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.
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Auckley is a one-form entry primary serving a village community on the edge of Doncaster, with nursery provision from age 3 and a clear emphasis on reading from the earliest years. The school’s own story is rooted in place: it dates its origins to 1876 and notes a move to the current site in 1973, with outdoor learning areas including a Forest School woodland, wildflower meadow, allotments, and a pond.
This is a state-funded school with no tuition fees. What tends to define it is a blend of close community feel with higher-than-average attainment at the end of Year 6, plus wraparound childcare that runs from early morning to early evening on school days.
Auckley’s identity is strongly values-led. The school sets out a core set of values that includes kindness, respect, integrity, empathy, collaboration, determination, tolerance, and resilience, and that language shows up as the framework for how pupils are expected to behave and how they are recognised.
The outdoor environment is not treated as a decorative extra. The school highlights a Forest School woodland area alongside allotments and a pond, which gives staff real scope to build routines around nature, seasons, and responsibility. That “learning beyond the classroom” theme also appears in formal external evaluation, with residential experiences referenced as part of how pupils learn about the natural world (including pond dipping as a curriculum-linked activity).
Leadership is clearly visible in the way the school communicates. The headteacher is Mrs Emma Fox, named on the school website and in the most recent inspection documentation. The headteacher’s welcome on the school website is signed June 2022, which indicates she was in post by that point; the school does not publish a specific appointment date in the sources available.
Auckley is part of Accomplish Multi Academy Trust Limited, which matters practically because it frames governance and accountability beyond the local governing body.
Because Auckley takes children from age 3, the culture starts before Reception. For families, that can be a real advantage, as expectations around language, routines, and early reading can be introduced gradually rather than arriving all at once in Reception.
The early years picture is consistent with a school that prioritises communication and vocabulary from the outset. Nursery children are described in official evaluation as beginning to listen carefully and to write letter sounds when ready, and Reception children begin systematic phonics from their first day. For pupils who need extra help to keep up, additional support is referenced as part of how early reading is kept on track.
For parents deciding whether nursery at a school feels “too formal”, this is a helpful signpost. The early years emphasis is not on worksheets, it is on language, phonics foundations, and calm, consistent routines that build towards Year 1 expectations.
The outcomes at the end of Key Stage 2 are a major strength.
In 2024, 89% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 33.67% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. Reading and mathematics scaled scores were also high, at 107 for reading (England average 100) and 108 for mathematics (England average 101). Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score was 108.
Rankings reinforce that picture. Ranked 2214th in England and 8th in Doncaster for primary outcomes, this places Auckley above the England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data).
What does that mean for families in day-to-day terms? It usually signals three things:
early literacy is working, so pupils can access the broader curriculum more confidently by Key Stage 2
mathematics learning is secure enough to support a higher proportion of pupils into greater depth
teaching is consistent across the year groups, because these outcomes are hard to achieve if only one cohort is strong.
A careful note for interpretation: end-of-Key Stage 2 data is one important measure, but it does not capture everything families care about, such as how anxious a child feels about tests or how well the school adapts learning for different needs. Those questions are best answered by looking at pastoral systems, SEND support, and the everyday texture of school life.
Parents comparing local schools can use the FindMySchool Local Hub page to view results side-by-side using the Comparison Tool.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
89%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading sits at the centre of the school’s approach, and it is framed as a strategic priority rather than a general aspiration. Books are described as carefully chosen to support curriculum content across subjects, so reading is used not just for English lessons but as a route into history, geography, science, and wider topics.
The early reading approach is systematic. Phonics begins from day one in Reception, staff training is referenced explicitly, and there are checks to ensure that pupils are reading books aligned to the sounds they have learned. The practical implication for families is straightforward: children who thrive on clear routines and incremental progression usually do well in this sort of model, and children who need extra reinforcement are more likely to be identified early.
Curriculum design is also described in a fairly concrete way. Key knowledge and vocabulary are identified and sequenced to build understanding over time, and examples include progression in mathematics from fractions concepts to applied tasks, and in history through developing language and ideas about invasion and industrial change.
One area for improvement is also clear. In religious education, plans were not being followed consistently enough to support long-term retention, and leaders had plans to address this. For parents, this is useful context rather than a red flag. It suggests that most subject areas have coherent sequencing, with one area needing tighter implementation across classes.
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 village primary in Doncaster, most pupils will move into the secondary admissions system in Year 6. For many families locally, the catchment secondary option is The Hayfield School, whose published admissions documents describe a formal catchment that includes Auckley among other nearby communities.
The practical planning point is timing. Secondary applications in England typically close on 31 October in Year 6, so families who want a particular secondary school should start looking early in the autumn term.
For parents who want certainty, the most reliable step is to check the Doncaster catchment finder for your address, because catchment is address-based and can be sensitive to boundary lines and new housing.
Competition for Reception places is real. In the 2024 entry route, there were 88 applications for 29 offers, which is just over three applications per place. That level of demand usually means families should treat admission as competitive, even if they live relatively close.
