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 small roll changes the feel of a primary school. At Parkend Primary School, it means children are known quickly, responsibilities arrive earlier, and Year 6 pupils are genuinely visible role models rather than an anonymous top cohort. With around 60 pupils on roll against a capacity of 70, it operates as a compact village school where routines and expectations carry across year groups.
The other headline is academic. The school’s Key Stage 2 outcomes place it among the highest-performing primaries in England on the FindMySchool ranking, and this academic strength sits alongside a strong behavioural culture and an outward-facing programme built around outdoor learning and cycling.
Leadership is a clear part of the story. Mrs Katharine Burke is the executive headteacher, and she states she has led Parkend since February 2022.
Parkend’s identity is unusually consistent across sources. The school positions itself as “a small school with BIG ideas”, and that phrase aligns with the practical realities of a mixed-age, small-roll setting. Children get chances to represent the school, lead initiatives, and take on jobs that, in larger primaries, are often limited to a small number of Year 6 places. The leadership roles highlighted externally include house captains, the school council, and wellbeing champions.
The latest inspection describes a calm, positive ethos where pupils are courteous, respectful, and proud to belong. It also describes a reward culture that children understand clearly, including house points and “green slips”. For parents, this matters because behaviour is not just about avoiding disruption. In a small school, the tone set by a handful of pupils can shape everyone’s day, and consistent expectations reduce the risk of low-level issues becoming a defining feature.
The Forest of Dean context is not decorative branding. Outdoor learning appears as an operational feature, with named elements such as a Forest Classroom, a Trim Trail, and a PlayPod, plus a whole-school biking initiative. That combination signals a school that treats physical activity and the local environment as part of how children learn, not simply an occasional enrichment day. The implication for families is practical, children who learn best through movement, outdoor tasks, and hands-on experiences are likely to find the day-to-day rhythm more natural here than in a classroom-only model.
There is also a longer view. Local history sources note the village school was built in 1822 and rebuilt in 1845, with distinctive stone gateposts and a Gothic-style window frame referenced as part of the site’s historic character. This is not a substitute for educational quality, but it does reinforce a sense of continuity that many families value in a village school.
On Key Stage 2 outcomes, the picture is clear and unusually strong. In 2024, 88% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 50.33% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. These are exceptionally high figures in England terms and indicate both strong attainment and depth, not just borderline passes.
Reading, mathematics, and grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS) scaled scores reinforce the same message: reading 112, mathematics 111, and GPS 116. In practical terms, that combination usually correlates with confident readers, strong arithmetic fluency, and accurate writing mechanics by the end of Year 6.
Rankings should be interpreted carefully, but they provide useful context. Ranked 28th in England and 1st in Forest of Dean for primary outcomes, this is a proprietary FindMySchool ranking based on official data. With an England percentile of 0.0018, results place the school among the highest-performing in England (top 2%).
For parents comparing options locally, the useful question is not “Is it high-performing?” but “What is driving performance?” External evidence points to structured sequencing of knowledge, a strong focus on vocabulary, and an explicit priority on English and mathematics. That implies a school where lessons are planned around what children need to remember over time, not just what they can complete in a single session.
If you are shortlisting across the Forest of Dean, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you view these results alongside nearby primaries, including the proportions achieving the higher standard, which is often the most differentiating measure.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
88%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The core curriculum, especially English and mathematics, is described as well-established, with staff trained to deliver it consistently and teachers checking what pupils know and remember. A key detail for parents is the emphasis on vocabulary and subject language. In practical classroom terms, this shows up when children use precise comparative language in mathematics, explain their reasoning clearly, and talk confidently about what they are learning rather than offering vague answers.
Early reading is an explicit priority. Staff training in phonics is highlighted, and pupils are matched to books that align with the sounds they know, so reading practice is tightly connected to instruction. Where children fall behind, support is described as prompt and targeted, which is exactly what parents want to hear in a small school. If a cohort is small, delays can be harder to hide, so fast identification and intervention tends to have a strong impact.
The wider curriculum is ambitious, and the sequencing of knowledge is in place across subjects, but there is a clear development point: some non-core subjects are not yet as securely embedded, with inconsistencies in revisiting prior learning leading to occasional gaps in knowledge recall. For families, the implication is straightforward. If your child is highly motivated by foundation subjects such as history, geography, art, or design technology, it is sensible to ask how revisiting and retrieval practice are being strengthened across the full curriculum, not only in English and mathematics.
A distinctive element in the school’s own narrative is the emphasis on oracy and pupil confidence. Recent news items highlight participation in an oracy competition and structured opportunities for pupils to speak publicly. For a small rural school, this is a meaningful differentiator, because public speaking and articulate communication often require intentional planning rather than simply hoping confident children will take the lead.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Gloucestershire primary, secondary transfer is coordinated through the local authority, with the usual application deadline in late October for Year 7 entry. Parkend’s own admissions information highlights this deadline clearly, which is helpful for families new to the system or relocating into the area.
For most families, the practical question is which secondary schools are realistic options from Parkend. In the Forest of Dean area, commonly considered mainstream secondaries include schools in Lydney and Coleford, such as The Dean Academy and Five Acres High School, alongside other Forest of Dean options listed in the county’s secondary admissions guidance. The best way to approach this is to treat Year 6 as a structured planning year, attend open events early, and check transport feasibility alongside academic fit.
