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.
For families who want an infant school that starts early and supports working patterns, this is a practical option. The age range is 3 to 7, with Nursery through to Year 2, and the school describes itself as two-form entry, with capacity figures set out for Nursery and each class.
The latest inspection outcome is the headline to understand first. The most recent Ofsted inspection (9 to 10 April 2024) judged overall effectiveness as Requires improvement; behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision were graded Good.
Leadership matters too, because the inspection focus includes how well the wider curriculum is being developed and embedded. The headteacher is Mrs Amanda Pickup.
The school’s own framing is clear: “working together, valuing and nurturing children”, with three core descriptors used prominently, respectful, resilient, reflective. That language is not decorative. It signals a strong emphasis on how young pupils learn to behave, cooperate, and talk about their feelings, alongside early reading and number.
The April 2024 inspection describes a caring, happy, inclusive setting where pupils enjoy school, feel safe, and behave well, with calm routines in both Nursery and the main building. That matters for a 3 to 7 intake, because smooth transitions, predictable expectations, and adult responsiveness often drive progress as much as any single scheme or resource.
There are also a few specific “signature” bits of culture that help it feel distinctive. One is the use of class rewards linked to extra playtime in the school’s woodlands. Another is the way the school positions wellbeing work as part of daily practice, including a named programme used across the school.
This is an infant school, so the standard headline measures parents see for primary schools (end of Key Stage 2 data) are not applicable. In this case, published performance metrics are not available, so it is not possible to give a verified numerical summary of attainment or ranks.
What can be said with confidence, based on official evidence, is where the school’s academic strengths and development priorities sit right now. Core subjects are the clearest positive. Reading is treated as a priority, staff are trained in the chosen phonics programme, and pupils who find reading harder are identified quickly and supported through extra sessions.
The development area is the wider curriculum. The inspection notes that while reading, writing and mathematics have benefited from recent improvement work, several foundation subjects are at an earlier stage of development. The practical implication for families is that the basics are being taught with clearer structure than some wider subjects, and the school is still standardising what progression should look like from Nursery through to Year 2 beyond the core.
The curriculum intent is expressed in plain, early-years appropriate terms: building curiosity, establishing what children already know, explicitly teaching knowledge, skills and vocabulary, then giving opportunities to apply learning through investigation and problem solving. That sequencing is sensible for infant-aged pupils, where language development, talk, and hands-on practice are closely linked.
In practice, the April 2024 inspection suggests the strongest consistency sits in reading and the core curriculum, where planning and delivery are clearer, and staff confidence is higher. The same evidence points to a workload and implementation challenge while the wider curriculum is being rebuilt, which is typical when schools move from broad topic coverage to tighter progression models in every subject.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as a strength, with needs identified quickly and support put in place for areas such as speech and language development. The inspection also notes that for pupils with more complex needs, bespoke timetables and adapted spaces are used. For parents, the implication is that early identification and targeted support appears well-established, but the quality of adaptation may vary by subject until wider curriculum planning is sharper.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Requires Improvement
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Pupils leave at the end of Year 2, so the key transition is into a junior or primary school for Key Stage 2. The school does not sit within the 11-plus selection system itself, and there is no sixth form layer to consider. What matters most is how well the Year 2 to Year 3 handover is managed and how aligned the receiving school is with your child’s needs, particularly for pupils with speech, language, or wider special educational needs.
There are two different admissions routes to understand, Nursery and Reception.
Nursery: Children are eligible for 15 hours of funded early education from the term after their third birthday. The school offers five three-hour morning sessions or five three-hour afternoon sessions, with three entry points stated, September, January, and after Easter (subject to places). It also references the option of extended entitlement (up to 30 hours) for eligible families. Nursery applications are handled directly via the school’s own process, and moving from Nursery into Reception is explicitly not automatic.
Reception: Reception entry is coordinated by Kirklees Council. For September 2026 entry, Kirklees sets online applications opening on 1 September 2025, with the on-time deadline on Thursday 15 January 2026, and offers released on Thursday 16 April 2026. The same published timetable gives a house move evidence deadline of Sunday 15 February 2026 and an appeals timetable running into summer 2026.
