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.
A first school that puts relationships and character development at the centre, while still keeping expectations high in the classroom. The most recent Ofsted inspection (10 to 11 January 2023) judged the school to be Good, with a clear emphasis on pupils feeling safe, welcomed, and supported to succeed.
Admissions demand is a defining feature. For the main Reception entry route, there were 93 applications for 30 offers in the latest available cycle, which equates to around 3.1 applications per place. That level of oversubscription shapes the practical reality for families, especially in a compact local area like Poundbury.
This is also a Catholic school with a clearly stated ethos. The published admissions policy sets out Gospel values and frames the school’s mission in explicitly Catholic terms, while also stating that families who are not Catholic can still apply and be considered under the admissions arrangements.
The most useful clue to the day-to-day feel is how the school talks about welcome and belonging, and how external evaluation describes it. Ofsted notes a warm, positive welcome at the start of each day and a culture where pupils feel safe and part of a school “family” that is focused on helping them succeed. That matters in a small first school, because routines at the gate and in the classroom set the emotional tone for very young children.
The Catholic identity is not an add-on. The admissions policy describes the school as being defined by its mission and Gospel values, then lists specific virtues such as humility, compassion, kindness, justice, forgiveness, integrity, peace, and courage. For families who want faith and values to be visible in daily school life, that clarity will feel reassuring. For families who prefer a lighter-touch faith presence, the right next step is to ask how worship and Catholic life show up through the week, and what that feels like for pupils from different backgrounds.
Leadership information is consistent across official records and the school’s own information. The head teacher is Mr Simon Thomas. The school website positions the relationship with families as a partnership and encourages prospective families to arrange a tour or meeting, which is usually a good indicator that the school expects parents to be engaged.
For this school, the most reliable recent performance evidence available in the materials provided is inspection-based, rather than published Key Stage 2 metrics. The latest inspection describes pupils achieving well, and attributes that to a curriculum that is broad and ambitious, with clear sequencing in core areas such as reading and mathematics.
Reading is treated as a priority. Ofsted reports that children in Reception start phonics straight away, and that early reading books align closely with the sounds pupils have learned, supporting fluency. For parents, the practical implication is that early literacy is likely to be structured and systematic, which tends to suit children who benefit from routine, repetition, and quick confidence-building wins.
The key academic caveat flagged in the same inspection is about curriculum precision in a small number of foundation subjects, where the “key knowledge” and the exact order it should be learned were not as well developed at the time. That is exactly the sort of issue that can be addressed well with careful subject leadership and planning, so it is worth asking what has changed since 2023, and how the school checks pupils are remembering what matters in subjects beyond English and maths.
Teaching and learning here reads as intentional rather than improvised. The inspection describes leaders identifying the knowledge pupils should learn “right from the start of pre-school”, and in core areas, sequencing that builds over time so pupils make secure connections between topics. In a school with pupils as young as two, that through-line matters, because early years learning can otherwise feel disconnected from what comes next.
For pupils with additional needs, the evidence points to a clear identification process and practical classroom adaptation. The inspection describes an effective system to identify and meet needs, and teachers being supported to adapt tasks across subjects, with pupils with SEND supported to develop knowledge and skills across the curriculum. If your child may need support, the most useful follow-up question is what adaptation looks like in each phase, especially where classes span Reception to Year 4.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because this is a first school (ages 2 to 9), transition usually means moving on to a local middle school at the end of Year 4. The school’s own newsletters indicate active transition work, including liaison with St Osmund’s Middle School as pupils approach the move to middle school in September.
For families, the implication is that the school is conscious of the Year 4 to middle school step and is likely to support it in a planned way. The best practical check is to ask which middle schools are the most common destinations in a typical year, and how the school supports both academic readiness and the social shift.
Competition for places is real. In the latest available Reception entry route data, there were 93 applications for 30 offers, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. That level of demand means timelines and criteria matter, and late applications can be disadvantaged.
