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 small, three tier first school serving children from age 3 to 9 in the village of Winterbourne Abbas, with pupils moving on after Year 4. The Christian character is visible in the school’s language and expectations, but day to day it reads as a practical set of routines, kindness, and shared responsibility, rather than formality.
The most recent graded inspection found plenty that is working well, including positive behaviour and early years, alongside clear areas to tighten up around curriculum sequencing and consistency. Ofsted rated the school Requires Improvement overall in July 2023; behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision were all judged Good.
Leadership has also changed recently. The current headteacher is Mrs Emma Sleightholme, appointed from 01 September 2025.
With only a few classes spanning Nursery to Year 4, the feel is naturally mixed age and relational. The inspection describes younger and older children playing together at social times and cooperating well in class, which usually goes hand in hand with older pupils learning to model behaviour and younger pupils learning the rhythms quickly.
The school’s published Learning Values lean heavily into how children treat one another and how they approach learning: caring, considerate, communicative, courteous, cooperative, conscientious, and confident. In a small setting, that sort of shared vocabulary can be unusually powerful, because staff can reinforce it consistently across the whole school, not just within a year group.
The outdoor strand is a genuine signature. The school describes daily access to a wildlife garden and field for early years, and weekly outdoor learning sessions. The inspection also highlights “Woodland School” as a key part of how pupils build resilience and learn to manage risk safely. The implication for families is straightforward: if your child learns best through doing, moving, and practical experiences, this is a strong match.
Because this is a first school (through Year 4), it sits outside the familiar Key Stage 2 SATs headline measures that parents often use for primary comparisons. In practice, what matters more here is whether the curriculum is well sequenced, whether reading is taught systematically, and whether gaps are spotted early enough to prevent drift.
The July 2023 inspection narrative is clear on both sides of the ledger. A broad range of subjects is in place, with lots of pupils enjoying their learning, but some pupils were not learning essential subject content at the right time, leading to gaps in knowledge in some subjects. The school’s improvement work is described as active, with curriculum thinking being strengthened, but not yet consistently embedded across classes.
Reading is treated as a priority. A phonics programme is in place, and pupils usually read books that match the sounds they know. Where the school still needs to tighten practice is in staff spotting misconceptions quickly enough, both in lessons and when pupils practise reading. For parents, that translates into a useful question to ask: how does the school check that every child is keeping up in phonics and fluency, and what happens, week by week, when a child slips behind.
In mathematics and writing, the inspection points to consistency and pitch as the key levers. At times, sequences of work in mathematics were not demanding enough; in Key Stage 1, some pupils had gaps in writing knowledge because important content was not introduced early enough. In a small school, variability between classes can have a bigger impact than it would in a large two form entry, so the school’s ability to align expectations across staff is central to the next phase of improvement.
Provision for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is identified and assessed accurately, but teaching was not consistently meeting needs well enough. The report flags that some learning aids did not provide structured support effectively, and that short term targets varied in quality. The practical implication is that families of children with additional needs should look for clarity: specific targets, structured interventions, and a shared approach that follows the child across the week, not just in isolated sessions.
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.
The three tier structure is the defining practical feature of progression here. After Year 4, pupils move on to a middle school rather than staying through Year 6. In local authority planning material, the usual receiver school listed for this first school is Dorchester Middle School.
That early transition can suit some children very well, particularly those ready for a larger peer group and wider facilities by age 9. For others, it can feel soon, so it is worth asking how the school prepares Year 4 pupils for the move, including visits, routines, and how pastoral information is shared with the next setting.
Admissions for starting school are coordinated through Dorset Council. For September 2026 entry, the council’s published deadline is 15 January 2026, with outcomes issued on 16 April 2026 for on time applications. Paper applications are available from 01 September (the council page sets this out explicitly).
As a voluntary aided Church of England school, families should also expect faith related admissions paperwork to be part of the process in some cases. The school publishes an admissions policy and a supplementary information form for faith and vulnerable children.
Demand, even in small schools, can be real. In the most recent entry route data available here, there were 10 applications for 5 offers, which is 2 applications per place. In small cohorts, a handful of families can shift the picture year to year, so it is wise to treat any single year as indicative rather than predictive.
A practical tip: families considering multiple local options can use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison view to keep notes on admissions criteria, wraparound availability, and transition routes alongside each school on their shortlist.
Applications
10
Total received
Places Offered
5
Subscription Rate
2.0x
Apps per place
The inspection describes a caring culture where pupils learn to respect and look after one another, and where adults help children grow in confidence and self assurance. It also notes a clear focus on promoting pupils’ physical and mental fitness, which tends to show up in regular movement, outdoor activity, and proactive routines for regulation, especially for younger children.
Ofsted also reported that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For a small school, the enrichment menu is unusually specific. The inspection mentions samba music ensembles, sports festivals, and a Year 4 residential, as well as trips including the SEA LIFE Centre Weymouth. It also notes lunchtime clubs, including golf.
The school’s published clubs list for 2025 to 2026 includes Gardening Club, Kickboxing, Forest School, Miniballers, Computer and Lego Club, Ball Skills, Netball, and Multi Sports, spread across lunchtimes and after school slots. The best schools use clubs as more than entertainment; they use them to practise teamwork, resilience, and belonging, and that is consistent with the wider picture described in the inspection.
Wraparound provision is clearly set out. Early Birds Club runs 8:00am to 8:30am, and After School Club runs 3:00pm to 4:30pm, covering children from pre school up to Year 4. Charges are published as £4.00 per half hour for Early Birds, and £12.00 per child for the after school session, with a snack included and discounts for additional siblings.
The standard school day start and finish times are not presented as a single headline on the pages reviewed, so confirm the core timetable directly if you are planning transport, work patterns, or child care handovers. Term dates are published for the academic year.
Inspection trajectory. The most recent graded inspection judged the school Requires Improvement overall, with curriculum sequencing and consistent implementation identified as the key improvement priorities. This is a school in active development rather than one that is already fully settled.
Consistency in early literacy teaching. Reading has a clear priority status, but the inspection notes that misconceptions are not always identified quickly enough. If your child needs rapid, precise feedback to thrive, ask how staff check and respond in the moment.
Support for pupils with additional needs. Identification is described as accurate, but the quality of teaching responses and short term targets is not consistently strong. Families should look for structured support plans and clear ownership across staff.
Early transition at Year 4. The three tier model means moving on to middle school at age 9. Many children handle this well, but it is a material change earlier than in a two tier system, so transition support matters.
A small village first school with a clear emphasis on values, outdoor learning, and enrichment that goes beyond what many schools of this size can offer. The strongest fit is for families who want a close knit setting where younger and older children mix naturally, and where learning is reinforced through practical experiences like Forest School and wider trips. The key question is pace of improvement: the direction of travel is clear, but consistency in curriculum delivery is the work in progress that families should probe carefully.
The school has clear strengths in behaviour, personal development, and early years, and it offers distinctive enrichment such as Forest School and music performance opportunities. The most recent graded inspection judged it Requires Improvement overall, with curriculum sequencing and consistency across subjects identified as priorities for improvement.
Applications are made through Dorset Council. The published deadline is 15 January 2026, with outcomes on 16 April 2026 for on time applications.
Yes. Early Birds runs 8:00am to 8:30am and After School Club runs 3:00pm to 4:30pm, with published session charges and sibling discounts.
As a first school, pupils move on to middle school after Year 4. Local authority planning material lists Dorchester Middle School as the usual receiver school for this setting.
Yes, the Christian character is explicit in the mission statement and the school’s published values framework. As a voluntary aided school, admissions paperwork can also include supplementary faith related forms in some circumstances.
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