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.
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House points, tight routines, and an early focus on reading shape daily life at Wroughton Infant Academy. The school serves children from Nursery through to Year 2, with places allocated through Norfolk’s coordinated admissions process. The intake is mixed and the academy sits within Creative Education Trust, having converted in December 2016.
Parents most often talk about three practical strengths. First, wraparound care is structured and priced clearly, with morning and after-school sessions available on site. Second, the curriculum is explicit about early reading, including systematic phonics. Third, the school has a well-defined approach to behaviour and classroom habits, with house teams and consistent routines forming part of the “how we do things here” culture.
The latest Ofsted inspection (25 and 26 March 2025) was an ungraded inspection and concluded that the school had taken effective action to maintain the standards from its previous graded judgement of Good (October 2019).
This is a school that prioritises calm, predictable routines for young children. The 2025 inspection report describes pupils taking pride in their house teams and responding well to clear expectations, with specific routines used in classrooms to keep learning time settled and purposeful. That matters in an infant setting because attention, turn-taking, and classroom habits are foundational skills at this age.
Relationships are positioned as a core lever for behaviour and belonging. Nursery and Reception children are expected to learn the basics quickly, sharing, taking turns, and looking after resources. Older pupils mirror this through small responsibilities, such as classroom jobs and leadership roles that feel age-appropriate rather than tokenistic.
Leadership is also part of the current identity. The headteacher is Mrs Jessica Balls, who started in September 2024, with the academy council listing her role from 01 September 2024.
Because this is an infant academy (ages 3 to 7), parents should read “results” differently than they would for a full primary. There are no Key Stage 2 outcomes for this establishment, so the most relevant published indicators are early years measures and phonics.
The school publishes recent early years and phonics figures. For 2024 and 2025, it reports 75% of children achieving the Good Level of Development (GLD), and 95% of pupils meeting the expected standard in the Year 1 phonics screening check. These are useful signals of early language development and decoding, especially when paired with a curriculum that is explicit about systematic phonics and vocabulary building.
A practical implication for parents is this: if your child needs a strong start in reading, ask how the school identifies pupils who fall behind in phonics and what catch-up looks like week to week. The 2025 inspection report describes tailored support for pupils who need extra help with reading, alongside regular checking for misconceptions in lessons.
Rankings-based commentary is limited here because the available results for this school does not include published primary performance metrics (for example, combined reading, writing and maths outcomes), and the school’s phase ends at Year 2. In other words, most comparisons parents expect for a full primary do not apply cleanly to an infant-only setting.
Teaching is framed around building knowledge in a logical sequence, with staff checking what pupils remember and adjusting teaching when misunderstandings appear. The 2025 inspection report highlights subject knowledge and the use of assessment to guide next steps, while noting that in a small number of subjects the precision of adaptation based on assessment information is still developing.
Reading is treated as a priority, and the school’s published curriculum information is consistent with that. Phonics is taught through Read Write Inc, and the headteacher’s welcome message also references a structured comprehension approach. The intent is clear: decoding first, then fluency and comprehension, then wider vocabulary and writing.
For children with special educational needs and disabilities, the approach described in formal sources is about careful adaptation rather than lowering ambition. The 2025 inspection report states that staff have a clear understanding of needs and that teachers adapt the curriculum so pupils with SEND learn the important knowledge they need. For families, the key question is operational: how quickly are adaptations made, and how consistently are they implemented across classes.
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 an infant academy, the main transition question is Year 3. Wroughton Infant Academy feeds into local junior provision, and the Norfolk schools directory lists Wroughton Junior Academy as a “feeds to” destination.
The most important practical point for parents is that transfer to Year 3 is not automatic. The published admissions policy wording for the linked junior provision states that families must apply for admission to Year 3 through the local authority, using the same oversubscription criteria structure as Reception. If you are thinking long-term, treat the Year 3 application as a separate milestone and plan ahead rather than assuming continuity.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. The primary route into Reception is through Norfolk’s coordinated admissions process, and the academy publishes the county timetable prominently.
For September 2026 Reception entry, Norfolk’s published key dates are: applications open 23 September 2025; applications close 15 January 2026; offer day 16 April 2026; appeals closing date 26 May 2026.
Demand is material. In the most recently available admissions results for Reception entry, there were 93 applications for 55 offers, which equates to about 1.69 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. That does not mean every year will look identical, but it does signal that families should apply on time and be realistic about allocation rules.
