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.
Respect, responsibility and resilience are not treated as marketing lines here, they are visible in the way pupils move through the day and the way adults set expectations. That clarity matters because this is a large, two-form entry primary (capacity 420), so systems have to work for every child, not just the confident few.
Leadership is established. Ms Ann Wheeler has been headteacher since September 2018, and the senior team listed publicly includes a deputy headteacher, an assistant headteacher, and a named special educational needs co-ordinator (SENCo).
Academically, the published Key Stage 2 picture is strong. In 2024, 75% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, which sits above the England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is also eye-catching, 29% compared with an England benchmark of 8%. (These are the official-data-based figures used in FindMySchool’s rankings and comparisons.)
This is a school that leans into consistency. The day is structured, the start is tight, and expectations are taught early. The published routine gives families a clear view of how the school protects learning time: gates open for a 10-minute window, registration is prompt, and there is a defined lunchtime and afternoon restart. For many children, that predictability is reassuring, especially in a bigger setting.
Pupils’ conduct is a clear strength. The latest inspection in September 2023 judged the school Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development both graded Outstanding. That combination often points to a culture where pupils are trusted with responsibility and adults actively teach social norms, not just enforce them.
The site layout also shapes daily feel. The school day information references two pedestrian gates used by different year groups, with one route described as being by the Bowls Club and another by Manorcroft Nursery. Practically, that suggests the school is designed to handle volume at drop-off and pick-up, rather than relying on families to improvise.
The headline measure for primary outcomes is the combined reading, writing and mathematics expected standard. In 2024, 75.33% of pupils met that benchmark, compared with an England average of 62%. That gap matters because it indicates a meaningful proportion of pupils are leaving Year 6 ready for the secondary curriculum without needing catch-up in core areas.
Depth is not limited to a small top set either. At the higher standard, 29% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 8%. That points to stretch for higher attainers, not just threshold coaching.
Scaled scores also support the picture: reading 107, mathematics 106, and grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS) 109. Scaled scores sit on a 100-based national standardised scale, so these results suggest attainment comfortably above the expected benchmark across tested areas.
Rankings, used carefully, add context. Ranked 2,997th in England and 2nd in Egham for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), the school sits above the England average, placing it comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
75.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is described as knowledge-led, with an emphasis on vocabulary development and long-term learning, framed around the idea that progress means knowing more and remembering more. For families, the implication is that teaching is likely to prioritise carefully sequenced content and retrieval, rather than loosely themed projects that can leave gaps.
Inspection evidence reinforces the mechanics behind outcomes. The September 2023 report describes a well-sequenced curriculum from Reception onwards, with particular strength in early reading and mathematics assessment routines. Where the report is more cautious is also useful for parents: it highlights that assessment in some foundation subjects was still being refined, with inconsistency in checking whether pupils had secured specific knowledge. In practical terms, this usually means core subjects are the most systematised, while parts of the wider curriculum are in a “tightening up” phase.
Support for pupils with SEND appears to be embedded, not bolted on. The staff list identifies a dedicated SENCo and a substantial learning support team, which matters in a large primary because support capacity can otherwise be stretched thin.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families, the immediate question is which secondary schools are realistically in play from Egham and the surrounding area. While individual destinations vary year to year, local admissions arrangements give strong clues. In Surrey, several secondary schools use defined priority categories, and one local secondary, The Magna Carta School, explicitly lists Manorcroft among named feeder schools within its published admissions priorities.
For families considering a Catholic secondary route, Salesian School is another prominent local option, but its criteria are faith-based and documentation-led, so it suits families who already participate in parish life and can evidence it.
The practical implication is that Year 6 transition planning should start with reading the relevant admissions criteria early, then matching that to your family’s actual circumstances: distance, sibling position, and (where relevant) faith evidence. FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful here because it helps families sanity-check proximity and local alternatives when the market is competitive.
This is a Surrey local authority maintained school, and Surrey County Council is the admissions authority for Reception entry as well as in-year applications. The school’s own admissions page is explicit that places are allocated under the council’s policy and that waiting lists are held by the local authority rather than by the school.
Demand is a reality. The most recent admissions figures show 133 applications for 59 offers for the main entry route, a ratio of 2.25 applications per offered place. First-preference pressure also looks meaningful, with 1.25 first-preference applications for each first-preference offer. In plain terms, that usually means families should plan as if a preferred place is not automatic unless their priority category is strong.
For September 2026 Reception entry, Surrey’s published timeline is clear: applications opened on 03 November 2025, the on-time deadline was 15 January 2026, offers were issued on 16 April 2026, and parents needed to accept or decline by 30 April 2026.