Demand indicators suggest the school is oversubscribed on the primary entry route, with 107 applications for 54 offers, which is close to two applications per place. The practical takeaway is that families should treat admission as competitive and check how Kirklees applies its oversubscription criteria each year, including how distance, siblings, and other priorities are handled. Parents comparing options can use the FindMySchool Map Search to understand how their home address may sit against typical distance patterns, remembering that allocation outcomes vary by cohort.
Applications
107
Total received
Places Offered
54
Subscription Rate
2.0x
Apps per place
Wellbeing and safeguarding messaging is prominent across the school’s published information, including a named safeguarding team structure and curriculum references. The school also uses myHappymind as a whole-school approach to building emotional literacy and resilience in age-appropriate ways.
The inspection confirms safeguarding arrangements are effective, which is a basic but essential foundation for any early years and infant setting.
There is also a practical safeguarding stance on end-of-day collection: routines emphasise that pupils must be collected by a responsible adult, and the school sets clear expectations around who can collect children at Key Stage 1 age. For working families using wraparound care, it is worth checking how those rules interact with your planned pickup arrangements.
Enrichment is an area where parents should read the detail carefully. The April 2024 inspection notes enrichment opportunities exist but were limited at that point, with examples including school choir and a named Friday Fitness Club. Pupils also expressed interest in more drama and arts experiences.
On the school website, you can see a wider picture of “what enrichment means” in practice. The curriculum statement refers to a mix of lunchtime and after-school clubs, with examples spanning gardening, construction (lego), arts and craft activities, computing, sport and music. The implication is that the menu may shift over time, but there is an intent to provide breadth alongside the core early-learning focus.
Two concrete examples stand out as distinctive and verifiable. One is participation in The Big Sing at Dewsbury Town Hall, led by specialists from Musica Kirklees. Another is a school-run wraparound programme that uses the Rainbow Room as the base for after-school childcare, which can be important if you need continuity of staff and familiar spaces beyond the main day.
The school day start is 9.00am. Collection is staged by year group, with Reception collected at 3.25pm and Year 1 and Year 2 finishing at 3.30pm.
Wraparound provision is clearly described. Breakfast club runs from 7.45am, and after-school childcare runs until 6.00pm on weekdays. Published pricing on the school site states £5.00 per day (£25.00 per week) for breakfast club and £10 per session for the after-school childcare provision.
For travel, Dewsbury railway station is the most obvious rail hub for the town. Local bus services operate around Shaw Cross and along Leeds Road, which may suit families commuting within Dewsbury or towards nearby centres.
Requires improvement judgement. The April 2024 inspection outcome means the school is expected to improve within a defined timeframe, and families should ask what has changed since that visit, especially in curriculum planning and leadership capacity.
Wider curriculum still bedding in. Reading, writing and mathematics are described as stronger than some foundation subjects. If you value a broad early curriculum, ask for subject-specific examples (for example, history, geography, art) and how progression is tracked from Nursery to Year 2.
Enrichment breadth may feel variable. The inspection references limited enrichment at that time; if clubs and creative opportunities are important to you, check what is running this term, not just the general list.
Nursery to Reception is not automatic. If your child starts in Nursery, you still need to plan and apply through the local authority route for Reception, and timelines matter.
This is a practical, community-facing infant and nursery school with clear routines, a strong early reading focus, and wraparound hours that work for many families. Best suited to parents who want a structured start, value calm behaviour expectations, and are comfortable tracking how the wider curriculum develops over the next phase of improvement. The main hurdle is admission competition, plus making sure the Nursery and Reception pathways are understood early.
The most recent inspection (April 2024) judged overall effectiveness as Requires improvement, while behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision were graded Good. The report describes a caring, inclusive setting with calm routines and a strong focus on early reading.
Nursery applications are handled directly by the school, with funded early education available from the term after a child’s third birthday. The school states it offers morning or afternoon session patterns and multiple entry points across the year, subject to places. Nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place, so families should plan the Reception application separately.
For Kirklees-coordinated Reception entry, applications open on 1 September 2025 and the on-time deadline is Thursday 15 January 2026. Offer day is Thursday 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound care from 7.45am through to 6.00pm on weekdays, covering children in Nursery through to Year 2. Published prices include £5.00 per day for breakfast club and £10 per session for after-school childcare.
The inspection references choir and a Friday Fitness Club, and the school’s curriculum information also lists examples such as gardening, construction (lego), arts and craft activities, and computing, alongside sport and music. Availability can vary by term, so it is sensible to confirm the current programme.
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