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.
Five core values shape daily life here: Resilience, Respect, Responsibility, Relationships, and Recognition. Together with a clear, early reading focus, they create a school that feels purposeful without being overly pressurised.
This is an infant school, so pupils typically attend from Reception to Year 2, then move on at age 7. That structure matters for parents comparing data because Key Stage 2 outcomes are not part of the picture in the same way they are for primary schools. Instead, the quality of early reading, language development, and how well pupils with additional needs are supported are the best indicators of fit.
Admissions demand is real. In the latest available admissions data, there were 203 applications for 62 offers, which indicates an oversubscribed intake and a competitive local market for places.
A distinctive feature is the 24-place resourced provision, integrated into the school day and designed for pupils with Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs). If you need specialist support at infant age, this is one of the key differentiators to explore in detail.
Westfield Infant School has a clear identity and it is not accidental. The school’s published values are reinforced through routines, assemblies, and the language adults use with pupils. The result is an expectations-led culture that still feels age-appropriate for 4 to 7 year olds.
There is also a strong sense of history in how the place was originally designed for young children. The school’s own historical opening document describes a purpose-built infants’ school opened in July 1952, with teaching rooms planned to have a southerly aspect and French windows leading onto a terrace for outdoor learning when weather permits. That design intent, daylight, access to outside space, and practical layout for early years, still reads as a thoughtful foundation for an infant setting.
The language used in the most recent inspection points to a calm and inclusive school where pupils learn to listen, show good manners, and understand friendship. It also highlights structured behaviour expectations through the school’s rules, alongside a pastoral layer for pupils who need more help to manage worries.
A final cultural marker is how the school groups pupils. The website references multiple “Team” identities, including Team Courage, which is also the name used for the resourced provision. For some children, that team structure can be a simple way to build belonging and make it easier for younger pupils to talk about values and behaviour in concrete terms.
Because this is an infant school, published outcomes are not the same as a full primary, and the strongest evidence sits in the quality of early reading and the consistency of classroom practice.
The latest Ofsted inspection (29 and 30 April 2025) graded Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, Leadership and Management, and Early Years Provision as Good, with safeguarding reported as effective.
Early reading is the headline academic strength. The inspection describes reading as prioritised from the start and taught systematically, with targeted support when pupils need to catch up.
That is reinforced by the school’s own published approach. Westfield Infant School states it teaches early reading through the validated systematic synthetic phonics programme Little Wandle Letters and Sounds Revised, with daily phonics from Reception and a clear progression through Reception, Year 1, and Year 2.
What this means for families is straightforward. If you are choosing an infant school, consistency in phonics teaching and early language development is often the best predictor of a smooth start, especially for children who arrive with weaker communication and social skills. The evidence available suggests a structured approach rather than a loose, ad hoc model.
The curriculum intent is framed explicitly as knowledge-rich, with the school referencing Rosenshine’s principles and related research in its published curriculum vision. For parents, that usually translates into a clear sequence of learning, frequent retrieval and rehearsal, and a deliberate attempt to build long-term understanding rather than relying on one-off projects.
In classroom terms, the most recent inspection describes staff presenting new content clearly and providing opportunities for pupils to rehearse and repeat key concepts. That is the kind of practice that tends to benefit early years and Key Stage 1 pupils, where repetition and routine are not a weakness, they are how fluency develops.
Reading is again the most specific and measurable element. The school describes a detailed phonics model including daily lessons, half-termly assessments through Reception and Year 1, and “keep up” support when gaps appear. It also outlines structured reading practice sessions several times per week with fully decodable books.
There are areas the school is still tightening. The inspection identifies occasional mismatch between some activities and the intended curriculum sequence, and also flags that pupils do not always apply spelling, punctuation, and grammar knowledge consistently across subjects. For parents, that is worth probing: ask how teachers build writing stamina and accuracy outside English lessons, and how they ensure topic work genuinely deepens knowledge rather than simply keeping pupils busy.
As an infant school, the primary “destination” is transition to junior education at age 7. The school’s admissions information and policies refer to Westfields Junior School as the federated junior partner, which strongly suggests many pupils move on within that local pathway.
