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.
In a busy part of Eastleigh, this is a large, mainstream community primary that feels organised and purposeful rather than sprawling. The school’s public messaging puts character and belonging up front, with a vision that centres curiosity, aspiration and inclusion, and a practical set of behavioural expectations that pupils can actually repeat and use day to day.
Academically, the most recent published Key Stage 2 results sit above England averages on the headline combined measure, with particularly strong performance at the higher standard, which suggests plenty of stretch for pupils ready to push on.
If you are thinking about Reception entry, demand is real. The latest application cycle shows more applications than offers, so families should treat admission as competitive and plan early.
The school’s stated vision is explicit about what it wants pupils to become: curious learners, aspirational in what they do, supported by a community where everyone belongs. That reads like a strapline until you look at how the day is framed. Pupils are expected to be ready, respectful and safe, language that is easy for younger children to grasp and for staff to apply consistently.
There is also a clear effort to make unstructured time work well. The recent inspection commentary describes a lunchtime approach branded as Happy Lunchtimes, with structured, engaging options at break so that pupils have something to do with friends, rather than just being managed until the bell. That sort of detail matters in a school of this size because it often sets the tone for behaviour and friendships across the whole afternoon.
Leadership is also in a transition phase that is worth understanding as a parent. Mr Mark Wartnaby is listed as headteacher on official records, and the school’s own welcome messaging says he became substantive headteacher in 2024. In practice, that means many of the systems parents experience now, such as curriculum routines, behaviour consistency and communication expectations, are likely being tightened and standardised rather than left to drift.
The Key Stage 2 picture is better than it might look if you only glance at the overall ranking position.
In 2024, 70.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 20.67% reached greater depth, well above the England benchmark of 8%, which suggests the school is not only getting pupils to expected standards, but also extending a meaningful group beyond them. Reading, mathematics and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores were 104, 104 and 103 respectively, all above the typical national reference point of 100 for scaled scores.
On the FindMySchool primary outcomes ranking, the school is ranked 10,163rd in England and 10th in Eastleigh. That places it below England average on the ranking distribution, in the band that corresponds to the bottom 40% of schools in England by this particular composite measure. For parents, the key nuance is that the ranked position is an overall comparator across a very large national cohort, while the published attainment indicators show a school that, in its most recent KS2 year, exceeded England averages on several of the measures parents most commonly care about. This is a good example of why it is worth looking at both the distribution position and the underlying attainment profile before drawing conclusions.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
70.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The current inspection evidence describes an ambitious curriculum that is planned in a logical sequence so pupils build knowledge progressively over time. Classroom delivery is framed around clear modelling, manageable chunks, and purposeful recap so that key content moves into long term memory, especially in English and mathematics where checking for understanding is most routine.
Reading is positioned as a priority from Reception onwards, with a structured phonics programme taught by trained staff, and an expectation that children read at school and at home. The school also runs reading cafés, which is a helpful mechanism for making shared reading feel normal and social for families who may not have that habit established yet.
There are also two improvement themes parents should notice because they shape the day your child experiences. First, early years curriculum planning is flagged as an area where some areas need clearer definition so children are consistently prepared for Year 1. Second, in some subjects beyond the core, checking what pupils have learned is not always precise enough yet to spot gaps and adjust planning reliably. Neither point suggests a weak school, but both point to a school working on consistency, which is often the difference between a solid experience and an excellent one in a large primary.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a state primary, most pupils move on at the end of Year 6 through Hampshire’s secondary admissions process, with choices typically shaped by where families live and which schools they list as preferences. The practical step for parents is to treat Year 5 and early Year 6 as the time to learn the local secondary landscape and to understand how distance and criteria operate for your preferred options.
For pupils themselves, the strongest transition outcomes tend to come from two things: academic readiness and confidence with routines. The school’s emphasis on behaviour expectations, structured teaching and regular recap should support both, particularly for pupils who benefit from predictability when stepping up to a larger secondary setting.
Reception admission is through the local authority process, not a direct application to the school. For September 2026 entry, an application deadline of 15 January 2026 for Year R. If you are considering a later year group, you should expect an in year process with places dependent on capacity in the relevant class.
For the primary entry route there were 132 applications for 78 offers, equating to 1.69 applications per place, and the route is marked oversubscribed. When a school is oversubscribed at this level, being realistic about criteria, timing and backup options is essential.
