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.
A small, one-form entry primary in Bennetts End, Chambersbury combines a family feel with the practicalities of a busy, oversubscribed intake. Reception entry is competitive, with 67 applications for 14 offers in the latest available admissions snapshot, a ratio of 4.79 applications per place. That pressure tends to shape the parent experience as much as the school experience.
Academically, the picture is mixed in a way that will matter to different families. In 2024, 62.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, essentially in line with the England average of 62%. The eye-catching statistic is at the higher standard, 19% achieved greater depth compared with 8% nationally, suggesting a subset of pupils are being stretched well. (FindMySchool uses official data to rank outcomes; on that measure the school sits in the lower-performing half nationally.)
Leadership is current and clearly signposted. Mr Christopher Payne is listed as headteacher, with the start date shown as 1 September 2024.
One of the most distinctive threads running through school life is pupil voice and shared identity. Children are placed into one of four house groups from the moment they join, Elf Owls, Indian Owls, Long Legged Owls, and Masked Owls, and Year 6 pupils canvass and are voted in as House Captain and Vice Captain. This creates a tangible structure for teamwork, fundraising, and sport across year groups, and it often suits pupils who like clear roles and visible responsibilities.
The pupil-led element is not just decorative. The Pupil Parliament brings together representatives from every year group, including Reception, to discuss what would improve school life. Past examples include influencing playground equipment decisions and school display themes. For families, that usually translates into a child who feels listened to and sees a direct link between suggestions and action, even where not every idea is adopted.
Early years are integrated into the school’s identity rather than treated as an add-on. Early years provision is part of the external quality picture, and it is explicitly graded alongside the main school judgement. Day to day, families can expect routines that acknowledge the transition into full-time school, including practical adjustments such as extended lunchtime for Reception and Year 1 during autumn and spring, so children can learn routines gradually.
Chambersbury’s headline outcomes are best understood as “expected standard broadly in line with England, higher standard stronger than England”.
In 2024:
62.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with the England average of 62%.
19% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with the England average of 8%.
Average scaled scores were 105 in reading, 102 in maths, and 103 in grammar, punctuation and spelling.
73% met the expected standard in science, below the England average of 82%.
These figures suggest the school is supporting many pupils to reach the expected benchmark while also pushing a meaningful proportion beyond it, even if science outcomes were weaker in that particular year.
FindMySchool’s proprietary ranking (based on official data) places Chambersbury 10,938th in England and 21st in the Hemel Hempstead local area for primary outcomes, which equates to below England average overall performance.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
62.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school’s curriculum organisation is detailed and highly structured, particularly in how learning is broken down by term and by year group on the website. That level of clarity often signals a teaching approach that values sequencing, revisiting prior knowledge, and shared expectations across classes, which can benefit pupils who thrive on routine and predictable lesson patterns.
Reading looks like a sustained priority in classroom routines. For example, in upper key stage 2, pupils are expected to read frequently at home and complete comprehension quizzes linked to books once finished, a model that rewards regular practice and accountability.
In early years and key stage 1, the school explicitly builds in time for routines and independence. The extended lunchtime arrangements for Reception and Year 1 are a small detail, but they often reflect an approach that values practical readiness and confidence, not only academic acceleration.
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, the main progression route is into local secondary schools through Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions process. For most families, the practical task is understanding how your address interacts with secondary admissions rules and transport, rather than expecting a fixed “destination list” published by the school.
A useful way to plan ahead is to use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools to shortlist local secondaries, then pressure-test your assumptions against admissions criteria. Where distance is a factor, FindMySchoolMap Search can help you check how your home location compares with recent cut-offs, while remembering that admissions patterns shift year to year.
Reception admissions sit within Hertfordshire’s coordinated system. For September 2026 entry, the county’s published timeline sets a clear framework:
Online applications open: 3 November 2025
Deadline to apply: 15 January 2026
Late application explanation deadline (to be treated as on time): 2 February 2026
Appeals period: 10 June to 17 July 2026
Open events are typically listed as running in November and December, with exact arrangements varying by school.
At school level, tours are available by appointment, which is helpful for families who prefer a quieter, more individual introduction rather than a large open evening format.
