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.
The defining thread here is consistency. Behaviour expectations are framed through the school’s Golden Rules, and the wider culture is tied to a clear set of values (spelt out as SUPER: Strong, Unique, Proud, Expressive, Responsible). The age range is early years through to Year 2, with nursery provision as part of the setting, so the day-to-day focus is on strong foundations: language, early reading, number, and learning habits that help very young pupils feel safe and ready to learn.
Leadership has recently stabilised after a changeover, with Mrs Emma Anderson taking up the substantive headteacher post from September 2024.
Expect a school that leans into clear, child-friendly structures. The Golden Rules are positioned as more than posters; they are described as a core part of the behaviour policy and a shared language between school and home.
The values page gives a strong steer on identity. SUPER is used to articulate the kind of learner the school wants to develop, and the same page places outdoor learning as a deliberate plank of the curriculum, not an occasional enrichment extra. That matters in an infant setting because it signals a belief that early confidence is built through doing, exploring, and practising self-regulation in different environments, not only at desks.
There is also a practical, community-facing feel to the way the school communicates. Newsletters and parent information focus on routine, readiness, and consistent expectations, the tone is very much about partnership with families rather than glossy marketing.
This is an infant school, so the usual end of primary outcomes (taken at Year 6) are not part of the headline picture for parents comparing schools.
What you can take from formal evidence is the emphasis on early reading. The most recent inspection highlights that early reading and phonics are taught consistently, with resources matched carefully to the phonics curriculum, and it notes that reading achievement improved significantly in 2023.
Mathematics is also flagged as an area where pupils achieve well, while leaders are expected to keep tightening consistency in some other curriculum subjects so that standards are strong across the board rather than in pockets.
Early literacy is treated as a whole-school priority. The school’s published parent information states that it has used Little Wandle Letters and Sounds since October 2024, and it signposts families towards structured ways to support reading at home.
The broader curriculum is supported by a large bank of subject progression documents and parent workshop materials, which is often a useful indicator in infant schools. It suggests staff are working from shared expectations about what “secure” knowledge and skills look like at each stage, which tends to reduce variation across classes.
Outdoor learning is explicitly positioned as part of curriculum design and daily life. The school describes Forest School as a route to resilience and problem-solving, with activities designed around managed risk. For many pupils, that practical strand can be a strong complement to classroom learning, particularly for confidence, language, and collaboration at this age.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Most families will be planning for a transition at the end of Year 2, since the setting finishes at age 7. Formal evidence indicates a close link with the neighbouring junior provision, with the inspection noting that older siblings at the junior school are able to join breakfast club, which often reflects practical family routines across the two sites.
In Doncaster, applications for Junior (Year 3) places follow the local authority’s coordinated admissions route, similar to Reception entry. Parents should treat the Year 3 move as a distinct admissions step and plan timelines early rather than assuming it is automatic.
For Reception entry, applications are coordinated by City of Doncaster Council. For September 2026 entry, the published closing date is 15 January 2026, and the national offer date is 16 April 2026.
Demand is real. In the most recent admissions data, there were 109 applications for 83 offers for the primary entry route, and the school is marked as oversubscribed.
Nursery admissions run on a separate local authority process. For the September 2026 to July 2027 nursery intake, the first closing date is 6 October 2025, with decisions issued on 6 November 2025; late applications are processed after that point.
If you are weighing up proximity and competitiveness across nearby options, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for checking travel practicality, and the Comparison Tool can help you contrast local schools on the same set of published indicators.
100%
1st preference success rate
78 of 78 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
83
Offers
83
Applications
109
The pastoral picture that comes through most strongly is “structure with warmth”. The inspection describes pupils feeling safe, and it points to a child-friendly behaviour policy that pupils understand. It also describes the school being creative in supporting the small proportion of pupils who find self-regulation harder, which is particularly relevant in early years and key stage 1 where emotional development can vary widely.
Clubs are present and clearly timetabled rather than ad hoc. For the Spring term window shown on the school’s clubs page, opportunities include basketball, football, and gymnastics, running to 4.15 pm after school, priced at £2.50 per session (with term totals listed per club).
Outdoor learning is the other major pillar. Beyond the classroom benefit is not only “fresh air”; it is the chance for pupils to practise independence, teamwork, and language in a different context, which can be especially powerful for younger children who learn best through movement and practical activity.
Start and finish times are published as staggered sessions. Reception runs 8.45 am to 3.15 pm, and Years 1 and 2 run 8.40 am to 3.10 pm. Nursery session times are also set out, including morning and afternoon sessions, plus a full-day option.
Wraparound care is available via Dragonflies, the school’s provision launched on 3 January 2023. If wraparound care is important for your family, check current booking arrangements and availability directly through the school’s published information, as places and timings can change across the year.
Entry pressure (Reception). The school is oversubscribed in the latest available admissions figures, so securing a place can be competitive even for local families.
A planned transition at 7. Because pupils move on after Year 2, families should think ahead about Junior (Year 3) admissions and timelines rather than treating progression as automatic.
Staggered day timings. Different start and finish times by year group can be helpful for calm drop-off, but it may be a juggling factor for families with multiple children.
Outdoor learning expectations. Forest School and outdoor learning are clearly part of the school’s identity, which suits many children well, but it also means planning for outdoor kit and all-weather readiness.
This is a school that prioritises early foundations through clear routines, a strong behaviour framework, and an explicit commitment to outdoor learning. It is best suited to families who value structure, consistent expectations, and a practical, active approach to early years and key stage 1 learning, and who are prepared to plan ahead for the move into Junior provision at age 7.
It is rated Good by Ofsted, with the most recent inspection activity dated May 2024. The inspection evidence places particular emphasis on early reading and a safe, well-ordered environment for young pupils.
Reception applications are handled through City of Doncaster Council under coordinated admissions. Catchment and oversubscription criteria are set out through the local authority’s admissions process and school policy documents, and families should use those rules rather than informal assumptions about “local” boundaries.
Yes. Nursery admissions are run through the Doncaster nursery admissions process, with published timelines keeping a first closing date and then processing late applications afterwards. Nursery fees are not quoted here; families should use the official admissions information and the school’s published pages for the latest session details.
Yes. Wraparound care is provided via Dragonflies, launched in January 2023. Availability and booking arrangements can change, so it is worth checking the most recent information before relying on a place.
Pupils move on at age 7, typically into Junior (Year 3) provision. The local authority’s primary admissions route covers Junior entry timelines, and families should plan that step early.
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