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.
Barncroft Primary School serves Leigh Park families with a straightforward promise, learning should feel real. The school’s own language talks about bringing learning to life, and that comes through in the way the day is structured, from breakfast club to after-school clubs, and in the breadth of experiences listed in official reporting, including residentials, visitors and sporting events.
Leadership is settled. Mrs Sara Petipher says she started as headteacher in January 2021, and the wider senior team is clearly set out on the school website.
Academically, the most recent published key stage 2 figures sit above England averages for the combined expected standard, but the school’s overall ranking position in England is in the lower performance band in the FindMySchool measure. The more useful takeaway for parents is nuance: there are strong pockets, particularly in reading, and the wider improvement work continues.
A primary that talks explicitly about character tends to have a clearer day-to-day feel, because children know the language staff will use when correcting and praising. Barncroft’s headline values are the 5Bs, Be Kind, Be Resilient, Be Curious, Be Aspirational, Be Empowered. That framework is referenced in school documentation and is designed to be used in real situations rather than left as a poster.
The 3 and 4 June 2025 inspection report describes a nurturing and inclusive community, with strong relationships and clear expectations for behaviour. It also highlights pupils taking on roles such as house captains, head boy or head girl, and school council membership, which matters because those opportunities tend to be the first thing squeezed in a crowded timetable. Here, they are positioned as part of the school’s core work on confidence and responsibility.
Early years is a significant part of the school’s offer. Barncroft takes pupils from age 2, and the pre-school information is published separately, including clear opening times and a link-out to childcare funding information for eligible families. This matters for parents who want one setting to carry their child from toddler years into Reception with continuity of routines and familiar staff.
A final piece of “feel” comes from how a school talks about staff development and support. The 2025 report notes that staff value professional development and feel supported, which is often a proxy indicator for stability in classroom practice and consistent expectations across year groups.
Barncroft is a primary, so the key numbers for most parents are the end of key stage 2 (Year 6) outcomes and the scaled scores in reading, mathematics, and grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS).
In 2024, 70.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 62%. That is a meaningful margin, and it suggests many pupils are leaving Year 6 ready for the demands of key stage 3.
At the higher standard, 13% reached greater depth in reading, writing and maths, compared with the England average of 8%. This indicates a modest but real cohort of higher attainers.
Reading averaged 105, mathematics 104, and GPS 102. These are above the typical national reference point of 100 for scaled scores, with reading the standout.
Barncroft is ranked 10,210th in England for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), and 6th locally in Havant. The England position places it below the England average overall, within the bottom 40% band on this measure. That can look contradictory next to the combined expected figure, but it usually reflects how multi-metric ranking systems weight multiple indicators rather than a single headline percentage. For parents, it is a prompt to look beyond one number: ask how consistently outcomes are strong across subjects, and how well gaps between groups are closing.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
70.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The 2025 inspection report gives the clearest window into classroom practice. It describes a curriculum that, in most subjects, is sequenced so teachers know exactly what pupils should learn and in what order. It also notes that teachers track what needs to be remembered over time to spot gaps and misconceptions, which is the difference between “covering content” and building secure long-term understanding.
Reading is treated as a priority area. Staff coaching, quick intervention when pupils fall behind, and careful book matching to phonics knowledge are all specifically referenced. The implication for families is practical: if your child needs structure in early reading, the school is set up to notice issues early and respond quickly, rather than waiting for problems to become entrenched.
The main development point in the 2025 report is also clear. In some wider curriculum subjects, the essential knowledge and sequencing are not yet as refined, meaning pupils do not build on prior learning as securely as they could in those areas. For parents, that is worth probing in conversation: which foundation subjects have been redesigned since June 2025, and what does that look like in planning and assessment?
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 state primary, Barncroft’s pupils move on to a range of local secondaries rather than a single named destination list. The most important planning question for families is admissions geography and transport practicality rather than “feeder” status.
Start with Hampshire’s secondary transfer process and your address-based options. If you are shortlisting, it helps to map realistic travel times and understand which schools are most accessible by bus, cycle, or a manageable car run. Families comparing primary options can also use FindMySchool’s local comparison tools to keep an eye on how different primaries in the Havant area perform and how their cohorts tend to transition.
For children with additional needs, the 2025 report notes quick identification and adaptation for pupils with SEND, with examples including targeted speech and language support for younger children. That early support can make transition smoother, because Year 6 readiness is as much about communication and independence as it is about test scores.
Barncroft is a Hampshire community school, so Reception admissions are coordinated by Hampshire County Council rather than handled directly by the school. The school is oversubscribed in the most recent demand data you provided, with 95 applications for 56 offers, 1.7 applications per place applications per place. This level of demand usually means families should treat Barncroft as competitive, particularly for those outside any priority area.
The admissions policy sets out the familiar hierarchy: Education, Health and Care Plans naming the school; then priority groups including medical or social need (with evidence), children of staff in defined circumstances, catchment-area children (with sibling priority described), and then other applicants according to the policy’s rules.