Transition in a small primary often benefits from deliberate preparation. Parkend’s ethos of leadership roles, house systems, and responsibility aligns well with what secondary schools expect, particularly around independence and routines. Where a child is anxious about the move, families should ask about transition support, including liaison with receiving schools and any structured preparation for organisation, homework habits, and independence skills.
Parkend Primary School is a state primary school with no tuition fees. Admission to Reception is coordinated by Gloucestershire County Council rather than handled solely by the school. The published closing date for Reception 2026 applications is 15 January 2026.
Demand signals are important. The most recent recorded Reception admissions data indicates 39 applications for 9 offers, with an oversubscription ratio of 4.33 applications per place. That scale of demand can occur when cohorts are small and places are limited, so it should be interpreted as “competition is real” rather than as a comment on absolute year-group size.
The practical implication is that families should treat admissions planning as a risk-managed process. Make a realistic preference list, understand the county’s oversubscription criteria, and avoid assuming that living “nearby” is sufficient without checking how allocation has worked in previous years. FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful here because small differences in distance can matter in oversubscribed rural schools.
In-year admissions are also addressed on the school’s site, with a clear expectation that families moving into the area during the school year engage directly with the school and follow the required process.
Applications
39
Total received
Places Offered
9
Subscription Rate
4.3x
Apps per place
The school places visible emphasis on wellbeing and mental health support, framed as part of its pastoral approach rather than an add-on. In a small school, pastoral systems tend to work best when staff know families well and can spot changes in a child’s behaviour quickly, and external commentary aligns with that model.
Leadership opportunities also function as pastoral infrastructure. Roles such as wellbeing champions and school council membership are not merely badges. When done well, they create peer-to-peer support pathways and normalise talking about worries, friendships, and behaviour in a structured way.
Provision for pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities is described as responsive, with early identification and curriculum adaptations that allow pupils to learn the same curriculum as their peers. For parents, the best next step is to ask how support is delivered in practice, for example, what interventions look like, how progress is tracked, and how the school balances support with independence, particularly in such a small cohort environment.
Extracurricular breadth matters in a school of this size because it directly shapes children’s experience of variety. The strongest evidence here is the mix of activities and the deliberate tracking of participation, so that quieter pupils are encouraged into clubs and opportunities rather than being left out by default.
Activities referenced externally include football, chess, book club, bike-ability, computing, and circus skills. This is a useful combination because it spans sport, performance, reading culture, and practical skills. The implication for families is that children can build confidence through multiple routes, not only through sport or formal music.
Outdoor learning is also positioned as a core pillar, with named facilities and a whole-school biking initiative. In rural settings, that sort of programme can be transformative because it links children’s daily life to the environment around them and encourages independence as they grow. It also tends to build stamina and attention in pupils who struggle with long periods of sitting still.
The school’s news stream also signals community-facing enrichment, including musical experiences such as a brass band visit and pupil participation in an oracy competition. These are small details, but they matter because they show a school investing in cultural experiences that widen children’s reference points beyond the immediate locality.
The published school day runs from 8.45am to 3.15pm, with a soft start from 8.35am.
Wraparound care is offered in collaboration with an on-site nursery provider, with opening hours published as 7.00am to 6.00pm Monday to Thursday, and 7.00am to 3.00pm on Fridays, plus a holiday club offer. Families should confirm availability, booking requirements, and age eligibility directly with the provider, particularly for holiday weeks.
For travel, Parkend benefits from being within the Forest of Dean while still having workable links out of the area. Lydney is the nearest mainline rail point for many families, and the heritage railway link between Lydney and Parkend is a notable local feature, even if it is not a daily commuter solution.
Very small cohorts. The small-roll setting suits many children, but it can limit friendship options in a given year group and can feel intense for pupils who prefer a larger social pool. Visiting at a normal school time, and asking how classes are structured, is worthwhile.
Wider curriculum consistency. Core subjects are described as strong, but some foundation subjects are still being embedded, particularly around revisiting prior learning so pupils remember more over time. Families with a child who thrives on history, geography, or creative subjects should ask how retrieval and knowledge-building are being strengthened across all subjects.
Competition for places. Reception demand data indicates significantly more applications than offers in the most recent recorded cycle. Families should plan early, understand the county criteria, and avoid assuming that proximity alone will secure a place.
Parkend Primary School combines the advantages of a genuine small school with outcomes that compete with the strongest primaries in England. Behaviour and leadership are described as areas of particular strength, and the outdoor learning and biking focus adds a distinctive practical character that fits the Forest of Dean setting.
This school suits families who value close relationships, clear expectations, and a structured approach to English and mathematics, while also wanting learning to extend outdoors and beyond the classroom. The main challenge is admission, because places are limited and demand is high.
Parkend Primary School combines very strong Key Stage 2 outcomes with a calm, well-ordered culture. The latest inspection judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding judgements for Behaviour and attitudes and for Leadership and management.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Gloucestershire County Council and follow the county’s published oversubscription criteria. Because rural schools can be oversubscribed with small intakes, families should check the county guidance each year and use precise distance tools rather than relying on assumptions about “nearby”.
Applications are made through Gloucestershire County Council. The school’s published closing date for Reception 2026 applications is 15 January 2026, and late applications are typically processed after on-time applications.
Wraparound care is available through a collaboration with an on-site nursery provider, with published opening hours covering early mornings and late afternoons on most weekdays, plus a holiday club offer. Families should confirm booking and eligibility details directly.
In 2024, 88% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 50.33% achieved greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%. These figures indicate both high attainment and strong depth of learning.
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