The Planned Admission Number (PAN) for Reception is 60. The Norfolk directory also sets out oversubscription priorities, including looked-after and previously looked-after children, sibling priority, certain premium eligibility categories, catchment considerations, and then distance (measured in a straight line basis using Ordnance Survey data). Infant class size rules also apply, with Reception and infant classes capped at 30 pupils per teacher.
Nursery is a separate admissions decision. The school offers provision for 3 and 4 year olds, accepts the universal 15-hour funding and the 30-hour entitlement for eligible families, and publishes session structures. For nursery fee details, use the school’s own nursery information rather than relying on second-hand summaries.
Applications
93
Total received
Places Offered
55
Subscription Rate
1.7x
Apps per place
A strong infant school is often judged by how it prevents small worries from becoming big problems, and how it supports regulation and attendance in a way that feels normal rather than punitive. The 2025 inspection report describes pupils as confident that adults will help if they have a problem or worry, and it highlights attendance improvement work, with leaders working closely with families when attendance dips.
Formal local-authority directory information adds some helpful specificity. It lists a sensory room, inclusive before- and after-school provision, speech and language therapy, and structured approaches such as Lego or block therapy. It also references mental health support roles such as a mental health champion and an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA). This is not an EHCP-only offer, but it does suggest a setting that has thought carefully about early intervention and practical supports for young children.
Safeguarding is treated as a non-negotiable. The 2025 inspection report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular at an infant school needs to be realistic: children are young, days are tiring, and provision must be safe, well-supervised, and genuinely enjoyable.
The school publishes an after-school club list that includes Football for Years 1 and 2, plus activities such as Library Club, and (at the wider academies level) options like Drama and Computer Club. For parents, the value is less about building a CV and more about routine, confidence, and trying something new in a familiar setting.
Wraparound care also functions as enrichment. The Early Birds session includes breakfast and simple activities such as arts and crafts, board games, and themed activities. Night Owls offers structured after-school sessions with snacks and a mix of indoor and outdoor play options. For working families, this is often the most practical “extracurricular” decision because it shapes the weekly rhythm far more than a single club.
School visits and tours are also part of the wider picture. The school has previously scheduled tours in October and November for families considering starting the following year, which suggests an autumn pattern for open events, even if exact dates change annually.
The school day for Wroughton Infant Academy starts at 8:40am and ends at 3:15pm, with gates opening at 8:30am.
Wraparound care is published as Early Birds from 7:30am to 8:15am (£4.00), and Night Owls from 3:20pm to 5:15pm (£5.50) or to 6:00pm (£6.50). These prices are for wraparound childcare, not nursery education fees.
Term dates for 2025 and 2026 are also posted on the school site, which is useful for planning childcare across the year.
Transport and travel considerations are typical for an infant school: most families prioritise walkability and drop-off practicality. If you are relying on wraparound care, check your commute timings against the published session windows, especially the 6:00pm end time for the longer after-school session.
Oversubscription is a real constraint. Recent Reception data shows more applications than offers, so applying on time and understanding priority rules matters.
Year 3 requires a fresh application. Transfer to junior provision is not automatic, and families should treat the Year 3 process as a separate admissions event.
Curriculum refinement is still underway in places. The 2025 inspection report notes that assessment-driven adaptation is still developing in a small number of subjects. That is worth discussing if your child needs very consistent scaffolding.
Infant setting, infant outcomes. If you are comparing schools using Key Stage 2 measures, remember that those results are not directly attributable to an infant-only provision. Focus instead on early years, phonics, attendance, and transition planning.
Wroughton Infant Academy suits families who want structured routines, a clear early reading strategy, and practical wraparound care within a state setting. The overall picture is of a school that values calm behaviour and predictable classroom habits, while also putting real operational weight behind phonics and early language development. Best suited to families who can engage early with the admissions process and who understand that Year 3 progression requires a separate application rather than an automatic continuation.
The school’s most recent inspection in March 2025 found it had maintained the standards from its previous Good judgement, and it operates with clear routines and behaviour expectations. Early reading is positioned as a core priority, with the school publishing strong recent phonics outcomes for Year 1.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees for Reception to Year 2. Families may have additional costs such as uniform, trips, and optional wraparound care. Nursery fee arrangements can vary by session and funding entitlement, so use the school’s own nursery information for current details.
Reception applications are made through Norfolk’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 23 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Recent admissions data indicates the school was oversubscribed for Reception, with 93 applications and 55 offers in the most recent published results for that entry route. Oversubscription can vary year to year, but it is a meaningful signal that allocation rules matter.
No. Published admissions policy wording for the linked junior provision states that Year 3 transfer is not automatic and is coordinated by the local authority. Families should plan ahead for the Year 3 application window rather than assuming a guaranteed place.
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