Admissions are coordinated through City of Doncaster Council rather than handled solely by the school.
For September 2026 entry, Doncaster’s published key dates list:
National closing date: 15 January 2026
National offer date: 16 April 2026
Given today’s date (31 January 2026), that national closing date has already passed for on-time applications. Late applications can still be made, but families should be realistic that applying late can reduce the chance of receiving a first preference.
Nursery admissions are also coordinated by Doncaster. For September 2026 to July 2027 nursery places, the published process states:
First closing date: 6 October 2025
Decisions sent: 6 November 2025
Late applications are considered after that date and processed on an ongoing basis.
The council also explains “early places”, where, if a place can be offered earlier than September, the school contacts families directly, with timing linked to the child’s date of birth and term start points.
Parents should use the FindMySchoolMap Search to check their precise distance to the school and to sanity-check how realistic a place might be if demand remains high year to year.
90.6%
1st preference success rate
29 of 32 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
29
Offers
29
Applications
88
Pastoral strength at Auckley is partly about consistency. Behaviour is described as calm and positive, with pupils understanding expectations and adults helping resolve fallouts fairly. Bullying is described as rare, and pupils report feeling safe and able to speak to an adult if worried.
SEND inclusion is also described as practical rather than theoretical. Systems are in place to identify needs quickly, pupils with SEND learn the same ambitious curriculum as peers, and teachers adapt tasks so pupils can access learning, including the use of assistive technology for reading questions aloud.
The one explicit official statement worth keeping in mind is safeguarding. The latest Ofsted inspection (June 2023) confirmed the school remains Good and that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Auckley’s co-curricular offer is not presented as a generic list, and that matters. The examples that recur across official evaluation and the school’s own messaging point to clubs and roles that build confidence and responsibility, not just “something to do after school”.
Two specific examples illustrate the tone:
Pupils can take part in a rock band, which is a clear marker of performance culture and teamwork, rather than music being limited to classroom singing.
Pupils take on leadership roles such as tiny forest tree keepers, which aligns with the school’s outdoor learning emphasis and gives children ownership over shared spaces.
Other activities named include yoga and cooking, along with sports clubs such as cricket and football. The school also references musical instrument learning as accessible to pupils.
The outdoor environment supports enrichment in a way that is easier for a smaller primary than for a large urban site. Forest School woodland, allotments, and a pond make it feasible to run nature-based learning routinely rather than as an annual treat.
School hours are published as 8.50am to 3.35pm. For working families, wraparound childcare is a meaningful strength: breakfast club runs 7.45am to 8.55am, and after-school club runs 3.30pm to 5.30pm (term time).
For transport, the school is set up for local village families as well as those coming in from the wider Doncaster area. Walking and cycling are common for nearby streets, while families travelling further typically plan around drop-off and collection windows, especially if combining with wraparound care.
Nursery funding and entitlements can be complex. Eligible families can access government-funded early education hours, and it is sensible to check entitlement alongside the council nursery admissions process. For nursery fee details where applicable, refer to the school and council information rather than relying on third-party summaries.
Oversubscription pressure. With 88 applications for 29 offers in the most recent published entry route data, demand is meaningfully higher than supply. Families should apply on time and include a realistic mix of preferences.
Small-school dynamics. One-form entry can feel reassuring, but it also means each year group is a single cohort. For some children that creates a stable social environment; for others it can feel limiting if friendship issues arise.
Curriculum consistency in one area. Religious education was identified as needing more consistent delivery so pupils build long-term understanding. If RE is especially important to your family, ask how the updated approach is being implemented.
Wraparound is a strength, but it shapes the day. Breakfast club running from 7.45am and after-school provision to 5.30pm is extremely useful for working parents, but it can make for long days for younger pupils.
Auckley is a high-demand village primary where reading is treated as the engine of the wider curriculum, and outcomes at the end of Year 6 are well above England averages. The outdoor learning infrastructure and the specific enrichment examples (rock band, tiny forest roles, cooking and yoga) suggest a school that wants children to enjoy learning rather than simply perform for tests.
Best suited to families who value a close-knit one-form community, want strong academic foundations, and can engage early with a competitive admissions process.
Auckley combines strong end of Key Stage 2 outcomes with a clear emphasis on early reading. The school is rated Good, and published attainment indicators place it above England averages, including a high proportion of pupils reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics.
Admissions are coordinated by City of Doncaster Council, and catchment is address-based. Families should check the council catchment finder for their specific home address, then plan preferences accordingly, especially because some year groups can be oversubscribed.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast club and after-school club provision during term time, with early morning and after-school hours designed to support working families.
Nursery places are applied for through Doncaster’s nursery admissions process, with deadlines and decision dates published by the council. Attendance at nursery does not automatically secure a Reception place, so families must make a separate Reception application through the main primary admissions route.
Most pupils move into the Doncaster secondary admissions system. For many local families, the catchment secondary option is The Hayfield School, and applications for secondary places typically close in the autumn term of Year 6.
Get in touch with the school directly
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