers to attendance and readiness to learn. It is the kind of practical, pastoral work that often matters more to daily experience than headline attainment.
Enrichment is described with enough specificity to be useful, rather than generic “lots of clubs” language. The school publishes a timetable that includes KS2 football, gymnastics for Years 1 to 3, netball for Years 4 to 6, KS2 dodgeball, choir club, and dance club, alongside lunchtime sports clubs for Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2.
There are also pupil voice and community structures that point to a broad definition of participation: a Learning Council, an Anti-Bullying League, and a Multi-Schools Council are all signposted. In practical terms, these give children structured ways to contribute and be heard, which often supports confidence and behaviour as much as it supports “leadership”.
A small but telling detail sits in the lunchtime offer. The school describes a PlayPod that opens each lunchtime, where children can borrow equipment to play and experiment with. For primary-aged pupils, that kind of play infrastructure can reduce low-level lunchtime conflict and improve social mixing.
The school publishes its core day clearly: the school day starts at 8.50am and finishes at 3.20pm, totalling 32 hours and 30 minutes per week. Lunch is staggered by phase, and there is a morning break at 10.20am for Years 1 to 6, while Reception operates through continuous provision.
Transport and site routines are also explicitly addressed. The school encourages walking as the preferred option, promotes cycling, and notes a lockable bike shelter. If you rely on car travel, the school asks families to park carefully with residents in mind, which usually signals that local roads are under pressure at pick-up times.
Wraparound care is signposted in the navigation, but detailed times and provider arrangements are not clearly published in the accessible pages surfaced in this research. Families who need breakfast or after-school provision should confirm current availability directly with the school.
Outcomes are currently mixed. The 2024 combined expected standard (62.33%) is in line with England, but the overall FindMySchool ranking places the school below England average compared with other primaries. This may suit families prioritising community feel and pastoral strength, but those seeking consistently high attainment across the cohort should interrogate how teaching consistency is being strengthened.
Oversubscription pressure. With 55 applications for 21 offers in the latest entry-route data (about 2.62 applications per place), admission is competitive. If you are outside the immediate local area, treat entry as uncertain and plan alternatives early.
Leadership transition period. A headteacher listed from September 2025 can be a positive catalyst, but it is also a period where systems settle and priorities become clearer. On a visit, ask how curriculum and assessment consistency is being driven across year groups.
Wraparound care clarity. The school day is published clearly, but wraparound details are not consistently visible in the pages reviewed. If childcare is non-negotiable for your household, confirm the current offer before you shortlist.
St Michael’s Primary School and Nursery is a community school with a distinctive service-family thread, clear behavioural expectations, and an inspection profile that points to strong personal development. Academic outcomes are currently more “steady” than standout, with reading a relative strength and a higher-standard cohort performing above England benchmarks, but overall comparative ranking suggests there is work to do to lift consistency across the full year group.
Who it suits: families in Berechurch and the south Colchester area who value inclusion, pastoral strength, and a grounded community ethos, and who want a school day that is organised and clearly communicated. The main constraint is admission competitiveness, so practical planning matters.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (January 2025) graded the school Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, leadership and management, and early years provision, with personal development graded Outstanding. Academically, 2024 Key Stage 2 results were broadly in line with England on the headline expected standard measure, so the school’s strengths are likely to be felt most in culture, support, and personal development rather than purely in top-end attainment.
Reception entry is coordinated by Essex County Council. For the September 2026 intake, Essex’s published primary admissions directory gives an application deadline of 15 January 2026. Families should check the current Local Authority timetable each year, as dates and processes can change.
Yes. The school admits children from age 3 and includes nursery provision as part of the setting. For current nursery session patterns and any paid-hours options, use the school’s official information and confirm details directly with the school.
In 2024, 62.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, which is broadly in line with the England benchmark. Reading (79% expected) appears stronger than maths (66%) and grammar, punctuation and spelling (58%). At the higher standard, 13% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England reference point of 8%.
The published enrichment programme includes activities such as KS2 football, gymnastics for Years 1 to 3, netball for Years 4 to 6, KS2 dodgeball, choir, and dance. The school also highlights pupil leadership and wellbeing strands such as the Learning Council, Anti-Bullying League, and support for young carers.
Get in touch with the school directly
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