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.
Small primaries can be hard to judge from the outside, because “small” sometimes means limited options. Here, the data and the wider evidence point in the opposite direction. Urchfont Church of England Primary School’s Key Stage 2 outcomes sit well above England averages, and the school is placed in the top 10% of primaries in England on FindMySchool’s ranking (based on official outcomes data). Its local position is also strong, ranking 2nd in the Devizes area.
Leadership has recently changed following an academy conversion on 01 September 2025, with Mrs Catherine Groves now headteacher. That timing matters for parents, because it usually signals some change in systems, reporting and governance even when a school’s day-to-day character remains consistent.
This is a Church of England primary with a clearly articulated values framework. The school’s published values include Respect, Compassion, Joy, Perseverance, Wisdom and Courage, and the Christian underpinning is described as being embedded through the day rather than confined to occasional events. For families who want an overt faith character, that clarity helps. For families who are not regular churchgoers, the key question is whether they are comfortable with a school culture that explicitly draws on Christian language and reflection.
The most recent Ofsted inspection evidence describes a calm and purposeful atmosphere, with strong routines in the early years and clear expectations for behaviour. Pupils are described as feeling safe and comfortable talking to adults if they are worried, and safeguarding is confirmed as effective.
Distinctive touches in the wider life of the school lean into community and responsibility rather than flash. The inspection report references pupil roles such as recycling monitors and school council, and examples of community participation including contributions to an annual village festival. That combination, structured routines plus small-school responsibility, often suits pupils who like clear boundaries and practical roles.
A final point on context: the setting is Urchfont, and Wiltshire Council’s community history record shows schooling in the village going back at least to the mid 18th century. That does not make the modern school “that old” in institutional terms, but it does reinforce the sense that education is part of the village’s long-established infrastructure.
Urchfont’s Key Stage 2 results (the end of primary assessments) are notably strong.
In 2024, 83.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
The England average is 62%.
For parents, the implication is straightforward: the typical Year 6 cohort is achieving securely across the core. That usually translates into confident transition into Year 7 for pupils who attend a wide range of secondaries. It can also indicate a school that has its core curriculum nailed down, including foundational writing and maths fluency.
That gap suggests there is meaningful stretch for higher prior attainers, not just basic consolidation. For families weighing whether a small primary can still challenge confident readers and mathematicians, this is one of the most reassuring signals in the published data.
Reading scaled score: 109
Mathematics scaled score: 106
Grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS) scaled score: 113
Scaled scores help because they are less sensitive to cohort size than raw percentages. Taken together, they reinforce the picture of strong literacy, strong maths, and particularly strong technical English skills.
Using FindMySchool’s proprietary ranking (based on official outcomes data), the school is ranked 853rd in England for primary outcomes and 2nd in the Devizes area. That places it well above England average, in the top 10% of primaries in England. Parents comparing nearby options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to see how these outcomes sit alongside other local schools.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
83.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The most recent inspection evidence describes an ambitious curriculum that is sequenced from early years to Year 6, and highlights a deliberate focus on subject vocabulary and on checking understanding so gaps are addressed quickly. In practice, that combination tends to look like clear modelling, careful practice, and teachers being precise about language choices across subjects.
Reading is flagged as a particular strength. Pupils are described as starting to learn to read as soon as they join the school, with books closely matched to the sounds being taught. The implication for parents is that early literacy is treated as a cornerstone rather than an add-on, and that weaker early readers are likely to be identified quickly.
Inspection evidence also points to a developing “subject expert” approach in the wider curriculum, with history given as a concrete example. The same evidence notes that some subject curriculums were still relatively new at the time of inspection, meaning older pupils had not yet built deep knowledge across every subject area. For parents, the sensible read is that core areas are highly secure, while wider subject depth has been an area of strategic focus rather than a settled endpoint.
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 Wiltshire village primary, pupils will typically move on to a range of secondaries depending on family preference, distance, and admissions criteria, including schools in and around Devizes and the wider area. The school itself is clear that Reception admissions are coordinated by Wiltshire, which usually indicates a mainstream transition pattern rather than a feeder arrangement to a single secondary.
For families trying to plan ahead, the most practical step is to shortlist likely secondaries early and then work backwards, focusing on travel time and admissions rules. If you are weighing options by geography, FindMySchoolMap Search can help you model realistic travel distances and compare alternatives without relying on “it seems close” assumptions.
Reception entry is through Wiltshire’s coordinated admissions process rather than direct allocation by the school. The school’s own published admissions information states a published admission number of 16 for Reception, and encourages prospective parents to arrange a visit.
