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Dudley Infant Academy is a state-funded infant school in St Leonards-on-Sea, serving children from Reception to Year 2. It sits within the University of Brighton Academies Trust and is led by Principal Stuart Maclean, who took up the post in January 2018.
The most recent graded inspection found a clear strength in behaviour and routines, with Behaviour and attitudes judged Outstanding alongside an overall judgement of Good.
This is a small academy by design, which often appeals to families who want a more personal early start. Demand is higher than supply, with the latest admissions results showing 105 applications for 60 offers. That makes admissions competitive, even without a published distance cut-off. (No distance data is available for the latest results.)
This is an infant setting that puts daily routines and readiness to learn at the centre. The academy’s own language focuses on children feeling safe, supported, and ready to succeed, with a strong emphasis on close partnership with parents and carers.
Being part of a wider trust matters here. Trust membership is not just a logo, it shapes leadership structures, policies, and staff development, and it also links Dudley to a family of Sussex academies under a single governance umbrella.
For families, the practical implication is consistency. You are likely to see shared expectations around attendance, behaviour, safeguarding systems, and curriculum design, rather than an entirely bespoke approach that changes year to year.
Infant schools do not have the same published end-of-primary Key Stage 2 outcomes as junior or all-through primaries, so parents should not expect comparable KS2 headline figures here.
The external benchmark parents can use is inspection evidence and the way the academy talks about teaching priorities. The latest graded inspection (September 2019) judged the academy Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes Outstanding.
A useful way to interpret this for an infant setting is that the academy’s strongest public signal is how well it establishes the habits that make later learning work, such as calm transitions, clear rules, and consistent expectations, rather than league-table style exam outcomes.
The curriculum intent is described as ambitious and enriched, with a focus on helping children become confident, independent learners. In an infant school, that usually shows up through early reading foundations, spoken language development, number sense, and structured classroom routines.
Reading is treated as a priority, with published policies emphasising comprehension and reading for pleasure as children move through the academy and prepare for later phases.
Outdoor learning is also positioned as a meaningful part of how children learn, rather than an occasional add-on. The academy references using its grounds and local area as part of first-hand learning experiences.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As an infant academy, Dudley’s children move on after Year 2, typically to junior or primary provision for Year 3. The key question for parents is how transition is managed, and which schools are the most common onward routes for Dudley children.
Because there is no single published destination list in the academy’s core public pages, families should ask directly about the usual Year 3 destinations, the handover process, and how information is shared to support continuity in reading and maths. For children with additional needs, transitions between phases should be planned early, and EHCP reviews follow a defined timetable across the system.
Admissions are coordinated through East Sussex County Council for Reception entry, with a clear timeline published by the academy:
Applications open: September 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
Late deadline (with good reason and evidence): 13 March 2026
National offer day: 16 April 2026
Induction days: Summer term 2026
Demand is higher than places. The latest admissions results shows 105 applications for 60 offers, a ratio of about 1.75 applications per place. First-preference demand is also tight relative to offers, which suggests many applicants are putting Dudley high on their list rather than using it as a fall-back option.
A practical step for parents is to read the academy’s admissions policy for the relevant intake year, then line that up with the local authority’s application process so there are no surprises about oversubscription priorities.
Applications
105
Total received
Places Offered
60
Subscription Rate
1.8x
Apps per place
Safeguarding leadership is clearly signposted, with named safeguarding roles including the Designated Safeguarding Lead and deputies.
For many parents, infant wellbeing is as much about daily rhythms as formal systems. The academy’s published routines include structured start-of-day timings and clear expectations for attendance reporting, which tends to matter in a small school where patterns are noticed quickly.
A Parent Teacher Association is also in place, which can be a practical route into school life for new families, particularly in the first Reception term when community connections matter.
Extracurricular choices in an infant setting work best when they are simple, consistent, and linked to confidence and coordination.
The academy publishes at least one named club in its current extracurricular listing, Zumba (Thursday, 3.15pm to 4.00pm).
The academy prospectus also references enhanced activities including football and archery, alongside Zumba, which suggests a sport-and-movement thread rather than a long list of rotating clubs.
Outdoor facilities are highlighted as a real feature, including a reading garden, a climbing wall, and sports areas. In practice, that can make a noticeable difference at this age, because play-based learning and physical development are not secondary to classroom learning, they are part of it.
Days are structured and timings are published. Gates open at 8.45am, with the school day starting at 8.55am. Finish times vary by day, with published end-of-day times of 3.05pm on most days and 3.30pm on Tuesdays and Fridays.
Wraparound care is available. Breakfast club runs 7.45am to 8.45am, and after-school club runs until 6.00pm.
Travel planning is usually local at this age. The sensible approach is to check walking routes, buggy-friendly paths, and drop-off practicalities at the times you would actually travel, particularly if you are balancing siblings at other schools.
Competition for places. With 105 applications for 60 offers admissions are competitive. Families should be realistic about likelihood of offer and consider back-up preferences.
Inspection staleness. The latest graded inspection is from September 2019. That is still relevant, but it is not a current-year snapshot, so parents should use open events, recent communications, and trust context to understand what has changed since then.
Infant-only structure. Children transfer after Year 2. Families should weigh the benefits of a focused early-years setting against the practicalities of another transition at age seven, and ask how continuity of learning is supported into Year 3.
Dudley Infant Academy will suit families who want a smaller, structured infant start, where routines, behaviour, and outdoor learning are treated as central rather than peripheral. It is also a logical option for parents who value trust-backed systems and clear published timings for wraparound care. Entry remains the main hurdle, with demand outstripping places, so families should apply with a clear-eyed plan and sensible alternatives.
The latest graded inspection judged the academy Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes judged Outstanding. It is an infant setting, so there are no end-of-primary KS2 headline results to compare. For most families, the best indicators are the school’s routines, attendance expectations, safeguarding structure, and how well children settle into early reading and number foundations.
Applications are made through East Sussex County Council. The academy publishes a timeline showing applications opening in September 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026, with offer day on 16 April 2026. Check the council route, then review the academy admissions policy for oversubscription priorities.
Yes. The latest admissions results shows 105 applications for 60 offers, which indicates more demand than places. Because no distance cut-off is published families should focus on oversubscription criteria and ensure they submit the local authority application on time.
Yes. Published timings show breakfast club from 7.45am to 8.45am and after-school club running to 6.00pm. Finish times for the school day vary by day, so it is worth aligning wraparound use to the published end-of-day schedule.
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