For September 2026 entry (the 2026/27 main round), Hampshire’s published key dates are: applications open 1 November 2025, deadline 15 January 2026, and national offer day 16 April 2026. Those dates are the fixed points for families who are applying through the coordinated system.
Barncroft also published open day dates for the 2025 to 2026 cycle, spanning mid-October through mid-January, which suggests open events typically cluster in the autumn term and early spring. If you are looking a year ahead, that pattern is useful even when specific dates have passed.
100%
1st preference success rate
54 of 54 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
56
Offers
56
Applications
95
A calm school day does not happen by accident in a large primary. The 2025 report describes a generally calm and purposeful environment with clear expectations, and notes recent work to adjust the approach for pupils who struggle to manage emotions. The honest point is that it was too early at the time of inspection to see the full impact, but the direction of travel is explicit.
Attendance is an area where the school’s work is described as improving for many pupils, supported by close collaboration with others and a clear mix of support and accountability with families. For parents weighing options, this matters because attendance challenges are common across many communities, and a school’s systems and follow-through make a tangible difference to progress and routine.
Safeguarding is addressed directly in the 2025 report, and is stated as effective.
Barncroft’s extended day offer is unusually explicit in official reporting, which points out that each part of the day, including breakfast club and after-school clubs, is designed to build character and confidence. That framing is important because it implies clubs are not treated as optional “extras” but as part of the wider education offer.
Named examples appear in the school’s published club information. Recent schedules include Young Voices, Cookery Club, Craft Club, and Netball, alongside options such as Cycling Club and Art Club in other terms. For parents, the practical implication is breadth: children who are not sport-first still have structured options after school that build skills and confidence, including food preparation and creative work, while sports clubs offer a route for those who like routine training.
Trips and “wider experiences” are also emphasised, with residential trips and visitors cited in the 2025 report. These experiences often matter most for children who learn best through concrete contexts, because they provide shared reference points for writing, discussion and topic work back in class.
Barncroft publishes a clear timetable, 8:45am start and 3:15pm finish for all children, with classroom doors opening at 8:35am.
Breakfast provision is well established. The attendance page lists two start-time options for breakfast club, 7:30am and 8:00am, with breakfast served until 8:30am.
After school, Night Owls runs from 3:15pm to 6:00pm, with pricing published for different pick-up points and options.
The Barn Owls pre-school page states term-time hours of 8:40am to 3:15pm and points families towards childcare funding routes where relevant.
The school sits in Leigh Park, Havant. For most families, the day-to-day question is whether the route works safely on foot or by bike, and whether your home address sits within relevant priority geography for admissions. Using a precise distance tool when you are shortlisting is sensible, particularly in an oversubscribed year group.
Competition for Reception places. Recent demand data shows more applications than offers. If you are outside priority criteria, treat admission as uncertain and keep a realistic second choice in your plan.
Foundation subject consistency. The 2025 inspection report highlights that, in some wider curriculum subjects, sequencing and assessment were not yet as refined. Ask what has changed since June 2025, and how the school checks that pupils remember key knowledge over time.
Attendance culture. Attendance was described as improving, but not yet high. Families who know mornings can be a struggle should ask about the school’s practical supports and expectations, and how it works with parents when patterns start to slip.
Wraparound costs add up. Breakfast club and after-school provision are clearly structured, but regular use can become a meaningful monthly cost. Check the latest pricing and how booking works for your routine.
Barncroft Primary School is best understood as a large, community-rooted primary with a clear character framework and an improving trajectory. Reading looks like a relative strength, and the 2025 inspection narrative points to strong relationships, a calm ethos, and practical support for pupils with SEND. The main trade-off is that curriculum development in some foundation subjects was still in progress at the time of inspection, and admissions demand means some families will find entry difficult.
Who it suits: families in Leigh Park who want a structured, inclusive school with an extended day offer and a strong emphasis on belonging and responsibility, and who value a school that spells out its expectations clearly.
The most recent published inspection outcome indicates the school has maintained its standards since its previous inspection. In academic terms, the 2024 combined expected standard figure in reading, writing and maths is above the England average, with reading scaled scores a relative strength.
The admissions policy references a defined catchment area used for prioritisation, with mapping provided through Hampshire’s school details pages. In practice, your address, sibling links, and other priority criteria will shape the likelihood of an offer.
Applications are made through Hampshire County Council’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, Hampshire’s key dates list applications opening on 1 November 2025, with the deadline on 15 January 2026 and offer day on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Breakfast club has published start times and an offer designed to cover the pre-school run-up to the 8:45am start, and Night Owls provides after-school care through to 6:00pm with different pick-up options.
The school publishes club information and has offered named options such as Young Voices, Cookery Club, Craft Club and Netball, alongside other activities in different terms. The 2025 inspection report also highlights residential trips and a wide set of experiences including visitors and sporting occasions.
Get in touch with the school directly
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