For Dorset-resident children, the published admissions policy for 2025 to 2026 entry states that applications open on 1 November and close on the national closing date of 15 January, with offers made for entry in September in the normal admissions round. For 2026 entry, families should treat that as a typical annual pattern and confirm the exact dates for the relevant year via Dorset’s coordinated admissions information.
The school also makes the “visit first” expectation clear. Its admissions page invites families to arrange a visit and then make a formal application once they decide they would like a place.
80.0%
1st preference success rate
28 of 35 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
93
The pastoral picture is one of the strongest elements in the available evidence. Ofsted describes high levels of pastoral support, pupils feeling safe, and leaders keeping the development of the whole child central to their work. It also reports that behaviour is good around the school, and that pupils are confident that rare incidents of bullying will be dealt with quickly.
There is also an explicit mention of therapeutic approaches to support pupils’ mental health, including strategies around problem solving and recognising solutions, alongside broader character education. For parents, the implication is a school that treats emotional regulation and resilience as teachable, not as an afterthought.
The school offers named clubs and programmes rather than just generic “after school activities”. The school day page lists after-school clubs including Art after school club, Performing Arts after school club, Forest School after school club, and Laudato Si after school club. That combination suggests a deliberate mix of creative, outdoors, and faith-linked enrichment.
Wraparound care is unusually detailed for a small first school. KidsZone is described as wraparound care provided by school staff, and it frames activities as child-led and varied, with examples like outdoor play, baking, face painting, and swimming in the summer in the school pool. The KidsZone information sheet sets out opening times and a menu of session options across the week. For working families, this level of clarity can be a decisive practical factor.
The school also highlights eco work. The inspection describes sustainability projects supported by the eco council, helping pupils learn about environmental responsibility. If your child responds well to purpose-led projects, that is a useful differentiator.
The published school day timings are clear. Classroom doors open at 8.40am, registers are taken at 8.50am, and the school finishes at 3.15pm. Break and lunch structures are also set out, which can be helpful for younger pupils who rely on predictable rhythms.
Wraparound care is provided via KidsZone, with opening times from 7.45am on weekdays and later finishes Monday to Thursday than on Fridays, plus structured session options that cover before-school and after-school windows.
For travel, the school’s site includes guidance encouraging active travel such as walking, biking, or scooting, and also provides parking guidance for families who drive.
Oversubscription pressure. With 93 applications for 30 offers in the latest Reception entry route data, competition is a practical reality and timing matters, especially for coordinated admissions.
Catholic ethos is central. The admissions policy is explicit that Catholic doctrine and practice permeate school life, and families are expected to support that ethos.
Curriculum consistency beyond core. The latest inspection highlights strong sequencing in reading and maths, but also notes that a small number of foundation subjects needed clearer knowledge sequencing at the time.
Transition at Year 4. As a first school, the move to middle school is built in. It suits many children well, but some families prefer an all-through primary model, so it is worth considering your child’s readiness for that change.
A caring, values-led first school with clear routines, strong early reading practice, and a pastoral approach that is taken seriously. Best suited to families who want a Catholic ethos embedded in daily school life, and who value wraparound care alongside a broad curriculum for younger pupils. The main constraint is admission, because demand for places is high.
The latest Ofsted inspection (10 to 11 January 2023) found that the school continues to be Good, and described a culture where pupils feel safe, welcomed, and well supported.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority. The school’s published admissions policy indicates an annual pattern where applications open in early November and close on 15 January for entry the following September, but families should confirm the exact dates for the relevant year.
Yes, there is on-site pre-school provision, St Mary’s Haycorns Pre-School, including places for two-year-olds upwards. For current early years session options and charges, use the school’s official information.
Yes. KidsZone provides wraparound care with published opening times and session options, including before-school and after-school cover across the week.
The school lists specific after-school clubs such as Art, Performing Arts, Forest School, and Laudato Si.
Get in touch with the school directly
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