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 calm start to school life matters most in Reception and Key Stage 1, and this is a setting that puts personal development right alongside early literacy and number. The most recent Ofsted inspection (28 to 29 January 2025) stated that the school has taken effective action to maintain the standards from its previous Good judgement, and it describes pupils who are keen to learn and kind to one another.
This is also a school in transition. The January 2025 report notes that the headteacher was appointed in January 2024, and that from 1 May 2025 the infant school was due to amalgamate with the on-site nursery and junior school to form West Rise Primary School. For parents, the practical implication is simple, the infant stage is not an isolated chapter, it sits within an expanding all-through primary offer on the same site.
The tone here is shaped by routines that help young pupils feel secure and ready to learn. Ofsted describes children who arrive happily and settle into lessons with positive attitudes, and it highlights a strong emphasis on wellbeing and personal development alongside academic learning.
A distinctive feature is the school’s “Wise Owls” language, which shows up in class communications as a way of recognising perseverance and everyday effort. In Reception, for example, children are celebrated for sticking with tricky tasks, with a rotating Wise Owl chair and certificates used as tangible milestones. This sort of shared vocabulary can work well for young pupils who need a clear, consistent set of expectations that feels encouraging rather than punitive.
The wider identity leans into a research-informed approach to wellbeing. The school explicitly frames itself as a “Wellbeing First School” in its published prospectus, and that emphasis is reinforced by named programmes and practices that sit alongside the curriculum. Parents who prioritise emotional regulation, confidence, and safe relationships at ages 4 to 7 will recognise the intent in how the school describes itself and organises day-to-day life.
As an infant school, the key academic priorities sit in the building blocks, early reading, early writing, and number sense. The January 2025 inspection report notes an ambitious curriculum that is sequenced logically through Key Stage 1, and it places reading at the centre, with phonics teaching starting from the moment children begin Reception.
There are no published Key Stage 2 outcomes for an infant-only age range, and the available results does not provide statutory attainment measures for this setting. The most useful performance lens for parents is therefore the strength of early reading, the clarity of routines, and whether pupils are being prepared to move into junior provision ready to learn confidently.
Early reading is the headline. Phonics starts immediately in Reception, and the report describes teaching that is well matched to pupils’ needs, with support put in place quickly for pupils who struggle. For families, the implication is that learning to read is treated as a non-negotiable entitlement, not an optional enrichment.
The curriculum is also organised to help pupils remember and build. In English and mathematics, staff return to content regularly, checking understanding and using repetition to strengthen recall. A useful nuance is the improvement point raised in the same report, in some subjects beyond English and mathematics, pupils do not always have enough opportunities to revisit prior learning, so on occasion they forget important knowledge. That is not unusual in a creative Key Stage 1 curriculum, but it is worth asking how subject leaders are tightening sequencing and retrieval outside the core.
Topic work appears to be used as a vehicle for vocabulary, background knowledge, and engagement. Recent class updates show coherent themes such as traditional tales (Into the Woods) in Year 1, and history-led work on castles, knights, and dragons in Year 2, with special theme days used to bring learning alive.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families, the key transition question is what happens after Year 2. Historically, children moved from the infant school to the neighbouring junior school on the same site, and the school’s published materials describe that pathway as the typical destination.
From May 2025, the formal structure changed, with the infant school amalgamating with the on-site nursery and junior provision to create an all-through primary school. In practical terms, that should reduce the “school change” feeling at the end of Year 2 for many pupils, while still allowing families to re-evaluate at the usual points if a different junior option is a better fit.
This is a East Sussex County Council coordinated admissions school, with applications made through the local authority rather than directly to the school. The school’s own admissions page directs families to apply via the local authority process and also notes that in-year applications are handled through the council.
Demand is clearly strong. Recent admissions figures show 182 applications for 82 offers in the main admissions round data available, which equates to around 2.22 applications per place. That competitive picture makes it sensible to plan early and to include realistic alternatives on the application form, particularly if you are moving into the area or are unsure how your address will be prioritised.
