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.
There is a very clear idea of what Roselands Infants’ School wants pupils to become: calm, capable, and increasingly independent, long before formal tests begin to dominate school life. The most recent inspection describes pupils as proud of their school, with positive relationships between pupils and staff, alongside high expectations for behaviour and a strong emphasis on character and responsibility.
This is an infant school (ages 4 to 7), so the focus is firmly on early reading, language, number sense, and the habits that set children up for Key Stage 2 later. It sits within the Cavendish Education Trust, and the school leadership structure includes an executive headteacher plus a head of school who runs day-to-day operations.
Competition for places is a real consideration. Recent admissions data show 157 applications for 71 offers, which indicates demand beyond available capacity.
Roselands leans into a straightforward, child-friendly version of responsibility. Pupils are given roles that make sense for this age group, such as contributing to school routines and taking part in pupil voice structures, including eco council and sports leader roles. The inspection narrative suggests this is not tokenistic, pupils can explain what they do and why it matters, including practical examples such as recycling and keeping the school environment cared for.
Behaviour expectations appear consistent, and the language used about pupils is specific rather than generic: mostly calm, engaged, polite, and respectful. Importantly, the report links that culture to adults using regular praise and encouragement, which helps pupils feel happy and safe.
Leadership is clearly structured. The inspection confirms Carol Wallis as head of school and Kyra Siddall-Ward as executive headteacher. The school is part of Cavendish Education Trust, which became the trust for the school at the point of academy conversion in September 2021.
As an infant school, Roselands does not publish Key Stage 2 outcomes because pupils leave at the end of Year 2. Parents looking for SATs-style data will not find it here, and that is normal for an infant setting.
The most useful “results” lens at this stage is whether children are learning to read securely, building early maths fluency, and developing the learning behaviours that will carry into junior school. External review supports that direction, highlighting a consistent approach to reading and an ambitious curriculum that is adapted so pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities can access the same curriculum as their peers.
Ofsted currently rates the school Good (inspection 17 to 18 October 2023), with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
Parents comparing local schools can use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages to view nearby primaries and infant settings side-by-side, then shortlist by the factors that matter most at this stage, such as inspection profile, admissions pressure, and wraparound availability.
Early reading is a central pillar. The inspection notes a clear and consistent approach to reading across the school, with support for children in Reception as they begin learning to read, and reading areas used to share books and build routines around reading for pleasure.
On the school’s published curriculum information, phonics is described as a structured programme designed to teach children the skills and code knowledge needed for reading and spelling. In practice, that usually translates into daily phonics teaching, careful matching of reading books to the child’s current decoding stage, and frequent opportunities to apply sounds in meaningful reading.
Maths is framed as both skill-building and problem solving, and the prospectus describes a mastery approach, with methods taught in purposeful contexts rather than as isolated drills.
The inspection’s strongest early-years signals are about coherence and sequencing, connections between Reception learning and what follows through the school, and children being able to explain what they are learning, which is an underrated indicator of teaching clarity 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.
The practical question for infant schools is transition. Roselands is linked and federated with Stafford Junior School, which is the natural next step for many families at Year 3.
A good infant-to-junior transition is more than admin. The inspection references planned links across age groups, and the school handbook also describes organised times when Reception children and Year 2 pupils mix for reading and classroom support activities, which helps pupils become comfortable with older peers and school routines.
Families who are weighing junior options should check how Year 2 to Year 3 places are handled locally, and whether siblings policies or travel routes affect the likelihood of staying within the same wider school community.
Reception places are coordinated through East Sussex County Council, rather than direct application to the school. The school’s own admissions page points families to the local authority process and deadlines.
For September 2026 entry (2026 to 2027 academic year), East Sussex’s published deadline for applying for a normal age group place is 15 January 2026.
Cavendish Education Trust admissions documentation also references 15 January 2026 as the closing date for Reception applications for September 2026, and gives a primary offer notification date of 16 April 2026.
