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.
For families who want an infant school that feels orderly without feeling rigid, Alverstoke Community Infant School makes a persuasive case. The most recent inspection judged the school Good, with Personal Development graded Outstanding, which tells you a lot about priorities here: relationships, routines, confidence-building, and learning how to behave well in a shared space.
Leadership is clear and stable. Mrs Vanessa Ridler is the current headteacher, and the school’s own documents show she had been appointed by July 2022, which matters for parents trying to understand whether the present culture is established rather than newly introduced.
It is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Expect the usual costs, uniform, trips, and optional clubs.
The most useful lens for “what it feels like” comes from the evidence around conduct, routines, and peer culture. Pupils are described as kind, attentive to one another, and confident about seeking help from trusted adults. The report also points to specific structures that shape daily behaviour, including “wonderful walkers” (pupil role-modelling for calm movement around the site) and a “buddy bench” approach that nudges children to include anyone who is feeling left out.
That sort of culture does not happen by accident. It signals a school where expectations are taught explicitly, reinforced consistently, and framed in language young pupils can use. For parents, the practical implication is simple: children who need predictable routines and clear boundaries are likely to settle quickly, and children who are socially confident will still find plenty of room to develop empathy and leadership.
There is also a distinctive local dimension. Pupils learn specific safety knowledge linked to being near the sea, including water safety. That is not generic PSHE, it is a place-aware curriculum choice that makes early learning feel relevant.
As an infant school, Alverstoke does not sit the same end-of-key-stage public benchmarks parents associate with Year 6. The better way to judge academic strength here is through curriculum design and early reading. The inspection evidence describes an exciting and ambitious curriculum, sequenced carefully from the early years into Key Stage 1, with adaptations in place for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities.
Early reading is clearly a strategic focus. The school has recently introduced a new phonics scheme, with daily planned content and frequent checks to identify gaps quickly. The improvement point is also specific, staff expertise is still being embedded so delivery is consistently strong across the team.
What this means for parents is that the reading journey should feel structured and purposeful, but it is sensible to ask a direct question at an open event about how the phonics programme is monitored, and how quickly pupils who fall behind are brought back on track.
If you are comparing local infant schools, the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool can help you keep like-for-like notes on inspection outcomes, admissions pressure, and practicalities, so you do not rely on vague impressions.
Teaching is described as well-trained and aligned to the curriculum, with careful attention to vocabulary so pupils can explain what they are learning rather than simply complete tasks. There is also evidence of deliberate oracy in the early years, with teachers planning conversations that develop communication skills.
A useful detail is how the school uses varied presentation methods, including technology to show images and videos when it fits the learning, for example in physical education to support movement development. This is not about screens for their own sake. In an infant context, visual modelling can be the difference between pupils copying a movement and actually understanding it.
The main curriculum development point is equally concrete. In some subjects, activities do not always match the intended learning closely enough, and skills are not always broken down into manageable steps. Parents do not need to treat that as a red flag, but it is a helpful prompt to ask how subject leaders check that tasks truly build knowledge, not just keep pupils busy.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school finishes at age 7, the key transition is into Year 3 at a junior school. In this area, the most relevant relationship is with Alverstoke Church of England Aided Junior School. Hampshire’s school information pages list Alverstoke Community Infant School as a linked school for the junior, and the junior school’s own transition information refers to collaboration with the infant school.
Practically, families should treat Year 3 transfer as a real admissions round, not an automatic continuation. Hampshire County Council provides a specific Year 3 application route for children in Year 2 at infant schools.
The implication is that planning should start earlier than some parents expect, especially if you are relying on a particular junior school or if siblings are involved.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority. In the latest available admissions data, there were 93 applications for 36 offers, which equates to about 2.58 applications per place. That level of demand often feels manageable for some families and impossible for others, depending on catchment and sibling position.
For September 2026 entry timing, Hampshire’s published admissions timetable is clear: applications open 1 November 2025, close 15 January 2026, and offers are released 16 April 2026.
Oversubscription criteria for Hampshire community infant schools follow a structured priority order. After children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, priorities include looked-after children, exceptional medical or social need (with independent professional evidence), children of staff in specified circumstances, then catchment-based priorities including siblings, followed by other catchment children, then out-of-catchment siblings, with distance used as a tiebreaker when categories are oversubscribed.