A practical way to approach this is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your likely distance and to stress test your shortlist against recent patterns, then keep a saved shortlist as you explore alternatives. That reduces the risk of falling in love with one option without a viable plan B.
100%
1st preference success rate
77 of 77 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
78
Offers
78
Applications
132
The safeguarding position is clear, with effective arrangements described in the latest inspection evidence and a designated safeguarding lead structure set out publicly by the school. For parents, the more useful layer is how pupils are taught to ask for help. The inspection commentary describes worry monsters in classrooms as a mechanism for children to signal concerns, plus explicit online safety preparation. These are age appropriate systems that matter most for pupils who struggle to speak up in the moment.
Behaviour and relationships are also described as consistently calm, with pupils understanding expectations and staff actively monitoring standards. Importantly, there is a nurture provision referenced for pupils who find behaviour regulation harder, with trained staff helping pupils develop strategies to manage emotions. That is the sort of targeted internal support that can stop repeated sanctions becoming a child’s whole story.
A school this size needs variety outside lessons so that children can find their thing, and the enrichment detail available suggests a genuine mix rather than a token list.
The inspection evidence highlights a wide range of sporting and creative clubs, plus an emphasis on music from a young age and performance opportunities, including performing to residents of a nearby care home. That last point is more than a nice extra. It shows pupils learning that their work has an audience and a purpose, which tends to raise both effort and confidence.
From the school’s own clubs information, there are externally run options that include Sketch, Dodgeball, Karate, Blue Butterflies and ICON Sports. That mix is useful because it covers both structured physical activity and creative or skills based sessions, and it also gives families flexibility if the teacher led clubs rotate by term.
Wraparound also links to enrichment. When after school care includes both free play and structured activities, children who stay late are not simply waiting for pick up, they are still in a developmentally useful setting.
The school day is published as 08:45 when gates open, 08:55 register, and 15:25 end of day, equating to 32.5 hours a week.
Wraparound care is available via Shooting Stars during term time. Breakfast Club runs 07:30 to 08:45, and After School Club runs 15:25 to 18:00, with session pricing published by the school. Families should note that pick up and drop off is managed from the double doors at the back of the car park, and the car park is not accessible to cars during drop off and pick up times.
For travel planning, the key is to map the school run realistically at peak times and to consider whether your child will use wraparound regularly, since that changes the traffic and parking pattern.
Competitive entry. The latest demand figures show 132 applications for 78 offers, and the route is marked oversubscribed. If this is your first choice, you should still shortlist realistic alternatives.
Early years curriculum clarity is still a development point. The most recent inspection evidence flags that parts of Reception curriculum planning need sharper definition to prepare children consistently for Year 1. For some families this will be a non issue, others will want to probe how this is being addressed.
Consistency of checking learning across subjects. In some foundation subjects, checking what pupils have learned is described as less consistent, which can affect how quickly gaps are spotted. If your child needs very systematic feedback to thrive, it is worth asking how assessment routines work beyond English and mathematics.
This is a large Eastleigh community primary with a clear behaviour culture, a strong emphasis on reading, and KS2 attainment that sits above England averages on key measures, including a notably strong higher standard figure. It suits families who want structure, predictable routines, and a broad school experience where clubs and wraparound are part of normal life, not an afterthought. The main challenge is admission competition at Reception, so the best approach is an early, data informed shortlist rather than a single school plan.
The most recent Ofsted report, published 20 September 2023, confirms the school continues to be Good. Academic outcomes at Key Stage 2 are above England averages on the combined expected standard measure, and a sizeable group reaches the higher standard.
For September 2026 entry to Year R, an application deadline of 15 January 2026. Applications are made through the local authority route rather than directly to the school.
The most recent demand data shows 132 applications for 78 offers for the primary entry route, and the route is marked oversubscribed. This indicates more applicants than places, so entry can be competitive.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound provision via Shooting Stars, with Breakfast Club from 07:30 to 08:45 and After School Club from 15:25 to 18:00 during term time.
Alongside teacher led clubs that vary by term, the school lists externally run clubs including Sketch, Dodgeball, Karate, Blue Butterflies and ICON Sports.
Get in touch with the school directly
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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