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.
Growth has shaped this school from the start. The Mease Spencer Academy opened in September 2019, and it has built its approach around consistent routines, a carefully sequenced curriculum, and a clear emphasis on personal development.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (6 February 2024) judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding for personal development. The picture that emerges is of a primary that puts relationships and readiness to learn at the centre, with a strong reading and phonics offer and clear expectations for behaviour.
Leadership is stable, with Mrs Julia Hart named as principal across official sources. Admissions are competitive on recent local application figures, so families should treat this as a school where planning matters and deadlines matter. (See Admissions for September 2026 entry.)
A school that opened in 2019 inevitably has a different feel from long established primaries. Here, that “newness” shows up in systems, language, and routines that have been designed deliberately, rather than inherited. The school’s core values are packaged as REFLECT, and these are used as a common vocabulary for how pupils are expected to behave and learn.
Expectations are made simple for children. The behaviour rules are framed as ready, respectful, safe, and kindness is treated as a constant theme in how pupils interact with adults and with each other. This matters for families who prioritise calm routines, predictable boundaries, and a consistent message across classrooms.
Personal development is a headline strength. The inspection evidence describes a programme that deliberately broadens pupils’ experiences beyond day to day lessons and encourages contribution to community life, healthy habits, and an understanding of wider responsibilities. In a practical, primary-school way, this tends to mean pupils getting many structured opportunities to try activities, take on small responsibilities, and learn language around feelings and relationships.
A distinctive detail is how explicitly the school teaches consent and emotional regulation. After lunch, “calm time” is used to help pupils reset for the afternoon, and in early years there are routines where children are taught to ask permission before offering a peer a gentle massage, with a clear emphasis that others can say no. Families who value early, age-appropriate personal boundaries and self regulation will likely recognise the intent behind this approach.
What can be said, confidently and usefully, is that the school’s most recent inspection judged the quality of education as Good, and it describes a curriculum that is carefully planned so that prior learning feeds clearly into what comes next. Early reading is identified as a strength, supported by rigorous staff training and close monitoring of pupils who need extra help to keep up.
There is also an important context point for parents: because the school opened in 2019, it has been building year groups over time. The inspection evidence notes that, at the time, the curriculum had been written through to Year 6, but the full impact could not yet be evaluated in the traditional “end-to-end” way because the school had not previously had the full primary journey in place for all cohorts.
Implication for families: academic quality is supported by formal evidence, but if you are looking for long historical exam trends, this is not that kind of school yet. It is a newer provision that has prioritised getting curriculum design, reading foundations, and classroom routines right first.
Teaching is described as structured and explicit. Staff are trained to introduce new learning clearly, give pupils time to practise before independent work, and check understanding routinely so misconceptions are addressed early rather than left to harden. This is the kind of instructional model that often suits pupils who benefit from clarity and repetition, particularly in early literacy and early number work.
Phonics and early reading are a central pillar. The inspection evidence points to rigorous staff training in the school’s phonics programme, strong pace in learning sounds, and prompt, targeted support for pupils who fall behind. There is also a practical commitment to reading culture, with books described as highly visible around the school and a library space designed to encourage pupils to settle with a book.
The way the school handles special educational needs and disabilities is described as early and systematic. Early years staff liaise with families and pre-school settings so support is in place when children start, and adaptations are planned so pupils with SEND access the same curriculum as their peers wherever possible. This points to a mainstream primary that is trying to make inclusion work through curriculum planning and classroom practice, rather than treating support as separate from teaching.
If you are trying to picture classroom “texture”, the inspection gives a few concrete learning snapshots: Reception pupils working on number composition, Year 3 pupils using atlases to locate cities and rivers, and curriculum deep dives including early reading and mathematics. These are small details, but they help anchor what teaching looks like day to day.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the key transition is to Year 7. The school’s official communications available for this review do not publish a destination list or named secondary pathways with figures, so it would be misleading to claim that most pupils go to any single named secondary without direct evidence.
What families can do, and should do early, is check the local authority’s coordinated admissions information for secondary transfer, then map likely options based on home address, transport, and admissions criteria. A practical step is to use FindMySchool’s map tools to understand distance and local alternatives, then validate the details against the local authority process for your child’s year group.
Because the school is part of a wider multi-academy trust, some families also look at trust secondaries in the wider area as part of their medium-term planning, particularly if they want continuity of ethos and shared practices across phases.
