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.
This is an infant school that puts emotional literacy and early reading front and centre, then backs it up with purposeful routines and unusually strong outdoor learning. The tone is settled and friendly, with pupils described as kind and enthusiastic, and behaviour characterised as calm and orderly.
Leadership is shared across the local federation with the linked junior school, which can make transition to Year 3 feel more seamless than a typical infant-to-junior move. The current headteacher is Ian Waine, and the school runs as a community school within Hampshire.
For parents, the practical draw is strong wraparound coverage across the week, with early-morning provision on site and partner options after school that run later.
The strongest clue to the school’s character is the language pupils are taught to use about feelings. The most recent inspection highlights pupils confidently talking about emotions, using the “colour monsters” as a shared way to articulate how they feel. That matters at infant age, because it often shows up as fewer small conflicts escalating, and quicker repair when they do.
Relationships are a second anchor. The same report describes strong, caring relationships between pupils and staff, and a culture where children know adults will listen when they are worried. It is a simple point, but it tends to correlate with smooth drop-offs, faster settling for Reception starters, and better readiness to learn for pupils who arrive anxious.
There is also a clear sense of a shared “family” identity. The inspection notes pupils being proud to be part of the “Trosnant family”, alongside a school ethos framed around respect and resilience. For families, that usually translates into consistent expectations across classrooms, and fewer surprises between one year group and the next.
Because this is an infant school (ages 4 to 7), parents will not find the same headline national measures that appear for end of primary (Year 6). Instead, the most useful evidence is how quickly pupils secure the fundamentals that set them up for Key Stage 2 later.
The latest Ofsted inspection rated the school Good across all graded areas in October 2023, including early years provision and quality of education. The report describes pupils achieving well across the curriculum and being motivated to learn, including those with special educational needs and disabilities.
A particular strength is early reading. Teaching of reading is described as effective from the first day of Reception, with phonics taught by staff with the required expertise, and books matched to the sounds pupils have learned. Struggling readers are supported to keep up, which is exactly the right “no gaps allowed” stance at this age.
The curriculum story here is about sequencing and foundations, rather than breadth for its own sake. In Reception, staff focus on communication and language, then build early mathematics through carefully defined steps that move pupils from practical exploration to more complex number work. This sort of progression matters because it reduces the number of children who appear confident in one-to-one situations but fall away when the maths becomes more abstract.
Teaching approaches are also described as deliberately connective. Staff recap prior learning and help pupils link new ideas to what they already know, which is especially effective for young children who need frequent retrieval and reinforcement.
The school is not complacent about consistency. The same inspection notes that, in a few foundation subjects, staff expertise is less developed, leading to tasks that do not always emphasise the most important content. The improvement task is therefore clarity and subject confidence beyond the strongest areas, so that pupils’ learning is consistently secure across the whole curriculum.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Most pupils’ next step is the linked junior school, Trosnant Junior School, which shares senior leadership and governance across the federation.
In Hampshire’s admissions system, attendance at a linked school can support priority for transfer, but it is still important to read the current admission arrangements and follow the application process on time. For many families, the practical benefit is the continuity of approach, with shared expectations and familiar routines easing the Year 3 transition.
Reception entry is coordinated by the local authority. In the most recently recorded intake data available here, the school had 69 applications and made 50 offers, which aligns with the “oversubscribed” picture and explains why local families often treat deadlines as non-negotiable.
For September 2026 entry, Hampshire published the main-round dates as follows: applications opened 01 November 2025, the deadline was 15 January 2026, and offers are due on 16 April 2026. As of 01 February 2026, that means the on-time application window has closed, and families are in the period leading up to national offer day.
A useful habit, especially in oversubscribed areas, is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense-check your home address against the way allocations are made locally, then follow up by reading the current admission arrangements in full before you commit to a plan.
