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.
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Folly View Primary has been through a period of rapid change, moving from an infant school model into a full primary for children aged 2 to 11, and relocating into a newly built site to support that expansion.
Leadership is structured across an Executive Headteacher, Joseph Rubba, and a Head of School, Jo Baird, which is often a practical model when schools are growing or working closely within a trust. The school is part of Cambrian Learning Trust.
For families, the immediate headline is competitiveness. The most recent published admissions figures show 87 applications for 48 offers for the main entry route, with the school recorded as oversubscribed. (The school does not publish a fixed catchment distance here, so planning tends to be about understanding criteria and timing, rather than relying on a known “safe” radius.)
This is a school describing itself as new “in name and structure”, with the practical implications that come with it, expanded age range, more phases to coordinate, and the need to build consistent routines from early years through to Year 6. That kind of growth can feel unsettled in some settings, but Folly View frames it as an opportunity to align culture and learning habits across the whole school, supported by the trust partnership and close working links with another local primary.
The values language is clear and repeated consistently across official pages: belonging, kindness, resilience, community, integrity, and aspiration. For parents, the usefulness of values is whether they show up in day-to-day expectations. Folly View’s own statements place these values at the centre of personal development and behaviour norms, not as background branding.
Early years is a meaningful part of the identity. The school offers places from age 2, with Seedlings for 2 year olds, and two preschool rooms for 3 and 4 year olds called Acorns and Sunflower. For families wanting continuity from nursery into Reception, that structure can reduce transition friction, children get familiar with routines, staff, and the wider environment before statutory school begins.
Public headline attainment measures for primary schools are not included for Folly View, so this review focuses on the strongest available evidence, inspection outcomes, curriculum intent, and the day-to-day conditions that typically underpin progress.
Ofsted’s inspection in May 2025 recorded Good judgements across all key areas, including quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. Under the current framework, there is no single overall effectiveness grade for state-funded schools, so parents should read the pattern across these strands.
The practical implication of that profile is a school that is functioning well across both academic and pastoral domains, rather than excelling in one area while lagging in another. For many families, that is the most reassuring combination in a growing primary, especially when early years and Key Stage 2 are being developed under one organisational roof.
A school expanding into a full primary has to solve a core question: how do you keep early years play-based foundations coherent, while also building the knowledge and habits needed for Key Stage 2? Folly View’s own positioning is that the shift to an all-through model enables stronger continuity and improved outcomes over time, because curriculum and routines can be planned across phases rather than “handed over” between separate schools.
For early years, the school’s nursery and preschool structure matters because it gives children longer to settle into expectations before Reception. Seedlings is described as having 15 spaces per session for 2 year olds, which suggests a deliberately small cohort size at the youngest end.
For older pupils, families should look for the basics done well: clear routines, strong reading culture, and consistent behaviour expectations. These are the kinds of building blocks that tend to translate into stronger outcomes at the end of Year 6, even when headline data is not being foregrounded here.
As a primary serving to Year 6, the “next step” is secondary transfer rather than sixth form or university destinations. Folly View sits within Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions landscape, so most families will be weighing likely secondary options based on where they live, travel practicality, and the admissions criteria of the secondary schools they are considering.
The best approach is to treat Year 6 transition planning as a process that starts early in Key Stage 2: understand transport and realistic travel time, review secondary admissions rules, and keep an eye on how your child responds to increasing academic demands and homework habits. Where a family is aiming for a specific secondary school, it is sensible to use FindMySchool’s tools to compare local options side-by-side, particularly when a child’s needs include SEN support or when the family wants a specific balance of academic and pastoral emphasis.
Admissions are competitive in the round. The most recent published figures show 87 applications and 48 offers for the main admissions route, and the school is marked as oversubscribed. Put simply, not every applicant can be offered a place. With the recorded ratio of applications to places at 1.81, that equates to roughly 1.8 applications per place.
In Oxfordshire, Reception applications for September 2026 entry opened on 4 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. These dates are important because late applications tend to weaken choice and reduce the chance of securing a preferred school if demand is strong.
