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.
The Orchard Infant School focuses tightly on the years that matter most for habits of learning, from Reception through Year 2. This is a state, mixed infant school in East Molesey, serving pupils aged 5 to 7, with an intake that is clearly in demand. In the most recent admissions cycle provided, 176 applications competed for 83 offers, so competition for places is a practical reality for local families.
The most recent full inspection (March 2022) judged the school Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes rated Outstanding. Safeguarding was reported as effective. For parents, that combination usually translates into a calm school day, consistent routines, and staff who do not let low level disruption erode learning time. Add a specialist resource centre for speech, language and communication needs, and you have a setting that tends to suit children who thrive on structure, predictable expectations, and early intervention when communication gets in the way of confidence.
Infant schools can feel like a blur of coats, lunchboxes, and rapid change. Here, the picture is more organised: clear routines are emphasised, and pupils are expected to manage transitions, tidy resources, and move purposefully between activities. That matters at this age. In Reception and Key Stage 1, behaviour culture is not a bolt-on; it is the mechanism that makes phonics, early writing, and number fluency possible without constant interruption.
The values language is simple and direct: courage, determination, respect, and kindness. Those themes are reinforced in how pupils are expected to treat others and how they are taught to recover from mistakes. For families weighing up “feel”, this is the kind of school that prioritises children learning how to learn, how to listen, and how to persist, rather than trying to do everything at once.
Inclusion is a defining element. The school runs a Specialist Resource Centre for Speech, Language and Communication Needs, supporting a small group of pupils whose primary need is a developmental language disorder profile, including needs such as Developmental Language Disorder or verbal dyspraxia. Importantly, this is not presented as a separate world running alongside mainstream, it is described as support that sits across the three year groups, which tends to make inclusion more practical and less tokenistic.
Parents often ask for results, but infant schools do not publish the same headline measures as junior primaries because pupils do not sit Key Stage 2 tests here. The more relevant question is whether children leave Year 2 as confident readers, writers, and mathematicians, and whether gaps are spotted early enough to avoid becoming entrenched by Key Stage 2.
The most recent inspection evidence points to particular strength in early reading and mathematics, supported by precise assessment and fast correction of misconceptions. That matters because the best infant practice is not just about keeping children busy, it is about knowing exactly what they have mastered and what they need next.
A fair caveat is that, at the time of inspection, leaders were still sharpening consistency in some foundation subjects. For parents, the implication is straightforward: core literacy and numeracy appear to be highly systematic, while some wider curriculum areas may have been in a phase of tightening expectations and subject leadership.
The curriculum intent emphasises strong foundations, resilience, and children being confident risk-takers in learning. In practice, that usually shows up as well sequenced phonics, explicit vocabulary teaching, and routines that help young pupils build independence. The school also highlights computing through the Teach Computing curriculum from the National Centre for Computing Education, which is a concrete signal that digital learning is planned rather than occasional.
Teaching in infant settings lives or dies on clarity. When lessons are short, focused, and predictable, pupils can concentrate their energy on new content rather than on figuring out what is happening next. The inspection report’s emphasis on clear structures and routines suggests this is a core operational strength.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school finishes at the end of Year 2, transition is not an abstract future concern, it is a near-term planning factor. Most families will be looking ahead to junior provision at age 7, and continuity matters, especially for children who benefit from stable routines or communication support.
Local authority admissions information for Elmbridge indicates that St Lawrence Church of England (Aided) Junior School includes children attending The Orchard Infant School within its published admissions criteria, which is a useful practical indicator of a common pathway for some families. Beyond that, families will typically consider other nearby junior and primary options depending on faith preference, sibling links, and travel distance. For children supported by an Education, Health and Care Plan, the transition planning piece becomes even more important, and early conversations are wise.
Reception entry is coordinated through Surrey County Council. For September 2026 entry, the school states that applications should be made via the Surrey coordinated admissions system, with the closing date for on time online applications given as 15 January 2026.
Demand looks strong. In the admissions data, 176 applications resulted in 83 offers, indicating an oversubscribed picture. Where families can make a difference is in understanding the oversubscription criteria, preparing any supplementary evidence that applies, and being realistic about how competitive the local area is.
The school also promotes tours for prospective Reception families, with tour dates typically running in the autumn term. When published dates have passed, it is safest to treat them as a pattern that often repeats annually, and to check the school’s current tours information for the live schedule.
