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 fewer than 60 pupils on roll and a planned intake of 8 children per year, this is a genuinely small Church of England primary where staff can know families well over time.
Academic outcomes are a clear strength. In 2024, 95.33% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with 62% across England. At the higher standard, 43% reached greater depth, well above the England average of 8%.
Leadership sits within a wider local partnership. The school is part of the Neatishead, Salhouse and Fleggburgh Primary Schools Federation and is led by Executive Headteacher Mrs Hayley Sonnex, with Mrs Ingrid Rounce as Head of School.
The feel here is rooted in a close-knit village school model, with routines and relationships doing a lot of the heavy lifting. Pupils are described as happy and safe, and the tone is calm enough that learning is rarely interrupted. Older pupils are given opportunities to support younger ones, including reading together, which suits a mixed-age setting where peer role-modelling matters.
The building itself adds a sense of continuity. The school describes the site as a Victorian building dating from 1866, an unusual asset for a small rural primary and a reminder that this is a long-established local institution rather than a recently-expanded free school model.
As a Church of England school, worship and values are part of the rhythm. The school’s published vision and values centre on being happy and safe while sharing a love of learning, framed through the phrase “Soar on wings”. A denominational inspection of worship and education (Section 48) took place in June 2017, and the school also publishes its SIAMS documentation, which signals that the faith dimension is actively maintained rather than nominal.
This is one of the strongest sets of primary outcomes in its local area. Ranked 899th in England and 2nd in Great Yarmouth for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), results sit well above England average and within the top 10% of schools in England.
Key Stage 2 outcomes in 2024 underline that position. The combined reading, writing and mathematics figure of 95.33% compares with an England average of 62%. The higher standard figure of 43% is also far ahead of the England average of 8%, indicating that high prior-attainers are being stretched, not simply brought to the expected threshold.
Scaled scores reinforce the same message. Average scaled scores are 111 in reading, 107 in mathematics, and 109 in grammar, punctuation and spelling. Science is also strong, with 86% meeting the expected standard (England average: 82%).
For parents comparing options across Norfolk, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to view these outcomes alongside nearby small primaries, particularly because cohort size can amplify year-to-year swings at schools of this scale.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
95.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum design in a small school succeeds when planning is disciplined and when assessment is sharp enough to avoid pupils repeating work they have already mastered. The latest inspection points to careful sequencing of “important knowledge” and a teaching cycle designed to revisit content, which is a sensible approach in mixed-age classes.
Reading is an especially prominent strength. Staff check pupils’ phonics application closely, and additional support is targeted when pupils need it. The approach appears coherent across year groups, with regular progress tracking meetings and structured intervention, which is often the difference between a school that reads daily and a school that systematically teaches reading.
There is also a clear improvement focus around task pitch and prior knowledge checks. The inspection notes that, at times, teachers do not extend and build on previous learning well enough, which can slow progress. For parents, the practical implication is not a concern about standards, but rather a reminder to ask how teachers assess what a pupil already knows before moving a topic on.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Secondary transition is coordinated through Norfolk’s normal admissions process, and the typical onward destination listed for this school is Acle Academy.
In a small primary, transition quality often comes down to how well pupils are prepared socially as well as academically, particularly for children moving from very small cohorts into much larger year groups. The school’s use of leadership roles (for example, house captains) and regular routines that promote respectful behaviour are sensible preparation for that step-up.
Parents who want to sense-check likely travel time and day-to-day logistics can use FindMySchool Map Search to compare realistic commuting routes, especially if considering a secondary option beyond the immediate area.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Admissions for Reception are handled by Norfolk County Council rather than directly by the school, and the county publishes a clear timetable for September 2026 entry. Applications opened on 23 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with National Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
The school is small, and the planned admission number for 2026/27 is 8 places, which means demand can exceed capacity quickly, even with relatively modest applicant numbers.
Norfolk’s published admissions policy for the school prioritises (in order) children with an EHCP naming the school, looked-after and previously looked-after children, then catchment and sibling criteria, before allocating remaining places by straight-line distance. Distance measurement is described as “crow fly” using Ordnance Survey data, and random allocation is used only if distance cannot separate final applicants.
Applications
21
Total received
Places Offered
8
Subscription Rate
2.6x
Apps per place
Pastoral support is strongest when it is preventative rather than reactive. Here, the latest inspection describes a culture where pupils are listened to and where concerns are addressed early, including worries that might otherwise escalate into bullying.
The safeguarding culture is clearly signposted. Ofsted states that safeguarding arrangements are effective, with staff training, careful record-keeping, and appropriate use of external agencies where needed.
SEND support also appears structured. Leaders are described as identifying needs effectively and equipping teachers with strategies to adapt learning, which is particularly important in a small school where one or two pupils’ needs can shape classroom practice disproportionately.
For a small school, enrichment is most convincing when it is specific. Educational visits are used to connect learning to lived experience, including farm visits linked to harvest and a cathedral trip linked to the Easter story, both of which align neatly with the school’s rural context and Church of England character.
Clubs exist, but the range is an area families should probe. The latest inspection notes that pupils would value a greater range of clubs, which is a fair and common constraint in very small schools where staffing, budgets, and transport all bite.
That said, there are examples of pupil-facing opportunities. The school promotes a lunchtime Reading Club and references pupil leadership roles such as house captains, giving children structured ways to contribute beyond their classwork.
The published school day is structured as two sessions: 8.45am to 12.15pm, then 1.15pm to 3.15pm.
Wraparound care (breakfast club and after-school provision) is not consistently published in an accessible, current format across official pages that could be verified for this review. Families who need childcare at the margins of the school day should ask the office for the latest offer, including timings, costs, and minimum booking patterns.
As with many village schools, parking and safe drop-off routines tend to matter. It is sensible to ask about practical expectations for on-site parking and where families are asked to wait at pick-up, particularly given the constraints of a small site.
Very small cohorts. With a planned intake of 8 pupils per year, friendship groups are small and cohort mix can shape a child’s experience more than it would in a two-form entry school.
Clubs breadth. Pupils themselves would like a wider range of clubs. Ask what runs term-by-term, who leads it, and whether transport is needed.
Mixed-age teaching trade-offs. Mixed-age classes can be excellent for peer learning, but they rely on precise assessment so pupils consistently build on prior knowledge rather than repeating it.
Faith dimension. This is a Church of England school with collective worship and a denominational inspection cycle. Families should be comfortable with that ethos in daily life.
Fleggburgh CofE Primary School combines the intimacy of a genuinely small village school with academic outcomes that stand out well beyond the local area. Reading is a particular strength, and the wider culture is calm, respectful, and grounded in clear routines. It best suits families who value a Church of England ethos and want a small-school setting without compromising on results, while accepting that extracurricular breadth can be narrower than at larger primaries.
Yes, outcomes and external evidence are both reassuring. In 2024, 95.33% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined (England average: 62%), and safeguarding is reported as effective.
Applications are made through Norfolk County Council. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 23 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The published day runs 8.45am to 12.15pm and 1.15pm to 3.15pm.
The typical listed destination is Acle Academy, with transfer handled through Norfolk’s admissions process.
Yes. It is a Church of England school with collective worship, and it sits within the normal denominational inspection cycle for worship and religious education.
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