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.
Wood End School in Harpenden combines two things that do not always arrive together in primary education, exceptionally high attainment and a calm, consistent culture that makes those results feel sustainable. The school serves pupils from Reception to Year 6 and includes an on-site nursery, with a Published Admission Number of 60 for Reception.
The data is striking. In 2024, 94.33% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 64.33% reached greater depth compared with 8% across England. That is the profile of a school where challenge is routine, not reserved for a small top set. (Results and ranking context below.)
Oversubscription is real. In the latest entry-route, Reception attracted 163 applications for 60 places, around 2.72 applications per place, with first preferences also exceeding available offers. For families, the headline is simple, the education looks superb; the limiting factor is admission.
The school’s stated aims, Learning Together, Respecting Each Other, read like a slogan until you look at how leadership, safeguarding, and pupil experience are framed across official information. The vision statement places equality of importance, broad curriculum access, and active learning at the centre, with a clear emphasis on confidence and happiness as enablers of high standards.
Leadership is clearly signposted. Mr Richard Boulton is named as headteacher on both the school website and official records, giving parents a consistent reference point across official sources. (A public appointment start date was not found in official pages consulted, so this review does not state one.)
The latest Ofsted inspection, carried out in November 2023, graded the school Outstanding across all judgement areas, including early years provision. This matters because it supports a picture of whole-school coherence, not just strong Year 6 outcomes.
A useful indicator of culture is how enrichment is treated. The school’s own communications highlight structured experiences such as enrichment days, author visits, and curriculum-linked events, rather than relying on generic “lots of clubs” claims. The Friends of Wood End (PTA) also publicly describes funding that supports class enrichment and experiences, which adds texture to what pupils get beyond lessons.
Wood End’s 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes sit in the very top bracket nationally for attainment, and the supporting scaled scores are similarly high.
Expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined: 94.33%, compared with 62% across England.
Higher standard (greater depth) in reading, writing and maths combined: 64.33%, compared with 8% across England.
Reading scaled score: 113.
Maths scaled score: 111.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 112.
These figures describe a cohort where most pupils are securely meeting the expected standard, and a large proportion are working well beyond it. For parents, the implication is that the school appears set up to stretch able pupils while still bringing the vast majority to age-related expectations.
On the FindMySchool ranking for primary outcomes, Wood End is ranked 71st in England and 2nd locally (Harpenden). This places the school among the highest-performing in England (top 2%). These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings derived from official performance data.
Because the school has nursery provision, it is also worth noting that the nursery information emphasises continuity and access to the full curriculum, which can support readiness for Reception, though a nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place (more on that below).
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
94.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The simplest interpretation of Wood End’s outcomes is “high expectations plus consistency”, but the details matter. The November 2023 inspection indicates particular attention to early reading and vocabulary, plus subject depth in areas like computing and history as part of curriculum evaluation. For families, that points to a curriculum that aims beyond English and maths, while still keeping core fundamentals exceptionally strong.
For pupils who are already confident learners, the published figures suggest plentiful stretch. The percentage reaching the higher standard is unusually high for a state primary, which usually only happens when challenge is systematic across year groups. It also suggests a teaching approach that supports pupils to write with sophistication, not just tick-box accuracy, given the very strong combined greater depth metric.
For pupils who need additional support, the inspection notes strong access to the curriculum with well-planned adjustments, including for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, alongside ambitious expectations. The implication is that support is not treated as a separate track, it is integrated so pupils can keep up with a demanding curriculum.
Wood End’s nursery is positioned as part of the main school, with expectations of five sessions per week to maintain learning continuity. It describes funded 15 hours provision for eligible children and notes that some families may be entitled to 30 hours, with the option to self-fund additional sessions depending on availability.
Session timings are clearly stated:
Morning session: 8.45am to 11.45am
Afternoon session: 12.30pm to 3.30pm
The practical implication for families is that the nursery appears structured and school-ready in rhythm, but you should treat nursery and Reception as separate admissions routes.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the most important “destination” question is transition to secondary school. The school’s publicly accessible pages reviewed here do not publish a specific list of typical secondary destinations or a named transition partnership. Parents usually need to look at Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions context, proximity to local secondary options, and any individual family preferences for selective or non-selective routes.
What can be said confidently is that Wood End’s attainment profile indicates pupils are likely to be academically well-prepared for a wide range of secondary pathways, including selective routes where relevant. In practice, families considering secondary transition should ask directly about:
How Year 6 prepares pupils for secondary-style study habits, not just tests.
How the school supports pupils who are applying to selective routes, while keeping the experience balanced for those who are not.
For Reception, the school directs families to Hertfordshire’s online application route for the main entry process. The school is oversubscribed in the supplied admissions results, with 163 applications for 60 offers, around 2.72 applications per place, and first preference demand exceeding available offers. That scale of demand suggests that families should treat entry as competitive and plan options carefully.