For September 2026 Reception entry, East Sussex County Council sets out the published timetable, applications open on 12 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026. Families can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense-check how their home location compares with typical patterns of local demand, while remembering that allocation depends on the full admissions criteria and the distribution of applicants in that year.
Applications
182
Total received
Places Offered
82
Subscription Rate
2.2x
Apps per place
Wellbeing is not presented as a bolt-on here, it is framed as a core organising principle. The prospectus explicitly describes the school as a Wellbeing First School, and the inspection report emphasises personal development, safe routines, and pupils learning how to keep themselves safe, including online.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as structured and integrated. The January 2025 inspection report notes that needs are identified well and that staff adapt their input so pupils with SEND can take part successfully in lessons. It also refers to a school “Growth” approach that supports pupils with SEND. For parents, the implication is that help is designed to sit inside everyday teaching rather than relying solely on separate interventions.
Enrichment is planned for young pupils and then broadens across the wider primary offer on the same site. In the infant phase, activities referenced in the inspection report include gymnastics and dance, and it describes pupils taking meaningful roles such as contributing to the school council and helping reduce waste.
On the current school website, clubs and enrichment are listed with practical detail. Examples include a Nature club for Reception that takes learning outdoors with a fire pit theme (stories, crafts, growing), dance sessions for Reception and Key Stage 1, and Lego for older pupils within the all-through primary structure. Even if your child is still in Reception to Year 2, it is useful to see how the offer grows as pupils move through the school.
Class-based experiences also matter at this age. Recent updates reference visits and special activities used to deepen topic learning, including a planetarium experience linked to a space theme. Those “big moments” can be disproportionately motivating for younger pupils, especially when they are tied back into vocabulary and storytelling in class.
The published school day times for the younger phase are 8.50am to 3.00pm. Wraparound care is available, with breakfast club and after-school club provision for younger pupils listed on the school site, including an hourly rate of £4.50 for 2025. (As with all wraparound provision, costs and session structures can change, so treat published rates as a snapshot and check the latest details before budgeting.)
For travel, the school sits in the Langney area of Eastbourne, serving local housing estates. The site is adjacent to the neighbouring junior provision, which matters for families with children across age ranges and for siblings planning.
Competition for places. With 182 applications for 82 offers in the most recent admissions data available, planning matters. Include a sensible spread of preferences and keep an eye on the local authority timetable.
A school in structural transition. The infant school amalgamated into an all-through primary structure from May 2025. That can be positive for continuity, but it can also mean policies and systems are still bedding in, so ask what has changed and what is still being aligned.
Curriculum consistency outside the core. External review notes strong sequencing and revisiting in English and mathematics, but it also flags that some other subjects need more planned revisiting so pupils remember what matters. Ask how this is being addressed across Key Stage 1.
Wraparound provision is available, but verify the details. Breakfast and after-school care is listed, including costs, and parts of the provision are externally managed. Check session times, availability, and booking arrangements early, especially if you need guaranteed childcare to cover work hours.
This is a supportive, structured infant setting with a clear emphasis on wellbeing, early reading, and confidence-building routines. The latest inspection evidence aligns with that picture, describing pupils who behave well, settle into routines, and are taught phonics and early literacy with urgency and care. Best suited to families in Langney and wider Eastbourne who want a caring Key Stage 1 start, with a strong pathway into junior provision on the same site, and who are comfortable navigating a competitive admissions process.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (January 2025) reported that the school has taken effective action to maintain the standards from its previous Good judgement. It highlights positive behaviour, strong routines, and a clear focus on early reading and phonics.
Applications are coordinated by East Sussex County Council rather than made directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, the published closing date for on-time applications is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes, wraparound provision is published on the school website for the younger phase, including breakfast club and after-school care. Session structures and prices can change, so check the most up to date information before relying on a place.
Historically, pupils transferred to the neighbouring junior school on the same site. From May 2025, the infant school was set to become part of an all-through primary structure, which should make continuity into Key Stage 2 more straightforward for many families.
Recent admissions figures indicate more applications than offers, which signals an oversubscribed picture. Families should apply on time, list realistic alternative preferences, and use the local authority guidance to understand how places are allocated.
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