Demand is a defining feature. With 67 applications for 14 offers in the available snapshot, and an applications-to-offers ratio of 4.79, the school is clearly oversubscribed. That level of competition usually means families should treat Chambersbury as a high-preference option but also build a realistic wider preference list.
100%
1st preference success rate
11 of 11 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
14
Offers
14
Applications
67
Safeguarding roles are clearly defined on the school’s published information, with the headteacher named as the Designated Safeguarding Lead and identified deputies listed. That clarity matters because it signals a system rather than reliance on informal relationships, and it helps parents know who to speak to if a concern arises.
Pupil leadership structures also feed into pastoral culture. House groups and Pupil Parliament create regular, formal channels for pupils to raise issues and propose improvements. For some children, that sense of being represented can reduce low-level anxieties and support belonging, especially during transitions.
The most recent Ofsted inspection, dated 8 November 2022, judged the school Good overall and graded all key areas, including early years provision, as Good.
The school promotes club participation and uses external providers to run activities through the year, with clubs announced each term. The key question for parents is not whether options exist, but whether the offer lines up with your child’s interests and your wraparound needs.
Two school-specific programmes stand out as distinctive:
OPAL (Outdoor Play and Learning): the school is developing playtimes through the OPAL approach, including the use of “loose parts” such as crates, blankets, and tyres to encourage creative, physically active play.
Pupil Parliament and house leadership: pupils from all year groups participate, with structured meetings and roles such as House Captains and fundraising representatives, which can suit children who enjoy responsibility and teamwork.
On the parent side, the PTA is branded as PATCH and runs fundraising events such as fairs, discos, and community work parties. A lively PTA often means more enrichment activity over time, but it can also mean a stronger expectation of parent participation, which some families enjoy and others find difficult to fit around work.
Daily timings are clearly set out. Breakfast club runs from 7:40am, classroom doors open at 8:40am, the school day starts at 8:45am, and finishes at 3:15pm, with after-school childcare and clubs running until 6:00pm. The published total time in school is 32.5 hours per week.
Wraparound is a practical strength. After-school childcare is available on site until 6:00pm and is run by Sports 2 Inspire, with booking required for breakfast club due to demand.
For transport, Hemel Hempstead railway station is the main rail hub nearby, useful for commuting families. Local bus connectivity in Bennetts End is served by routes such as service 2, which runs via central Hemel Hempstead.
Oversubscription is real. Recent admissions data shows 67 applications for 14 offers, so families should plan a preference strategy rather than assume a place is likely.
Results depend on what you value. Expected-standard outcomes are close to England average, while higher-standard outcomes are much stronger; children who need significant catch-up may have a different experience from those ready to be stretched.
Early years fees. The school has nursery provision, but families should check the school’s own published information for early years pricing and funding arrangements rather than relying on third-party summaries.
Club detail varies term by term. The school promotes a broad clubs offer, but specific activities are published termly; if your child has a fixed passion, it is worth asking what is running this term and what typically repeats each year.
Chambersbury suits families who want a smaller primary with clear routines, visible pupil leadership, and practical wraparound that supports working days. The academic pattern suggests steady delivery at the expected standard with stronger-than-average outcomes for pupils reaching greater depth. Admission is the obstacle; the day-to-day offer is organised and child-centred for those who secure a place.
Chambersbury was graded Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection (8 November 2022), with all key areas, including early years, also graded Good. In 2024, the proportion meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined was 62.33%, broadly in line with the England average of 62%, while 19% reached the higher standard compared with an England average of 8%.
Applications follow Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions timeline. The online system opens on 3 November 2025 and the deadline to apply is 15 January 2026. Schools typically hold open events in November and December, but families should rely on the school’s own tour arrangements for the most current availability.
Yes. The latest available snapshot shows 67 applications for 14 offers, equivalent to 4.79 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 7:40am and after-school childcare runs until 6:00pm. After-school childcare is run by Sports 2 Inspire, and the school notes booking is required for breakfast club due to increased demand.
The Pupil Parliament includes children from every year group, including Reception, and it feeds into practical decisions such as playground improvements. The house system includes four houses and elected House Captains and Vice Captains in Year 6, plus fundraising representatives.
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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