A particularly useful practical detail is that the school publishes a clear timeline for Reception applications for the most recent cycle shown:
Online applications open: Monday 3 November 2025
Application deadline: Thursday 15 January 2026
For nursery, the process is separate, and the school explicitly states that a nursery place does not guarantee admission to Reception; families must re-apply through the county route.
The nursery admissions page also provides a timeline for September 2026 nursery entry, including an applications-open date and a set of nursery tour dates in January 2026.
Parents comparing schools and admissions likelihood should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check realistic proximity and shortlist alternatives, especially where demand is consistently high year to year.
67.0%
1st preference success rate
59 of 88 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
163
Pastoral strength shows up in two places, safeguarding structure and the way expectations are embedded into daily routines. The school’s safeguarding page lists designated safeguarding roles, including the headteacher as Designated Child Protection Co-ordinator, alongside senior leaders and a safeguarding governor.
The inspection report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective. Beyond safeguarding, it also describes strong relationships, consistent adult modelling of expectations, and harmonious social times, which is typically what parents mean when they ask whether behaviour is calm and consistent.
For families, the practical implication is that high attainment is being delivered in an environment where behaviour supports learning rather than competing with it. That matters particularly for pupils who are academically able but sensitive to disruption, and for families who value predictable routines.
Wood End does the helpful thing and publishes a detailed club programme with timings, year groups, and venues, which makes it easier to judge how enrichment fits around working-family logistics.
Examples from the Spring Term 2026 programme include:
Multi-sports for Year 3 on Mondays, 3.15pm to 4.15pm
Netball for Year 6 on Mondays, 3.15pm to 4.15pm
Boys football for Years 5 and 6 on Thursdays, 3.15pm to 4.15pm
Code Club for Year 6 on Fridays, 3.15pm to 4.15pm
There is also a Wood End Community Running Club that runs on Tuesday mornings 8.10am to 8.40am, with families able to attend and no fee stated for participation.
Alongside school-run clubs, the website also lists external providers offering activities such as drama, art, French, and dance, which can broaden choice for families whose children want a particular specialism.
Reading culture is also made concrete. The school describes its library offer and an opened learning hub, including a specific opening event involving author Cressida Cowell and the Harpenden Town Mayor. That kind of detail suggests literacy is treated as a whole-school identity, not a narrow intervention.
Wood End offers structured wraparound care, with clear timings and operational details.
Breakfast Club runs 7.45am to 8.45am on school days and is available from Nursery to Year 6; it is run by Wood End staff.
After School Club is operated by Jousters Childcare, runs 3.10pm to 6pm every school day, and is also available from Nursery to Year 6.
The website pages consulted do not present a single, clearly stated start and finish time for the standard school day for all year groups in one place. Families should confirm the daily timetable for their child’s year group directly when planning travel, childcare handovers, and after-school commitments.
Admission pressure is the constraint. Demand in the supplied admissions results is around 2.72 applications per place for Reception, so families should prepare a realistic set of preferences, not a single-school plan.
Nursery is not a back door into Reception. The nursery information is explicit that a nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place; families must apply again through the county process.
High attainment can suit some children better than others. With very high proportions at expected standard and greater depth, the academic pace may feel intense for pupils who need a slower runway. Ask how the school balances stretch with emotional load in Year 5 and Year 6.
Wraparound is strong, but it changes the rhythm. Breakfast Club and After School Club provide practical coverage; however, a long day can be tiring for younger pupils. Families should think about how many days per week wraparound is needed.
Wood End School looks like an exceptional state primary, combining an Outstanding inspection profile with results that place it among the top-performing schools in England. For families who value academic stretch, consistent expectations, and a clearly organised enrichment programme, it is an unusually compelling option.
Best suited to families who want a high-achieving primary with structured routines and who are prepared for the reality that securing a place is the main hurdle.
Wood End combines an Outstanding inspection judgement with exceptionally strong Key Stage 2 outcomes. In 2024, 94.33% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, and 64.33% reached the higher standard.
Results are among the strongest in England. In 2024, 94.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths (England average 62%), and 64.33% reached the higher standard (England average 8%). Reading, maths, and GPS scaled scores are also high at 113, 111, and 112.
Yes. In the latest admissions for Reception entry, there were 163 applications for 60 offers, which is around 2.72 applications per place. That level of demand typically makes entry competitive.
No. The nursery information states that allocation of a nursery place does not guarantee subsequent admission into Reception, and parents must apply for Reception through the county admissions route.
Breakfast Club runs 7.45am to 8.45am. After School Club is run by Jousters Childcare and operates 3.10pm to 6pm each school day, for children from Nursery to Year 6.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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