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.
This is a large first school for ages 2 to 9 in Poundbury, Dorchester, with capacity for 450 pupils and a published roll in the low 400s. It sits within the Wessex Multi Academy Trust, a factor that shapes governance and the school improvement framework parents will encounter.
Head of School Tamara Sterck is the key figure for day to day leadership, and is also named as safeguarding lead on the school website. The school presents itself as a values-led Church of England setting, using the strapline Love for God, Love for Each Other, Love for Learning.
The headline contextual point for families is inspection history. The predecessor school was judged Inadequate in February 2022 (with safeguarding judged not effective at that time), and the current academy does not yet have a published Ofsted report under its new URN. That combination makes it sensible for parents to focus on current leadership, behaviour routines, SEND support, and how improvement priorities are being implemented now.
The school’s own messaging puts emphasis on calm, respectful behaviour and purposeful learning, with a clear desire to be seen as a happy place where children develop a love of learning. The building is described by the school as modern, with extensive grounds, and Forest School is explicitly referenced as an opportunity enabled by the site.
Families should also understand the governance model. Manor Park operates with a local School Governance Committee within a multi academy trust structure, and governors describe their role as strategic oversight linked to the school development plan priorities. In practice, that often means you will hear school improvement language more explicitly than at a small maintained first school, for example around behaviour consistency, curriculum sequencing, and staff training.
Because this is a first school with nursery age children in the same setting, the daily experience can feel like two linked phases. The early years focus is obvious in the website structure, with a dedicated EYFS Base section and information about pre school routines and parent communication tools. For many families, that continuity matters: settling a two or three year old into nursery in a school environment can make the transition into Reception smoother, even if you still need to apply through the local authority for school places.
Published Key Stage 2 performance measures are not available here because the school’s age range ends at 9, which is typically Year 4. This matters for parents comparing schools purely on end of primary SATs outcomes, as that data point is not part of the school’s phase.
The most useful academic evidence to interpret is therefore curriculum intent and early literacy and numeracy practice, alongside any published phonics and Key Stage 1 information the school provides. The school’s own performance page explicitly points parents towards early years, Year 1 phonics, and Key Stage 1 results over time.
A practical way to use that information is comparative rather than absolute. Parents can look at phonics and Key Stage 1 outcomes alongside other Dorchester first schools via FindMySchool local comparison tools, then treat school visits and conversations as the tie breaker, particularly around behaviour culture, SEND scaffolding, and staff stability.
The school describes its intake as broad in ability, background, nationality and experience, with a commitment to progress from each child’s starting point. That is the right framing for a mixed intake first school, but families should still probe how this works in the classroom: how staff identify gaps early, how intervention is delivered without narrowing the curriculum, and how teachers and support staff coordinate for pupils who need more structure.
One of the most important foundations at this phase is early reading. The 2022 inspection report for the predecessor school describes strengths in the approach to early reading, including matched books that align with sounds taught and regular opportunities to practise. If this approach has been sustained and strengthened, it is a meaningful lever for raising confidence across the wider curriculum, especially for pupils who otherwise risk falling behind early.
Mathematics is another key building block. The same report refers to an improving curriculum with increasing fluency in number and multiplication tables, alongside a need for greater consistency in building on prior knowledge. For parents, the implication is straightforward: ask what a typical maths lesson looks like in Year 2 and Year 4, how misconceptions are caught, and whether there is a shared approach across classes.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Inadequate
Personal Development
Inadequate
Leadership & Management
Inadequate
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a first school ending at age 9, the next step is transfer to a middle school rather than a secondary school. In Dorchester, families commonly look towards local middle schools as the natural progression route, and Dorset’s coordinated admissions processes shape how and when applications are made for those later transfers. Dorset Council publishes admissions policy documentation for 2026 to 2027, including key dates for first admission and offer days, which is a good reference point for planning ahead.
For parents of children in Year 4, it is sensible to ask Manor Park how transition is handled in practice: liaison with receiving schools, information sharing for SEND support, and how the school prepares pupils for the shift in expectations that typically comes with moving to a larger setting.
Reception entry is coordinated by Dorset Council rather than direct application to the school. The council’s published timeline for September 2026 entry includes a closing date of 15 January 2026 and national offer day on 16 April 2026 for on time applications. The school’s own admissions page points families back to the local authority route and suggests using council information for catchment and appeals guidance.
Demand looks real. The results you provided shows 92 applications for 57 offers for the primary entry route, with an oversubscribed status and 1.61 applications per place applications per place.
For nursery and pre school entry, the school website advertises specific open days in late February and early March 2026. Nursery funding information is clearly signposted, including universal funded hours from the term after a child’s third birthday and additional entitlements for eligible families. (Nursery and pre school fees are published on the school site, but families should refer to the official page for the current breakdown, as early years pricing and funding arrangements can change.)
