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 small child’s first school needs two things done consistently well, calm routines and warm relationships. St Andrew's Church of England Infants School sets its stall out clearly, the school’s day-to-day language is built around six Christian values, Friendship, Compassion, Resilience, Forgiveness, Thankfulness and Peace, and the wider ethos is framed as learning together in friendship and faith.
It is a state-funded infant school for pupils aged 4 to 7, serving the Langney area of Eastbourne, and it is part of the Diocese of Chichester Academy Trust (DCAT). A key practical plus for working families is that wraparound care is described in unusually concrete terms, with an early morning club and an after-school club run by school staff, and a stated trial extension of the after-school finish time into March 2026.
The tone here is explicitly shaped by Church of England identity, but it is expressed through everyday habits rather than grand statements. The school’s own materials link values language to routine choices, behaviour expectations, and ways pupils learn to relate to each other. That matters at infant stage, because culture is not an abstract idea, it is the repeated pattern of how adults respond to children and how children are taught to respond to each other.
Leadership visibility is also a theme. Mrs C Meakins is named as Head Teacher on the school website, and she also signs the welcome message. The school does not clearly publish her appointment date on its own website, so parents who need timeline detail should ask directly during an open event or a call.
As a trust school, St Andrew’s sits within DCAT’s network, which can have practical implications even for an infant school. The school frames this as collaborative capacity, shared work with other schools in the trust, and access to wider development opportunities. For some families, trust membership is reassuring because governance, safeguarding processes, and staff development often run to consistent standards across the group. For others, the key question is local, how much autonomy does the school keep over curriculum choices and daily life. This is best explored through the school’s own published curriculum documentation and policy set.
Infant schools sit in an awkward data gap, because the most familiar national benchmark, Key Stage 2 results, happens at age 11, long after pupils have moved on. For this school, does not include published national attainment metrics, so it is not sensible to dress the Results section up with proxy numbers.
Instead, the most reliable external anchor is inspection history. The predecessor establishment at the same site was judged Good, with the latest inspection visit dated 18 September 2018 (published 09 October 2018). The current academy opened in 2023, and the only document listed under the current URN on Ofsted’s site is an academy conversion letter dated 05 October 2023, rather than a full inspection grade for the new establishment.
What should parents take from this? A Good judgement on the predecessor school is meaningful, particularly because infant schools can change more slowly than larger secondaries, but it is still historical. The best practical approach is to treat the 2018 inspection as a baseline indicator, then test today’s reality through a visit, behaviour and routines at the start and end of day, reading culture, and how quickly staff notice and respond when a child is struggling.
The strongest evidence of day-to-day teaching intent is the school’s own curriculum documentation. For Reception and the early years phase, the school explicitly references Development Matters and the seven curriculum areas, and it also highlights outdoor learning as a regular feature, with planned use of a Foundation Stage play space as a learning environment.
In Year 1, the school describes a topic-led approach with deliberate structure, a central idea each term, and planned starting points and finishing points to frame learning. One example given is a Year 1 topic that explores caring for animals through the idea of being a vet. The useful implication for parents is that literacy and numeracy are likely to be taught with consistent cross-curricular links, which can help younger pupils make sense of learning as a connected story rather than disconnected lessons.
In practice, the question for families is fit. Topic-led learning suits children who thrive on narrative, exploration, and talk. Children who need a more linear, worksheet-forward style can still do well in this model, but parents may want to ask how phonics, handwriting, and early number fluency are taught within the topic frame, and what the school does when a child needs additional repetition and structure.
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 an infant school, most families think about transition early, usually to a linked junior school. Local authority information for the school notes a linked and federated relationship with Tollgate Community Junior School. That does not mean every child automatically transfers, but it strongly suggests a common pathway for many pupils, and it often correlates with practical transition work, shared events, and staff-to-staff collaboration.
A sensible question to ask at this stage is how transition is handled in Year 2, for example, whether junior staff visit, whether pupils have taster sessions, and what support is offered for children who find change difficult. For families considering alternatives at junior stage, ask what proportion historically move to the linked junior school versus other local options, and why.
Reception admissions are coordinated by East Sussex County Council, not by the school directly. For the 2026 to 2027 admissions round, the council lists applications opening on 12 September 2025, with a closing date of 15 January 2026, and National Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
The school is oversubscribed on the provided admissions data. For the primary entry route, there were 143 applications for 64 offers, a ratio of about 2.23 applications per place. This level of demand usually means the finer details of priority order matter.
The school’s own admissions page summarises East Sussex priorities for 2026 to 2027. It includes looked after children and previously looked after children, sibling priority linked to the defined community area, and a staff priority in specified circumstances. It also states that where a tie-break is needed, allocation is by home-to-school distance measured as a straight line, with random allocation if distances are identical.
