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.
With a capacity of 90 and an age range from 4 to 9, Rode Methodist VC First School is a genuinely small first school, the sort where children are known quickly and routines matter because everyone depends on them. It sits within the Rode and Norton St Philip federation, and day to day life reflects that structure, with Reception and Year 1 based at Norton St Philip First School and Years 2 to 4 based at Rode.
The latest Ofsted inspection (13 March 2023) judged the school to be Good, and the report paints a picture of pupils who enjoy school and settle into clear expectations, including the shared language of “ready, safe, care”. The school is also Methodist in character, which shows up in the way collective worship and Christian values are talked about and organised.
From an admissions perspective, the school is oversubscribed in the most recent entry cycle, with 31 applications for 14 offers, around 2.21 applications per place.
A small first school lives or dies by its daily rhythms, and this one is explicit about them. At the Rode site, gates open at 8:35am, morning register is taken at 8:45am, and the school day ends at 3:00pm. Those timings matter for families, especially those juggling siblings across federation sites, since start and finish times are described as staggered to support the minibus provision.
The federation set up also shapes the social feel. Reception and Year 1 are based at Norton St Philip, then pupils move to the Rode site for Years 2 to 4. For many children, that is a positive “fresh start” moment, a step up in independence without the scale change of moving to a much larger junior school. For some, it is one more transition to manage before the next move at the end of Year 4, so the quality of pastoral routines and handovers matters. The published safeguarding information identifies the headteacher, assistant headteacher, and senior teacher as part of the trained safeguarding team, which is reassuring in a setting where adults often wear multiple hats.
Faith character is present but, in a village first school context, usually experienced as a tone and a set of values rather than something heavy handed. The SIAMS inspection (19 and 20 June 2019) graded the school Excellent overall, with collective worship graded Good, and describes the federation context explicitly.
This is a first school, so parents are typically looking less for headline exam outcomes and more for the quality of early reading, writing, number sense, and habits of learning, especially because pupils will transition again after Year 4.
The most recent Ofsted inspection describes an ambitious curriculum and pupils who enjoy learning, which aligns with what families often want at this stage, strong foundations, clear expectations, and breadth beyond phonics and arithmetic. The school’s public materials also show deliberate attention to enrichment and wider development, which matters because, in small settings, it is easy for the curriculum to narrow if staffing is stretched.
If you are comparing several local schools, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools to line up what is published side by side, and then validate the “story behind the numbers” directly with each school, especially where cohorts are small and year to year variation can be large.
In early years and Key Stage 1, teaching quality is often best judged by consistency: structured phonics, purposeful talk, regular assessment, and quick intervention when a child slips behind. The Ofsted report’s emphasis on a well considered curriculum suggests leaders have spent time sequencing what pupils learn and when, rather than relying on topic work alone.
By Years 2 to 4, the federation’s enrichment menu becomes more visible. The school publishes a wide range of curriculum areas and enrichment strands, including a specific “Science and STEAM” area, which signals an attempt to keep practical investigation and making central, even in a small setting.
A distinctive strength here is that specialist or semi specialist experiences are built into the weekly life through clubs and activities that would be unusual for very small schools if they were trying to do everything in house. For example, the after school programme lists LAMDA sessions (speech and drama), music provision including piano and guitar lessons, plus drumming, folk dancing, and a dedicated music club. The implication for families is simple: children with a spark for performing, music, or movement have a clear pathway to develop it early, without needing parents to organise everything externally.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because this is a first school (up to age 9), the key question is transition after Year 4. The federation model already gives pupils experience of a structured transition between sites and classes, which can help build independence before the next step.
Rode Methodist VC First School is a state school with no tuition fees. Admissions are coordinated by Somerset, and the federation’s admissions page is clear that Rode’s arrangements are set by the local authority.
For September 2026 entry, families can apply from September 2025 until 15 January 2026 through the local authority process. The same page notes open day opportunities, including an upcoming open day in January 2026 with the date to be confirmed, plus individual tours by appointment.
Demand is a real factor. In the most recent primary entry cycle in the available data, there were 31 applications for 14 offers, around 2.21 applications per place, and the school is described as oversubscribed. Without a published “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure, families should treat admission as competitive and plan accordingly, especially if you are moving house and relying on a single school outcome.
100%
1st preference success rate
13 of 13 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
14
Offers
14
Applications
31
In small schools, pastoral care is rarely about grand systems; it is about vigilant routines, consistent adults, and clear escalation when something feels off. The safeguarding page identifies named staff roles within the safeguarding team, including the headteacher, assistant headteacher, and senior teacher, which is what parents should want to see, named accountability rather than generic statements.
The “ready, safe, care” expectations referenced in the latest Ofsted report also point to a simple behavioural framework that children can actually remember and use. For younger pupils, that kind of shared language can be more effective than complex reward systems, because it reinforces the basics: arriving prepared, making safe choices, and treating others with respect.
A standout feature is the specificity of the after school programme. Rather than listing generic clubs, the school publishes named activities and providers, including:
LAMDA sessions focused on voice, articulation, presentation skills, and drama games, with optional exams in March
Drumming sessions, plus instrumental tuition such as piano and guitar
Folk dancing, art club, and Music Club
Football provision, including a girls lunchtime football slot and an after school football club
This breadth matters because it gives children multiple “ways to be good at school”. For a child who is still finding their academic confidence, success in music, drama, or sport can be the hook that keeps them enthusiastic about coming in each morning.
At the Rode site, gates open at 8:35am and the school day ends at 3:00pm. Wraparound care is clearly laid out: Sunrise Club runs 7:45am to 8:35am, and an externally run after school club operates Monday to Thursday from 3:00pm to 4:30pm, with a shorter “Wait and Play” option on Fridays from 3:00pm to 3:30pm.
Families should also factor in the federation logistics. Start and finish times are described as staggered due to minibus provision between sites, which can be helpful for siblings but adds coordination complexity.
Federation logistics. With Reception and Year 1 based at Norton St Philip and Years 2 to 4 at Rode, families should think through transport, wraparound care, and sibling drop offs in a realistic way.
Oversubscription pressure. Demand is higher than supply in the most recent entry cycle, so families should not assume that living nearby guarantees a place.
Another transition after Year 4. First schools can be ideal for early foundations, but they do mean a further move at age 9. Some children thrive on that step up, others prefer a single primary to age 11.
Faith character. The school is Methodist in character. Families who prefer a fully secular setting should explore how worship and Christian values are expressed day to day.
Rode Methodist VC First School suits families who want a genuinely small first school experience, clear routines, and unusually detailed enrichment for this age range, within a federation structure that supports breadth without needing large scale. The main challenge is admission pressure in a small PAN setting, and the main practical consideration is managing transitions, first between federation sites, then onward after Year 4. Best suited to families comfortable with a Methodist character and happy to engage actively with the move-on planning for age 9.
The school is rated Good by Ofsted following its most recent inspection in March 2023. The report highlights pupils who enjoy school and a curriculum described as ambitious and well considered, supported by clear expectations.
Admissions are coordinated by Somerset, and places are allocated according to the local authority’s published criteria.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast provision (Sunrise Club) from 7:45am and after school options including an externally run club Monday to Thursday, plus a shorter Friday session.
Families can apply via the local authority process from September 2025 until 15 January 2026 for September 2026 entry.
The published programme includes options such as LAMDA, drumming, folk dancing, art club, Music Club, and football, alongside instrumental tuition including piano and guitar. Availability varies by term.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
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.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.