Open events can help families make a more confident decision, but dates move annually. The school’s communications for the September 2026 intake indicate that open mornings typically run in the autumn term, with an additional session sometimes scheduled after Christmas. Treat that as a pattern rather than a promise, and check the current year’s calendar before planning childcare or time off work.
79.7%
1st preference success rate
59 of 74 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
133
The staffing structure points to layered support. In addition to the SENCo, the published staff team includes an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA) and a Home School Link Worker (HSLW). For parents, this matters because it suggests the school has internal capacity to support emotional regulation, attendance issues, and home-school communication without relying solely on external referrals.
Play is treated as a development area, not a break from learning. The school is implementing OPAL (Outdoor Play and Learning), described as a programme supported by Sport England, with the explicit aim of improving wellbeing, self-regulation, physical activity and social development, alongside learning to manage risk. The school also signals that this is a staged project over 12 to 18 months, which is a helpful indicator that leaders are investing in behaviour culture through better play, rather than simply tightening sanctions.
Clubs are one of the easiest ways to see whether a school is trying to meet different children where they are. Manorcroft’s published list for Autumn Term provision provides unusually concrete detail for a state primary, and it is broader than just sport. Examples include Jam Coding, Cookery Club, Judo, Cheerleading, Street Dance, Drama Club, Craft Club and a French Club for younger pupils. That spread tends to suit children with different confidence profiles, including those who do not naturally gravitate to competitive team sport.
Wraparound care is also clearly defined and, importantly, long enough to be usable for full working days. Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am to 8.40am for all year groups. After school, XT Club runs from 3.15pm to 6.00pm, and the provider also advertises holiday camps. The implication is practical rather than philosophical: families can avoid patchwork childcare, which reduces stress in Reception and Key Stage 1 especially.
Sport and physical development appear to be supported by local access. The school’s PE and sport documentation notes that pupils can walk to a local pool, and swimming lessons are offered in multiple year groups. For many families, the benefit is simple: more than one exposure point to swimming across primary, rather than leaving it to a single Year 6 block.
The school day runs 8.45am to 3.15pm, which the school states equates to 32.5 hours per week. Drop-off is managed through a short gate window, and collection begins with gates opening slightly before the end of the day. Lunch begins at 12.05pm and the afternoon session starts at 1.00pm.
Wraparound is a genuine strength for working families: Breakfast Club from 7.30am, then after-school care via XT Club to 6.00pm. Holiday provision is also referenced by the wraparound provider.
For parents comparing several local primaries, FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison view can help you line up KS2 outcomes and demand indicators side-by-side, rather than trying to hold them in your head across multiple tabs.
Competition for places. The admissions figures indicate oversubscription, with more than two applications per offered place in the latest recorded cycle. If you are relying on a place here, treat your application strategy as high stakes, and include realistic alternatives in your preferences.
Big-school trade-offs. Two-form entry brings social breadth and more clubs, but it can also feel less intimate for children who need a slower warm-up. A tour at a normal time of day is useful for judging fit.
Foundation subject assessment still being refined. External review points to strong practice in early reading and mathematics assessment, but also indicates the school has been improving precision in some foundation subjects. Ask how this now works in your child’s year group, and how leaders check progress outside the core.
Manorcroft Primary School suits families who want clear routines, a calm culture, and KS2 outcomes that sit above England averages. It also works well for working parents because wraparound care is structured and extended. Who it suits most is a child who responds well to consistent expectations and likes having lots of options, clubs, leadership roles, and a busy peer group. The main hurdle is admission rather than what happens once a place is secured.
It is a good school overall, with particular strength in behaviour and personal development as evidenced in the most recent inspection. The published KS2 outcomes in 2024 were above England averages, including a higher-than-average proportion reaching the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics.
Admissions are managed by Surrey County Council and places are allocated using the local authority’s admissions policy, rather than a fixed “school-defined” catchment map on the school website. The practical outcome is that priority categories and distance measures matter, and families should read the Surrey policy for the relevant entry year.
Yes. Breakfast Club is available in the morning, and there is after-school wraparound care via XT Club that runs to early evening. Holiday provision is also referenced by the wraparound provider, which can be helpful for families needing cover outside term time.
Applications go through Surrey County Council for the normal admissions round. The council publishes the annual timeline, including the application window, deadline, offer day, and the date by which families must respond to an offer.
The school publishes a termly programme. Examples from the Autumn Term include Jam Coding, Cookery Club, Judo, Cheerleading, Street Dance, Drama Club, Craft Club and a French Club for younger pupils, alongside football and multi-sport options.
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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