If you are considering this school, do two practical checks early. First, confirm whether your address sits within the predefined community area referenced in the council priority order. Second, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to see how your home lines up geographically with the school gate and likely local competition for places, because oversubscription tends to compress distances quickly.
Applications
143
Total received
Places Offered
64
Subscription Rate
2.2x
Apps per place
For infant pupils, wellbeing is mostly delivered through routines, clear boundaries, and adults who can spot small changes. There are a few useful indicators on the school website that suggest a layered approach rather than a single catch-all system.
One is the explicit presence of named support groupings within staffing, including roles labelled Explorers and Stepping Stones, alongside an Emotional Learning Support Assistant, and a named SENCo role within the staff listing. Even without detailed published explanations of each strand, this suggests the school is thinking for targeted support, not only general classroom differentiation.
Another indicator is that the school discusses values language as part of behavioural expectations and decision-making, which, when done well, becomes a shared vocabulary for reconciliation, friendships, and classroom relationships. Parents should ask how this works in practice for the youngest pupils, for example, how conflict is repaired, how consistent adult responses are across classrooms, and what happens when a child needs more intensive support than a class teacher can provide.
At infant stage, extracurricular life is often less about specialist clubs and more about the breadth of experiences children can access safely and regularly. Two areas stand out from the published information.
First, wraparound provision is described as an active environment rather than simply supervision, with children able to play, create, relax and enjoy a snack in the school library, and clubs run by staff who already know the pupils. The implication is practical continuity, the same adults and expectations across the day, which can be particularly helpful for children who struggle with transitions.
Second, sport appears to be treated as a skill-building programme rather than only games. The sports premium page describes a scheme that gives pupils opportunities across gymnastics, athletics, games and dance, and it also links physical skills to wider school life, such as dance used in whole-school services and participation in inter-school sport. That breadth matters at ages 4 to 7, because it is where confidence, coordination, and willingness to try are often established.
On the community side, the school highlights an active parent and teacher association, which usually correlates with events, fundraising, and a sense that families have a route to get involved. For parents who value community participation, that can be a meaningful part of day-to-day experience.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Wraparound care is published as an early morning club running 7.30am to 8.30am, and an after-school club running 3.00pm to 5.00pm, with a stated trial extension to 5.30pm until March 2026.
For travel planning, most families will approach this as a walkable local school, but where distance is the tie-break in an oversubscribed year, it is worth being realistic about how quickly allocations can narrow. In Eastbourne, many families also weigh traffic and parking pressure at drop-off, so checking the immediate streets around Winchelsea Road at the relevant times can be as useful as checking mileage.
Infant-only age range. The school ends at age 7, so families will need a clear plan for Year 3, including how transition is supported and whether the linked junior pathway suits your child.
Oversubscription pressure. With 143 applications for 64 offers in the latest provided admissions figures, allocation is competitive, and priority categories will matter.
Inspection recency. The last full inspection grade on Ofsted’s site relates to the predecessor school, with the latest visit dated September 2018, while the current academy listing shows an academy conversion letter rather than a graded inspection outcome.
Possible change on the horizon. The school website refers to a consultation about lowering the age range to include nursery provision, which could affect future intake patterns and facilities if approved.
St Andrew's Church of England Infants School looks like a values-led infant school that prioritises relationships, routines, and a clear Christian framework, with practical strengths in wraparound care and a coherent early years curriculum story. It suits families who want a Church of England ethos expressed through daily language and behaviour expectations, and who value a local infant-school start before moving on to junior provision. The limiting factor is admission, competition for places is real, so families should treat planning and timing as part of the decision, not an afterthought.
The most recent graded Ofsted outcome available on the inspection history relates to the predecessor school at the same site, which was judged Good, with the latest inspection visit dated 18 September 2018. The current academy listing shows an academy conversion letter dated 05 October 2023 rather than a full graded inspection outcome, so it is wise to visit and test current routines, behaviour culture, and reading provision for yourself.
Applications are made through East Sussex County Council for the normal admissions round. For 2026 to 2027, the council lists 12 September 2025 as the opening date and 15 January 2026 as the closing date, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The provided admissions figures show 143 applications for 64 offers for the primary entry route, which is around 2.23 applications per place. In oversubscribed years, priority categories and distance tie-break rules become especially important.
Yes. The school describes an early morning club running 7.30am to 8.30am and an after-school club running 3.00pm to 5.00pm, with a stated trial extension to 5.30pm until March 2026.
The school describes a daily focus on six Christian values, Friendship, Compassion, Resilience, Forgiveness, Thankfulness and Peace, linked to relationships and behaviour expectations. For many families, the best way to judge fit is to ask how worship, reflection, and values language show up in assemblies, classroom routines, and how staff help pupils repair friendships.
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