A local tip that genuinely helps is to use FindMySchool’s map distance tools when you are shortlisting, but then validate the admissions criteria and any catchment definitions through Dorset Council before you commit emotionally to a single option.
100%
1st preference success rate
47 of 47 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
57
Offers
57
Applications
92
This is the section where families should do the most due diligence, because the most recent graded inspection outcome for the predecessor school raised serious concerns about behaviour consistency and safeguarding culture at that time. The February 2022 Ofsted inspection judged the predecessor school Inadequate, and explicitly stated that safeguarding arrangements were not effective.
What matters now is the current reality. The school identifies the Head of School as safeguarding lead, and lists senior leaders alongside deputy safeguarding roles on its staff page. Parents should ask how concerns are recorded and escalated, what training looks like across all staff groups including wraparound providers, and what pupils are taught about personal safety and respectful relationships at an age appropriate level.
If your child is sensitive to unpredictability in the playground or needs clear boundaries, ask about behaviour routines at transitions, lunchtime supervision, and how the school supports pupils whose behaviour escalates. These are concrete, practical questions, and a good school will welcome them.
Manor Park’s enrichment is easiest to see through the named initiatives and community-facing projects it publicises.
Forest School is explicitly referenced by the school as a site enabled opportunity, which usually translates into structured outdoor learning and confidence building for younger pupils. The school also runs a Year 4 residential experience at Hooke Court Residential Study Centre, framed as curriculum enhancement and personal development, with dates published for March 2026.
A second strand is community and inclusion. The Manor Park Pantry is presented as a practical initiative, with school communications encouraging community support and linking it to an eco committee theme in news tagging. Even without over-interpreting, it signals that pupils are likely exposed to service and responsibility in an age appropriate way.
Finally, for families who need childcare coverage outside the school day, the school signposts wraparound and holiday provision delivered by an external provider, with holiday club hours shown as 8am to 5pm. The key implication is to check capacity, booking rules, and whether childcare voucher schemes are supported, early in the process.
Transport and local logistics will be straightforward for many families in Poundbury and Dorchester given the residential layout, but you should still plan your routines realistically, particularly if you rely on wraparound or holiday provision.
Holiday club provision is listed with hours of 8am to 5pm via the school’s wraparound page. For nursery aged children, the school provides information about funded hours and eligibility pathways, which is useful for planning, but always verify your entitlement via the official childcare funding routes.
Inspection context and confidence. The most recent graded inspection outcome for the predecessor school was Inadequate in February 2022, including a judgement that safeguarding arrangements were not effective at that time. The current academy does not yet have a published Ofsted report, so families should probe current safeguarding culture and behaviour routines carefully.
Oversubscription pressure. With 92 applications for 57 offers for the primary entry route admission is competitive. If you are set on this option, apply on time and keep realistic backup choices.
Wraparound dependence on an external provider. Wraparound and holiday provision is delivered via a third party, and holiday club hours are published as 8am to 5pm. Check booking and costs early so you are not caught out in September.
Phase structure. As a first school ending at age 9, you will need to plan a middle school move later. Make sure you are comfortable with that progression route and how transition is handled.
Manor Park Church of England First School is a sizeable Dorchester first school with nursery provision, clear community-facing initiatives, and a trust framework that can support structured improvement. It is also a school where families should take inspection history seriously, and focus their decision on what is happening now: leadership clarity, safeguarding culture, behaviour consistency, and how well teaching builds strong foundations in reading and maths.
Best suited to families who want a Church of England setting with early years continuity and who are prepared to do proper due diligence through visits and detailed questions, rather than relying on reputational shorthand. The limiting factor for many will be securing a place, not the breadth of what the school aims to offer.
It is a school with clear strengths parents may value, including nursery continuity and published enrichment such as Forest School and a Year 4 residential. However, the predecessor school was judged Inadequate in February 2022, and the current academy does not yet have a published Ofsted report under its new URN. Families should focus on current safeguarding routines, behaviour expectations, and how learning is improving in practice.
Reception admissions are handled through Dorset Council. For September 2026 entry, the published closing date is 15 January 2026 and the on time offer day is 16 April 2026. The school’s admissions page also directs families to the local authority route.
Yes. indicates 92 applications for 57 offers for the primary entry route and an oversubscribed status. This suggests competition for places, so it is sensible to apply on time and list realistic alternatives.
Wraparound and holiday provision is signposted on the school website and delivered via an external provider. Holiday club hours are shown as 8am to 5pm. Parents should check booking arrangements and costs early, especially if childcare is essential for work patterns.
Because the school is a first school ending at age 9, pupils typically transfer to a middle school. Dorset Council publishes admissions policies and timelines that help families plan ahead for later moves. Ask the school how transition is supported, especially for pupils with SEND.
Get in touch with the school directly
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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