Applications
69
Total received
Places Offered
50
Subscription Rate
1.4x
Apps per place
Expectations for behaviour are taught explicitly from the earliest days in Reception. Pupils learn how to resolve disagreements and are guided to express themselves kindly, supporting calm lessons with little disruption.
The school also frames wellbeing as part of readiness to learn, not an add-on. The inspection points to the school prioritising emotional and physical health, including practical routines such as children learning to brush their teeth in Reception.
Safeguarding is treated as a clear baseline, and the latest report confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Outdoor learning is a defining feature, and it is unusually detailed rather than tokenistic. Forest School and Beach School are structured parts of the offer, with Forest School activities including shelter-building, campfire experiences (managed appropriately), woodworking, birdwatching with binoculars, and “mud kitchen” play. Beach School sessions take place at Hayling Island Sailing Club, where pupils explore the shoreline, identify natural materials, and learn about tides through practical experiences.
There is also a sustainability thread that young children can actually understand. The school keeps four chickens as part of the Forest School provision, cared for with support from “Chicken Rangers”, pupils who volunteer before school to help look after them. It is a small detail, but it tends to build responsibility and routine in a way worksheets never will.
Clubs and wraparound options are practical, not just enrichment. The school runs an on-site Early Bird Club in the morning, and there is a short “Library Club” immediately after the end of the day for families who need a brief buffer between pick-up times. The broader clubs list also includes KS1 sport through CM Sports Club, alongside creative and outdoor options across the federation week.
The daily rhythm is clear from the wraparound timetable. The Early Bird Club runs from 7.40am to 8.30am, and school opens at 8.30am. The end of the school day is indicated by wraparound provision starting at 3.15pm, with the Library Club running 3.15pm to 3.45pm.
Wraparound coverage can extend to 6.00pm through a mix of on-site and partner provision, which is useful for families with commuting or split-school pick-ups.
On transport, the school provides travel-to-school guidance and a travel plan, aimed at supporting safe, active journeys. For many families in Leigh Park, walking and scooting will be the default, and the school’s materials are designed to help families plan routes and reduce pressure at drop-off.
Competition for places. The school is recorded as oversubscribed, with more applications than offers in the latest available admissions round. If you are planning for Reception entry in a future year, treat deadlines and evidence requirements as critical.
Curriculum consistency beyond core strengths. External evaluation praises reading and mathematics, but also flags that staff expertise in a few foundation subjects needs strengthening so learning is consistently secure across the curriculum.
A specialist resourced provision on site. The school shares a small specially resourced provision for pupils with social, emotional and mental health needs with its junior partner, with places limited. This can be a positive for families who need that pathway, but it also signals that the setting has a wider inclusion role that can shape day-to-day priorities.
For families who want an infant start that blends firm routines with emotionally intelligent pastoral work, this school reads as a strong option. The combination of early reading discipline, the shared language for feelings, and the depth of outdoor learning is distinctive at this phase. It most suits families in the local area who value calm behaviour and practical learning experiences, and who can work within an admissions process where timing and criteria matter.
The most recent inspection in October 2023 rated the school Good across all graded areas, including quality of education and early years. The report describes calm behaviour, strong relationships between pupils and staff, and effective early reading and phonics from the first day of Reception.
Reception applications are coordinated through Hampshire’s admissions system. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 01 November 2025 and the on-time deadline was 15 January 2026, with offers due on 16 April 2026.
It is recorded as oversubscribed in the latest available admissions data, with 69 applications and 50 offers in the most recently reported round. In practice, that means it is worth treating it as competitive and planning realistic alternatives.
Yes. The school offers morning provision through an Early Bird Club (7.40am to 8.30am). Wraparound options can extend later in the day through a combination of school-run and partner provision, and there is also a short Library Club immediately after the end of the school day.
Most pupils move on to the linked junior partner school, Trosnant Junior School, which shares leadership and governance across the federation. Families should still follow the junior transfer process and published admission arrangements for Year 3.
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