The school is oversubscribed on the provided admissions results: 100 applications for 29 offers, which equates to 3.45 applications per place. First preferences also exceeded places, with a 1.45 ratio of first preferences to first preference offers. Entry is competitive, and families should treat this as a school where timing and criteria matter.
For Reception entry in September 2026 (2026 to 2027 academic year), Derbyshire’s published timeline is clear:
Applications open online from 10 November 2025
The closing date is midnight on 15 January 2026
Offers are issued on 16 April 2026
Implication for families: this is not a “leave it late and see” process. You can apply at any point after the system opens, but you must submit by the closing date to be treated as on time.
If you are considering an in-year move, treat that as a separate process from the normal admissions round, and check the school’s published admissions information and the local authority route for your circumstances.
69.0%
1st preference success rate
29 of 42 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
29
Offers
29
Applications
100
The school’s strengths in personal development are not presented as a bolt-on. They sit within a wider approach to relationships, emotional regulation, and consistent behavioural expectations. For many families, this matters as much as academic content, especially for younger pupils who need to feel secure before they can learn well.
There is also evidence of staff attention to pupils’ emotional skills in a way that is specific, not generic, for example the lunch time reset routine and explicit teaching around consent and personal boundaries in early years.
Ofsted also confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular breadth is part of how the school builds confidence and personal interests. The school’s published club list includes sports themes that vary by term and named activities including Soccer Stars, girls’ football, and street dance.
Wraparound provision is more detailed than many primaries publish. Mac’s Club runs on site, with breakfast club open Monday to Friday, 7:30am to 8:45am, and an after-school club open Monday to Friday, 3:30pm to 6:15pm, during term time. Activities described for wraparound include board games, sport and team games, Lego or construction, craft, puzzles, and supported reading or homework where requested.
There is also a strong hint of enrichment culture running through the curriculum itself, with pupils citing topics like the Titanic and space as examples of learning they enjoy, and the inspection evidence describing a broad set of experiences designed to extend beyond formal lessons.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual costs such as uniform, trips, and any paid clubs.
Wraparound care is a concrete strength here: Mac’s Club covers both early drop-off and after-school childcare on weekdays in term time. For core school day timings, term dates, and any changes to routines, families should use the school’s published information and confirm details directly with the school.
For travel, Hilton is served primarily by local bus routes and family car journeys, and many parents will prioritise whether a safe walk or short drive is realistic at peak drop-off and pick-up times. If you are shortlisting, it is worth testing the route at the times you would actually travel.
Competition for places. The admissions results suggests demand is high relative to places. Families should take deadlines seriously and understand the admissions criteria early.
A newer school building long-term track record. Opened in 2019, it is still in the phase where systems and curriculum are being proven over time. That suits many families, but those who want decades of results history may prefer an older, more established primary.
Systems must scale as the school grows. Inspection evidence highlights the need for processes to keep pace as pupil numbers rise, with some parental dissatisfaction linked to how a small number of concerns were handled. Families who value very high-touch communication may want to explore how the school now manages queries and feedback.
Behaviour is generally strong, but not uniform for every child. The vast majority engage well, yet the inspection evidence notes a small number who do not consistently meet leaders’ expectations for learning attitudes. If your child struggles with sustained attention, ask how support and routines are applied day to day.
The Mease Spencer Academy stands out for the clarity of its routines, the strength of its early reading approach, and an unusually strong personal development offer for a newer primary. The 2024 inspection profile supports a school that is well organised and ambitious for pupils, with safeguarding in place and relationships treated as a core driver of learning.
Who it suits: families who want a structured mainstream primary with clear expectations, a strong emphasis on reading foundations, and a wide personal development programme. The main challenge is securing a place in a competitive admissions context.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (6 February 2024) judged the school Good overall and Outstanding for personal development. The report highlights carefully planned curriculum sequencing, strong early reading, and warm relationships between adults and pupils.
Applications are made through Derbyshire’s coordinated admissions process. The online application window opens on 10 November 2025 and closes at midnight on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Wraparound care is provided by Mac’s Club, with breakfast club running from 7:30am to 8:45am and after-school club from 3:30pm to 6:15pm on weekdays during term time.
The school publishes a club offer that includes sports themes that change by term and named options such as Soccer Stars, girls’ football, and street dance. Club availability can vary across the year, so families should check the current list for the term you are applying.
Get in touch with the school directly
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