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 one-form entry primary in Little Gonerby that has expanded from an infant setting into a full primary, with a clear aim to combine close relationships with higher ambition. Leadership is identified publicly as Mr Joe Hawkins, and the school sits within Infinity Academies Trust, which matters day to day because many policies and systems are trust-wide.
Families considering Reception should read the demand picture carefully. Recent admissions figures show 74 applications for 27 offers, which indicates a competitive year for places. The school day is structured and consistent, with an 8.45am registration and a 3.15pm finish.
The overall feel is of a Church of England school that places Christian values at the centre of routines and relationships. The published vision is framed around “life in all its fullness” and a whole-school ethos of cherishing everyone and flourishing together.
This is a small school by design, which often suits children who do best when adults know them well and expectations are consistent. Staffing information is unusually transparent, and it shows a structure typical of a one-form entry school, with named leads for safeguarding, attendance, and pastoral support.
As a Church of England primary, faith is not treated as an add-on. The school’s Church School pages set out a Christian vision and values intended to shape behaviour, relationships, and how pupils are supported. That is likely to appeal to families looking for a values-led culture, while still being accessible for families who are less observant but comfortable with a Christian framing.
The school also signals a strong Early Years focus. Practical guidance for Reception mentions outdoor learning and forest school-style activities such as gardening, den building, and a mud kitchen. That kind of messaging usually correlates with a Reception experience that prioritises physical development and language through play, not just early formal literacy.
Published attainment and ranking measures are limited for this school in the structured, so the most reliable current benchmark is inspection evidence and the school’s stated curriculum intent.
The latest Ofsted inspection (September 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Early Years provision graded Outstanding.
Within that framework, the report describes pupils as happy, safe, and proud of the school, and it highlights leadership ambition alongside inclusive practice for pupils with SEND. Those are meaningful signals for parents because they point to a school that is trying to raise expectations while still keeping the “everyone is known” feel that many families want from a smaller primary.
Parents comparing local options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to line up nearby primary schools on the same measures, rather than relying on anecdotes.
The most distinctive feature in the current published picture is the school’s transition from an earlier infant model into a full primary. That typically requires a curriculum rethink, particularly in foundation subjects and Key Stage 2 progression, because the sequencing from Reception to Year 6 needs to be coherent rather than stitched together.
The school communicates curriculum ambition clearly on its welcome messaging, and it links that ambition to enrichment and investment in learning spaces, especially for the youngest pupils.
For parents, the practical implication is this: ask how the school builds cumulative knowledge year on year, and how it checks pupils have the basics secure, particularly reading and mathematics, as cohorts move into older year groups. Smaller schools can do this very well, but it depends on clarity of planning and consistent teaching routines.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary, the main transition point is Year 6 to Year 7. Admissions to secondary schools are handled through the local authority, and Lincolnshire has clear secondary application dates for the September 2026 transfer cycle (opens 8 September 2025; closes 31 October 2025; offers released 2 March 2026).
If your child is approaching the end of primary, the best next step is to map likely secondary options early, then use open events and travel time to pressure-test what the day will look like in practice.
For Reception entry in Lincolnshire for September 2026, the local authority timetable is explicit. Applications open 17 November 2025 and close 15 January 2026 (national closing date), with primary offers released on 16 April 2026.
The school is oversubscribed in the latest available admissions figures in the published figures (74 applications for 27 offers). Without a published “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure families should avoid assuming proximity guarantees a place. If you are considering a move, use FindMySchool Map Search to check likely distance scenarios and compare with other realistic options.
The school’s own admissions page links to policy information and indicates that admissions arrangements are actively consulted on for future years, which is common for academies as their admission authority updates policy documents.
100%
1st preference success rate
27 of 27 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
27
Offers
27
Applications
74
Safeguarding messaging is clear and prominent, and leadership roles are explicitly named, including the designated safeguarding lead and deputies.
Pastoral support is also visible in staffing, with a Family Support Advisor listed. In a small primary, that can make a tangible difference because early intervention and consistent communication often prevent attendance and wellbeing issues from becoming entrenched.
This is one of the areas where the school provides unusually concrete detail. The clubs list includes several distinctive offerings rather than just generic “sports and arts”, including Bell plates, Ocarinas, E-Cadets, and a Bible club, alongside Choir, Gymnastics, French, Reading, Craft, and Football.
There is also a specific Gymnastics Club structure described, including a lunchtime slot and named staff leading it, which suggests clubs are embedded into weekly routines rather than being sporadic.
For Reception-age children, the emphasis on outdoor learning activities such as den building and a mud kitchen points to play-based enrichment that can suit children who need movement and hands-on exploration to thrive.
The school day timings are published: registration at 8.45am and the day ends at 3.15pm.
Wraparound care is available via Brightstars breakfast and after-school provision operating from the school each morning and after school, but families should confirm exact session times, availability, and booking arrangements directly.
For travel, most families will approach as a local primary serving Little Gonerby and nearby parts of Grantham, so the key practical check is the school-run route at peak time and whether walking feels realistic from your address.
Competition for places. Recent admissions figures show far more applications than offers for Reception. If you have a tight timeline, shortlist backup options early.
School in transition. Expanding from infant provision into a full primary can be a strength, but it also means curriculum, staffing, and routines may still be bedding in for older year groups. Ask how Key Stage 2 is being built year by year.
Faith character is real. The Church of England identity is clearly articulated through vision and values. Families who prefer a fully secular setting may be more comfortable elsewhere.
A small, values-led primary with a clear Early Years emphasis and a tangible set of clubs that goes beyond the usual. The strongest fit is for families who want a one-form entry setting where pastoral structures are visible, Christian values are part of the culture, and outdoor learning plays a meaningful role in the early years. The main challenge is admission in oversubscribed years.
The most recent inspection outcome is Good overall, with Outstanding in Early Years provision (September 2023). For many families, that combination suggests a secure baseline with particular strength in Reception and the early stage of primary.
Lincolnshire allocates places according to published admissions arrangements, and the school’s policy sets out the oversubscription criteria.
In Lincolnshire, primary applications for September 2026 open on 17 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. Apply through the local authority rather than directly to the school.
Yes, wraparound care operates via Brightstars breakfast and after-school provision based at the school. Families should confirm current timings and how to book.
The school publishes a clubs list including Bell plates, Ocarinas, E-Cadets, Choir, Gymnastics, French, Reading, Craft, Bible club, and Football, with some clubs running at lunchtime or after school.
Get in touch with the school directly
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