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.
Brierley Primary School sits in Wistaston, serving families who want a traditional primary structure with a strong emphasis on care, routines, and practical support for working parents. The school’s mission statement, Nurture, Aspire, Believe, Achieve, is used consistently across its public messaging and links directly to how it talks about behaviour, wellbeing, and ambition.
Academically, the 2024 Key Stage 2 picture is mixed. 68% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, which is above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 14.33% achieved greater depth, above the England average of 8%. That said, reading expected standard (57%) and science expected standard (75%) sit below England averages (62% and 82%). This is a school where outcomes vary by subject, and where the detail matters more than a single headline.
For families thinking about entry, demand is real. Recent reception-place demand data shows 79 applications for 30 offers and an oversubscribed status, which means admissions planning needs to be deliberate.
Brierley positions itself as a “school family”, and the language on its website repeatedly comes back to safety, belonging, and confidence building. The mission statement is not just a strapline, it is framed as the organising idea for how pupils are supported to aim high and feel capable.
Leadership appears settled and visible. The headteacher is Mrs Coral McIntosh, and official records list her as headteacher, while the school’s own staff information also presents her as the overall safeguarding lead. A much older inspection report notes a headteacher appointment in September 2007, and the naming convention in later correspondence aligns with the same headteacher surname and initial, suggesting long tenure and continuity.
Day-to-day culture is reinforced through systems pupils can understand. One example is the “house” approach, which assigns pupils to Delamere, Jodrell, Anderton, or Tatton, explicitly linked to Cheshire landmarks. It is used for sports and activities, but also for recognition through house points (Dojos), which matters because it turns behaviour and participation into something concrete for younger children.
Early years is not treated as an add-on. The linked Little Bears Nursery describes a play-based curriculum for ages 3 to 4 and emphasises independence and personalisation. For families who value a gentle start with a clear pathway into Reception, that nursery-to-school connection is a practical advantage.
The most recent published Key Stage 2 outcomes (2024) show a nuanced profile:
Combined reading, writing and maths (expected standard): 68%, above the England average of 62%.
Higher standard (greater depth across reading, writing and maths): 14.33%, above the England average of 8%.
Reading expected standard: 57%, below the England average of 62%.
Maths expected standard: 79%, comfortably above typical national benchmarks and supported by a maths scaled score of 104.
GPS expected standard: 64%, with an average GPS scaled score of 103.
Science expected standard: 75%, below the England average of 82%.
The scaled score totals reinforce the story of a school that does better in some components than others. Reading and maths scaled scores are both 103 to 104, which indicates many pupils are working around the expected standard, while the combined expected measure suggests the cohort, overall, managed to convert that into combined outcomes better than the national average.
Rankings provide additional context. Brierley is ranked 10,867th in England and 20th in the Crewe local area for primary outcomes in FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings based on official data. That placement sits below England average overall, and it is a reminder to families to look at the subject-level strengths and the school’s improvement trajectory, not only the rank.
One sensible way to interpret this: outcomes are not uniformly strong, but there are identifiable positives (combined expected, higher standard, maths) that are worth probing during visits and conversations, especially around reading and science.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
68%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Brierley describes a curriculum built around the National Curriculum, with a stated focus on continuity, progression, and a creative cross-curricular approach where it fits. Subjects listed include the full set of core and foundation subjects, plus Personal, Social, Health and Citizenship Education. French is taught as Modern Foreign Languages for Years 3 to 6.
Computing is explained in unusually practical terms for a primary website. The school sets out five strands, including computer systems and networks, programming and debugging, creating media, data handling, and online safety. For parents, that level of clarity matters because it shows how computing is organised and assessed, rather than being treated as a generic “we do coding” claim.
In Key Stage 2, homework is framed as both skills practice and topic-linked projects, including model making and presentations. That approach tends to suit pupils who enjoy producing and sharing work, and it helps families see what “home learning” looks like in practice.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a state primary serving pupils up to Year 6, the most important “next step” question is transition into local secondary schools across Cheshire East. Brierley’s admissions information is coordinated through Cheshire East Council, and that same local authority coordination will also shape typical secondary pathways for many families.
Because secondary allocation depends on the Cheshire East admissions process and family preferences, parents should treat Year 6 planning as a two-part job: understand which secondary schools are realistic under current criteria, and map the journey time. FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful here for modelling practical travel options alongside the admissions realities.
For pupils, the most effective transition experiences usually come from predictable routines and clear handover between Year 6 and Year 7. Families will want to ask how Brierley prepares pupils for the shift in expectations, homework demands, and independence, especially for children who need a little extra structure at the start of secondary.
Reception entry is coordinated through Cheshire East Council rather than directly through the school. The school’s own admissions page makes this explicit, and it also references the council timetable for deadlines.