Demand is a meaningful data point here. Recent admissions figures show 157 applications for 71 offers, and 2.21 applications per place applications per place, which points to consistent pressure on entry.
If you are planning a move, FindMySchool Map Search can help you model realistic options, especially when multiple nearby schools are likely to be part of your shortlist, and small changes in address can affect priority.
Applications
157
Total received
Places Offered
71
Subscription Rate
2.2x
Apps per place
The inspection describes pupils feeling happy and safe, with staff praise and encouragement used deliberately to build confidence and engagement. The report also links the school’s character work to emotional literacy, describing pupils recognising feelings and managing emotions through activities such as storytelling and role play.
The school also publishes parent-facing guidance on mental health and wellbeing routes, including a clear “what to do if you are concerned” structure and signposting to support pathways.
For infant-age pupils, the day-to-day interface matters as much as policy. The published materials repeatedly reference accessible staff and regular communication with families, which tends to be the difference between a school that feels organised versus one that feels ad hoc.
In an infant setting, enrichment is often strongest when it is built into the curriculum rather than bolted on as a long list of clubs. Roselands’ inspection evidence supports that integrated model: pupils take on responsibilities (eco council, sports leader roles, helping set up assemblies), and those roles are used to build confidence, talk skills, and a sense of contribution.
The school’s curriculum materials also show a heavy emphasis on structured talk, storytelling, and role play as vehicles for language development and self-regulation. That matters because early language skills are strongly predictive of later comprehension and writing stamina.
Wraparound childcare is available through a third-party provider arrangement: Fireflies runs breakfast and after-school provision linked to the local federation, with breakfast starting from 7:30am and after-school provision running until 6:00pm, with children collected at 3:00pm for the after-school setting. Availability is described as high-demand rather than guaranteed.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Start-of-day routines in the published handbook describe gates opening at 8:10am, with classroom gates and doors opening at 8:20am for pupils. Wraparound childcare is available via Fireflies (breakfast from 7:30am; after-school up to 6:00pm), but families should check availability early.
Term dates are published on the school website (including a 2026 to 2027 set), which is helpful for planning childcare and leave.
Oversubscription pressure. Recent admissions figures show more than two applications per place, which can make first-choice planning feel uncertain for families without priority criteria.
Wraparound is helpful but may be tight. Breakfast and after-school care is available, but the school’s own documentation flags that places can be limited, so it is worth checking early if you rely on it.
It is an infant school, not a full primary. You will make a second transition at Year 3, and the “next school” plan should be part of your decision from the start.
No nursery provision on-site. Families needing nursery attached to the school will need to plan separately, then join at Reception.
Roselands Infants’ School is a Good-rated infant setting with a strong emphasis on behaviour, character, and early reading consistency, supported by a leadership model that splits strategic oversight and day-to-day running. The best fit is for families who want a calm, structured start to school life, and who value early literacy and responsibility-building as much as phonics checklists. Entry remains the key hurdle, and families should plan early for both Reception allocation and the Year 2 to Year 3 transition.
The school is currently rated Good by Ofsted (17 to 18 October 2023), with Good judgements across all key areas including early years provision. The inspection also describes pupils as calm and engaged, with strong relationships and a clear approach to early reading.
Reception admissions are handled through East Sussex County Council, using the published admissions criteria and local authority process. Because distance cut-off figures can vary each year, families should rely on the current year’s published admissions guidance and their own application priority rather than informal assumptions.
Yes, wraparound childcare is available through Fireflies, with breakfast provision from 7:30am and after-school provision up to 6:00pm. The school handbook notes it is a popular service and places may not always be available.
You apply via East Sussex County Council. The published deadline for applying for a normal age group place is 15 January 2026, and trust admissions documentation also references 16 April 2026 as the primary offer notification date for Reception.
As an infant school, pupils move on at Year 3. The school is linked and federated with Stafford Junior School, which is a common next step for families planning continuity across the federation.
Get in touch with the school directly
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