Parents comparing options can use the FindMySchool Map Search to check practical travel distance and identify realistic alternatives nearby, particularly when an area is consistently oversubscribed.
Applications
176
Total received
Places Offered
83
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
For a school serving 5 to 7 year olds, pastoral care is not just about formal roles, it is about whether adults respond quickly to small problems before they become big ones. The inspection evidence describes pupils feeling safe, staff listening, and behaviour being handled effectively. Safeguarding was reported as effective, with staff alert to concerns and clear processes for getting help when needed.
In addition, the school places explicit emphasis on mental health and emotional wellbeing for the whole community, including staff. In infant settings, this often shows up as consistent emotion language, predictable routines, and an approach that helps children regulate enough to access learning.
For pupils with additional needs, the specialist language provision and the wider inclusion approach will matter to day to day experience. The school frames SEND support around adaptive teaching and reasonable adjustments, aiming for pupils to be part of classroom and school life rather than carved out of it.
Extracurricular in an infant school has to be practical and age-appropriate. The school offers its own breakfast and after-school club on site, and it also lists a structured programme of clubs, many provided by external agencies, that run term by term.
The detail here is unusually specific for an infant setting. Current examples include Onside Football Club (with sessions targeted by year group), Magpie Makes Art Club for Years 1 and 2, Busy Bees Craft Club for all year groups, Baking Buddies for Years 1 and 2, Playball across year groups, a Year 2 Times Table Club, and Choir subject to availability. For families, the implication is that enrichment is not limited to one or two generic options, and children who enjoy making, moving, singing, or number play can often find something that fits.
This also gives a useful signal about school culture. When clubs are well organised, clearly communicated, and aligned to age stages, it often reflects a school that values routine and planning beyond the classroom.
The school publishes a clear structure for the day. Gates open at 08:25, classroom doors open at 08:30 and close at 08:40, with the school day ending at 15:00. Total weekly hours are stated as 32 hours and 30 minutes, in line with the 32.5 hour recommendation.
Breakfast and after-school provision is available on site, and a wider set of after-school clubs operates through external providers. Specific session times and availability can change by term, so families should check the current wraparound information directly before relying on it for work patterns.
For travel, East Molesey families typically factor in school run congestion and parking constraints on residential roads. The practical test is whether walking or scooting is realistic from your home, especially when a school is oversubscribed and punctuality expectations are tight.
This is an infant school, so published “results” look different. There is no Key Stage 2 data here, and parents should judge outcomes through early reading, writing foundations, and how well children build number fluency by the end of Year 2.
Competition for places. With 176 applications for 83 offers the limiting factor for many families is not the education but securing entry through Surrey’s coordinated admissions criteria.
Wider curriculum consistency. The most recent inspection evidence highlights that some foundation subjects were still being refined to ensure pupils build and secure knowledge as intended, so parents who prioritise breadth as strongly as core literacy and numeracy should explore how this has progressed.
Transition at 7 is a real planning step. Because pupils move on after Year 2, families should consider the junior school pathway early, particularly where siblings, faith criteria, or additional needs influence the best fit.
The Orchard Infant School suits families who want a structured, calm start to schooling, with strong expectations for behaviour and routines that support early reading and mathematics. It is also a compelling option for children who need early speech and language support, given the presence of a specialist resource centre alongside mainstream provision. Best suited to local families who can engage early with Surrey’s admissions process and who value a school culture built around clear routines, inclusion, and purposeful learning in the earliest years.
The most recent full inspection judged the school Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes rated Outstanding. Parents prioritising calm routines, early reading foundations, and a well established behaviour culture are likely to see this as a strong fit.
Reception applications are made through Surrey County Council’s coordinated admissions system rather than directly to the school. The school states that the closing date for on time applications for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026.
In the admissions data, the school was oversubscribed, with 176 applications for 83 offers. That indicates meaningful competition for places in the local area.
Yes. The school runs a Specialist Resource Centre for Speech, Language and Communication Needs that supports a small cohort of pupils whose primary need is a recognised developmental language disorder profile, across the age range served by the school.
The programme varies term by term, but examples listed include football, art club, craft club, baking club, Playball, a Year 2 times tables club, and choir, alongside breakfast and after-school provision.
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