For September 2026 Reception entry, Cheshire East’s published timetable sets out these key dates:
Applications open: 1 September 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
Offers made: 16 April 2026
Deadline to accept or refuse: 30 April 2026
Demand indicators suggest competition. Recent reception demand data shows 79 applications for 30 offers, and an oversubscribed status. The “applications per place” ratio in that same results is 2.63, which signals that families should not assume a place will be available simply because they live locally.
74.4%
1st preference success rate
29 of 39 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
79
Safeguarding responsibility is clearly signposted, including the headteacher’s role and the named Designated Safeguarding Lead. That transparency helps families know who holds responsibility and how safeguarding is structured.
The school also emphasises consistency in behaviour approaches, including sharing a home version of its behaviour system for families who want to mirror school routines. That tends to be helpful for pupils who respond well to predictable, visual, and repeatable expectations.
SEND information is presented in a practical, school-facing way, highlighting coordination and oversight responsibilities across vulnerable learner groups. For parents of children with additional needs, the right next step is to ask how support looks in class, how interventions are chosen, and how progress is reviewed over a term.
Brierley is specific about the mechanics of its clubs programme. Clubs run across the year, change by half term, and places are allocated with an emphasis on fairness and rotation so that pupils can access different activities over time.
The school lists a mix of sport and curriculum-linked clubs. Examples include computing, science, and art clubs alongside activities like hockey, gymnastics, and tag rugby. That blend matters because it means extracurricular is not only sport, it also supports curiosity and skill-building for pupils whose interests are academic or creative.
Sport has a distinct identity here. The school describes participation in the Crewe and Nantwich School Sports Partnership and highlights recognised School Games Award status, including recent Platinum-level awards. That combination points to organised fixtures and a structured approach to participation rather than occasional one-off events.
Two school-specific features stand out:
Swimming provision using an on-site heated pool supplied through Pools to Schools, with lessons delivered for Years 2 to 6.
Forest School framing outdoor learning as a regular, structured approach rather than a single annual “outdoor day”.
The standard school day is described as 9:00am to 3:15pm in the school’s remote learning information, which provides a useful anchor for families planning routines.
Wraparound care is unusually well-defined for a primary. Breakfast club runs 7:30am to 8:30am (£3.50 per session), and after-school club runs 3:15pm to 6:00pm with multiple price points depending on collection time.
For travel, the school sits in Crewe, and many families will find that walking, short car journeys, or local buses are the practical options day to day. For wider commuting, Crewe’s rail connections can support longer-distance routines, but parents should be realistic about peak-time travel and childcare handovers.
Outcomes vary by subject. Combined reading, writing and maths is above the England average, but reading and science sit below England averages. This is a school where it is worth asking what is being done specifically in reading fluency and science knowledge-building.
Oversubscription is a real constraint. Recent data shows 79 applications for 30 offers and an oversubscribed status. Families should treat admissions as competitive and build a sensible set of preferences.
Nursery information is warm and inviting, but check operational detail. Little Bears Nursery describes a play-based approach for ages 3 to 4, but families should still confirm session patterns, hours, and how progression into Reception is handled in practice.
Wraparound care is strong, but it is paid provision. Breakfast and after-school club pricing is clear and structured, which is helpful, but families should model costs across the week if they will rely on it regularly.
Brierley Primary School is a community-focused state primary with a clearly articulated nurture-led ethos, strong wraparound provision, and practical enrichment through clubs, sport, swimming, and outdoor learning. Academic results are not uniformly strong across subjects, but there are clear positives in combined expected outcomes and higher-standard performance that suggest capacity for strong attainment when conditions align.
Best suited to families who value a structured, caring environment, need reliable before and after-school options, and are prepared to engage closely with reading and curriculum priorities. The main hurdle is admission competitiveness, so planning early matters.
Brierley Primary School is currently judged Good, and the most recent inspection also graded the key areas, including early years provision, as Good. Academically, 68% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in the latest published Key Stage 2 results, above the England average of 62%, although reading and science outcomes sit below England averages.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Cheshire East Council, and places are allocated using the local authority’s published criteria rather than a simple informal catchment rule.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:30am, and the after-school club runs from 3:15pm to 6:00pm on weekdays during term time, with pricing that varies by pick-up time.
Cheshire East’s timetable states that applications open on 1 September 2025, close on 15 January 2026, and offers are made on 16 April 2026, with acceptance by 30 April 2026.
Brierley’s Little Bears Nursery is for ages 3 to 4 and describes a play-based approach. Nursery attendance does not, by itself, replace the need to apply for Reception through Cheshire East’s admissions process, so families should plan on completing the formal application even if their child attends nursery.
Get in touch with the school directly
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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