Two practical tips follow from that:
If you are close to the catchment boundary, use a precise distance-checking tool. FindMySchool Map Search is designed for exactly this kind of shortlist work.
If you are relying on exceptional need criteria, gather the right evidence early, and make sure it addresses why this school specifically is required.
Applications
93
Total received
Places Offered
36
Subscription Rate
2.6x
Apps per place
This is where the school’s strongest evidence sits. The inspection grading for Personal Development is Outstanding, and the report links that to daily routines and specific practices rather than vague statements.
Pupils learn wellbeing strategies, including daily mindfulness sessions, and they get structured opportunities to talk through feelings and perspectives, including regular “circle time”. Service children are explicitly supported, with a sense of community built through regular service club meetings.
For parents, the benefit is that pastoral work is integrated into daily life rather than bolted on. This often suits pupils who are sensitive, anxious, or still developing confidence in social settings, and it can also help more exuberant children learn self-regulation without constant sanctions.
Even in an infant setting, enrichment matters because it is often where confidence forms. The school’s enrichment is evidenced in a few concrete ways.
First, pupils access a mix of experiences, including trips and visits that broaden understanding of the world. The report gives examples of visitors, including scientists and medical and military professionals, which helps explain why young pupils might begin to talk about jobs and community roles in more specific ways.
Second, there are identifiable clubs and performance opportunities. The evidence points to children enjoying performing in a band, learning to dance, and being creative in an arts club. For an infant school, that range is meaningful because it supports different kinds of confidence: performing, collaborating, and learning to practise.
Third, there is named wraparound provision. The school’s breakfast and after-school club is called The Treehouse. That is an important practical offer for working families, and also an emotional one for pupils who benefit from continuity at the beginning and end of the day.
The school day begins at 8.40am and finishes at 3.10pm, based on the school’s published attendance information.
Wraparound care is available via The Treehouse breakfast and after-school club. If you need exact session times, pricing, or holiday coverage, check the club information directly with the school, as these details can change year to year.
On transport, this is a Gosport, Alverstoke setting, so many families use a mix of walking, cycling, and short car journeys. If you commute by rail, local onward travel typically links to stations across Portsmouth and Fareham, so it is worth mapping the full door-to-door route at drop-off time, not just the distance.
Competition for Reception places. With 93 applications for 36 offers in the latest available admissions data, demand is real. If your plan depends on this school, apply on time and build a realistic second and third preference strategy.
Phonics is in a transition phase. The phonics scheme has been recently introduced, and staff expertise is still being embedded across the team. This is normal for programme changes, but parents should ask how consistency is assured across classes.
Some curriculum areas are still tightening up. In a minority of subjects, activities do not always match the intended learning closely enough, which can slow secure knowledge-building. Ask how leaders check curriculum delivery beyond English and maths.
Year 3 transfer needs planning. Infant-to-junior transfer is a separate application process, which can surprise families who assume continuity.
Alverstoke Community Infant School offers a calm, structured start to education, with a clear emphasis on personal development, wellbeing routines, and positive behaviour culture. Academic provision looks thoughtfully planned, particularly in early reading, with sensible work underway to embed a newer phonics programme consistently.
Who it suits: families who value strong pastoral foundations, clear routines, and an infant experience where confidence and conduct are treated as core learning rather than extras. The main challenge is admission pressure, so shortlist with care and keep an eye on the Year 3 transfer pathway early.
The most recent inspection graded the school Good overall, with Personal Development graded Outstanding. Evidence points to warm relationships, clear behaviour routines, and a structured approach to early reading and curriculum sequencing.
Hampshire community infant schools use catchment as a key priority in their oversubscription criteria, with distance used as a tiebreaker if a category is oversubscribed. The exact boundary varies by address, so families close to any boundary should check carefully before relying on catchment priority.
For September 2026 entry, Hampshire’s timetable indicates applications open on 1 November 2025, close on 15 January 2026, and offers are released on 16 April 2026. Applications are made through the local authority’s coordinated process.
Yes. The school’s wraparound provision is called The Treehouse, and it operates as the breakfast and after-school club. Families should confirm session times, availability, and charges directly, as these can change.
Children usually transfer to a junior school for Year 3, and this is a separate admissions round for pupils in Year 2 at infant schools. Locally, Alverstoke Church of England Aided Junior School is listed as linked, and transition work is described as collaborative between the two schools.
Get in touch with the school directly
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