Folly View also signals a proactive approach to prospective visits, promoting Reception 2026 tours and encouraging families to book a guided visit through the school. While tours are not “data”, they are one of the most practical ways to test fit: how calm routines feel, how staff explain learning and behaviour expectations, and how the school supports transitions into Reception.
Because no last-distance-offered figure is available for this school, distance planning should be cautious. Families should avoid assuming that living “nearby” is enough, and instead review the oversubscription criteria carefully and apply on time, with realistic back-up preferences.
Applications
87
Total received
Places Offered
48
Subscription Rate
1.8x
Apps per place
The clearest signals available in public-facing material are leadership roles and the way responsibilities are allocated. Folly View lists a Head of School who is also the Designated Safeguarding Lead, which can support fast decision-making and clear accountability.
In a growing school, wellbeing often depends on consistency, clear behaviour norms, and predictable routines. The wraparound care arrangements are also a pastoral factor for working families, because a stable start and end to the day can reduce pressure on children and parents alike. Folly View expanded wraparound care to include after-school provision from September 2025, with breakfast club starting at 7:30am and after-school provision running until 6:00pm.
Folly View states that it runs multiple after-school clubs each term, staffed by teaching and support staff, and free of charge. The most useful way to understand this offer is to look at named examples rather than generic claims. The current club timetable includes:
Book Club (Years 1 to 5), based in the library
Golden Mile (Years 1 to 5), on the school field
Rugby Club (Years 3 to 5), led by Faringdon Rugby Club
Science Club (Years 3 and 4), based in a classroom setting
ECO Club (Years 3 and 4)
Tennis Club (Years 1 and 2), on the main playground
The implication for parents is practical. These are not just “nice extras”. Book Club supports reading stamina and motivation, Golden Mile builds daily fitness habits, and Science and ECO clubs give children structured opportunities to explore topics beyond class lessons. For some pupils, especially those who need a sense of belonging outside formal lessons, clubs can be where confidence is built.
The school day starts at 8:45am and ends at 3:15pm, with 32.5 compulsory hours per week stated by the school. For wraparound care, breakfast club begins at 7:30am and after-school provision runs until 6:00pm.
Travel and drop-off are always worth sanity-checking for a popular primary. Families should expect peak-time pressure around the start and end of the school day, and rely on the school’s guidance for safe drop-off routines, especially for younger children.
For nursery-aged children, government-funded hours may be available for eligible families, and parents should check current eligibility rules and the school’s early years information before committing to a pattern of sessions. Nursery pricing is published by the school separately and should be checked directly.
Competition for places. With 87 applications and 48 offers in the most recent published figures, demand outstrips supply. Families should use all preferences strategically and submit on time.
A school in growth mode. Folly View describes itself as new “in name and structure” after expanding from an infant model into a full primary and moving into a newly built site. Some families love that momentum; others prefer settings with a longer-established all-through track record.
Wraparound operates with booking and availability constraints. The school’s wraparound information highlights booking processes and the reality that provision can fill. Families who rely on early start or late pickup should confirm capacity early.
Folly View Primary is a popular, expanding state primary in Faringdon, with Good judgements across the board at its May 2025 inspection and a clear emphasis on values-led culture and structured personal development. The school will suit families who want continuity from early years into Year 6, and who value predictable routines, wraparound options, and a clubs programme with named, practical activities.
The main challenge is admission. It is best suited to families who can apply early, understand Oxfordshire’s timeline, and keep realistic alternative preferences alongside Folly View.
The most recent inspection in May 2025 recorded Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. Demand for places is also strong, with the school recorded as oversubscribed in the latest published admissions figures.
Reception applications are made through Oxfordshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 4 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes, the school is recorded as oversubscribed in the most recent published admissions figures, with 87 applications and 48 offers.
Yes. The school offers provision from age 2, with Seedlings for 2 year olds (15 spaces per session stated), and preschool rooms for 3 and 4 year olds called Acorns and Sunflower.
The school states that breakfast club begins at 7:30am and after-school provision runs until 6:00pm, introduced as an expanded offer from September 2025.
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