Demand is meaningful even with a small intake. In the most recent admissions snapshot provided, there were 19 applications for 10 offers on the primary entry route, with an oversubscribed status and around 1.9 applications per place. The implication is that families should take admissions seriously even though the school is small, and should not assume availability. (No “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure is available provided for this school, so it is not sensible to plan based on a historic cut-off distance.)
Wiltshire’s published guidance for September 2026 primary entry includes:
Apply by 15 January 2026 (national deadline)
National offer day: 16 April 2026
These are local-authority level dates, so they apply regardless of which Wiltshire primary is listed first.
Applications
19
Total received
Places Offered
10
Subscription Rate
1.9x
Applications per place
A small school can be a pastoral advantage when routines are strong and expectations are consistent. Ofsted’s evidence describes pupils as feeling safe and willing to speak to adults when worried, and it describes leaders setting high expectations for behaviour that pupils meet. That is the kind of safeguarding and culture baseline most parents want to see clearly evidenced.
Pastoral work also shows up in the way pupils are given responsibility and a voice, from formal roles to school council participation. In a small setting, those opportunities are often more accessible, because leadership roles are not restricted to a tiny fraction of a large cohort.
Extracurricular provision is described by the school as varying term to term, with a mix of teacher-led and external-provider clubs. That flexibility is typical in small primaries and can be a strength when the club offer responds to pupil interest rather than sticking to the same list all year.
Recent examples published by the school include football, calligraphy, mindful colouring, netball, tag rugby, and judo. The implication for parents is a balance of sport, creative work, and wellbeing-oriented activities, rather than a single dominant pillar. The external-provider point matters too, because it signals that some clubs may involve additional cost depending on the provider.
Community-linked projects are also part of the broader experience. Inspection evidence references creative work connected to a “festival of colour” project (dance, poetry and art), and community contributions such as making a scarecrow for a village festival. Those specifics help parents understand that “creative curriculum” here is not just a label, it shows up in tangible projects.
The published school week is 32.5 hours. Doors open and pupils are supervised from 8.40am; the school day starts at 8.45am and ends at 3.15pm, with lunch running 12.00pm to 1.00pm.
Lunches are supplied by an external provider, and the published price for Years 3 to Year 6 is £2.40 per meal, while pupils in Reception to Year 2 receive free school meals through the universal infant offer.
Wraparound care can be a decisive factor for working families. The school publishes after-school clubs and the core day timings, but it does not clearly publish a standing breakfast club or after-school care offer on the pages reviewed. Parents who need childcare coverage beyond 3.15pm should check directly with the school before relying on it.
Small intake, real competition. With a published admission number of 16 for Reception and an oversubscribed picture timing and application accuracy matter.
Faith character is explicit. This is a Church of England school with Christian values and reflection described as integrated into daily school life. Families seeking a fully secular setting should weigh that carefully.
Wider curriculum depth was still developing at the last inspection point. Core strengths are clear, but inspection evidence noted that some subjects were newer and not yet fully embedded for older pupils. Parents may want to ask how this has progressed since 2023.
Wraparound care is not clearly published. If you need consistent childcare beyond the school day, verify the current offer and any costs early.
Urchfont Church of England Primary School combines the two things parents most often struggle to find together: a genuinely small-school feel and outcomes that sit well above England averages. It is best suited to families who value a calm, structured environment, are comfortable with an explicit Church of England ethos, and want strong academic foundations without a “big school” scale.
The main constraint is practical rather than educational. With a small Reception intake and an oversubscribed picture securing a place is the hurdle, so families should plan early and keep alternative options live.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (May 2023) confirmed the school continues to be good, with effective safeguarding and a calm, purposeful atmosphere. Key Stage 2 outcomes are well above England averages, including 83.67% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths.
Applications for Wiltshire primary places are made through the local authority’s coordinated process. The national deadline for September 2026 primary entry in Wiltshire is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
83.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 31% achieved greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%. Reading, maths and GPS scaled scores are also above typical England benchmarks.
The school publishes the core day timings (8.45am to 3.15pm) and a programme of after-school clubs that varies by term. A formal wraparound childcare offer is not clearly published on the pages reviewed, so families needing regular childcare beyond 3.15pm should confirm arrangements directly.
The school publishes a set of Christian values and describes them as embedded throughout the day, alongside community-focused roles and service. Families who want a faith-informed culture will likely see that as a positive; families wanting a strictly secular approach should factor it in early.
Get in touch with the school directly
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