For families, the practical question is less “which senior school” and more “how seamless is Year 2 to Year 3”. Look for evidence of transition work such as shared events, familiarisation visits, curriculum alignment in reading and maths, and SEN transition planning for pupils who need it.
If your child has SEND, the question becomes even more specific. For pupils in the resourced provision, continuity of specialist support and how EHCP outcomes are reviewed at transition will matter as much as the name of the next school.
Reception entry is coordinated by the local authority. The school’s own admissions page sets out planned intake structures for 2026 to 2027, including three EYFS classes with a cohort size of 90. It also notes an operational capacity adjustment for Year 1 in September 2026, capped at 60 for that year group, with the rationale linked to low numbers moving into Year 1 and an annual review of that cap.
For Leicestershire, the published application window for first-time primary entry runs from 1 September to 15 January, with the national offer day on 16 April (or the next working day if that date falls on a non-working day).
The oversubscription picture is clear from the available demand data: more than three applications per place. For parents, that means it is sensible to treat this as a school where preferences and back-up choices matter, even if you live nearby.
The resourced provision is different. It is for pupils with EHCPs, and admissions are organised by the local authority SEND route rather than the standard Reception application. The school describes this provision as integrated with whole-school life and designed to support pupils with significant communication and interaction needs, while the inspection notes the provision educates up to 24 pupils and that the local authority is responsible for admissions.
Practical tip: if distance is a key factor for you, use FindMySchool’s Map Search tool to check your exact home-to-gate measurement and then compare it with recent admissions patterns across nearby infant schools. Even when a school does not publish a last-distance figure, precise measurement helps you understand realistic options.
Applications
203
Total received
Places Offered
62
Subscription Rate
3.3x
Apps per place
Pastoral support is unusually well described for an infant school. The inspection references a dedicated space used to support pupils who need help expressing worries and concerns, and describes wellbeing and mental health as a prioritised area.
On the school website, emotional literacy support is also visible through ELSA (Emotional Literacy Support Assistant) style interventions, typically delivered in weekly programmes over several weeks with clear aims and coping strategies.
One small but telling detail is Jett, a school dog who is sometimes involved in ELSA sessions. Used well, this kind of approach can help younger pupils practise calm routines, empathy, and confidence in a low-stakes way, particularly for children who find adult conversation intimidating.
Safeguarding systems are also described on the school website, including Operation Encompass, which is designed to ensure schools receive timely information after domestic abuse incidents involving a child so that support can be put in place quickly.
Extracurricular at infant age is less about elite pathways and more about giving pupils a safe way to try new experiences, build confidence, and practise social skills beyond their class group.
The school’s newsletter for Spring 2025 lists a structured after-school offer including Mini Singers, Kidslingo Spanish club, and multiple sports options delivered by external providers and specialist staff. It also references Drama Club, Nerf Adventures, football club, dodgeball, and multi sports sessions. Clubs are stated to run until 4:15pm.
The most recent inspection adds more texture, referencing gardening and multi-skills clubs, plus pride taken by pupils involved in gymnastics through recent awards. For parents, that is useful because it suggests extracurricular is not limited to one sport or one term, and that participation is recognised in a way that matters to young children.
Inclusion threads through this section too. The school’s facilities and SEND information reference Makaton signs and symbols used in school life to support communication, alongside intervention groups and lunchtime support structures for pupils who need a calmer space. For some families, especially those with speech, language and communication needs, this can be the difference between a child coping and a child enjoying school.
Community involvement is also formalised through WISA, the Westfield Infant School Association, which meets at least once each half term to plan fundraising events. This often matters in practical ways, because active parent associations tend to support enrichment purchases, events, and experiences that sit outside the standard budget.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. The main predictable costs are typically uniform, trips, and optional clubs.
The attendance policy states the school day starts at 8:45am, with doors opened at 8:35am to allow pupils time to settle.
Wraparound care is offered via an external provider. The school’s published wraparound information states breakfast provision opens at 7:30am, with breakfast available until 8:20am, and after-school provision available until 6:00pm. It also publishes session pricing, including £6.50 for breakfast club and £10.50 to 5:30pm or £13.00 to 6:00pm for after-school club (snack included).
All pupils are entitled to Universal Infant Free School Meals, with a daily choice and support for special diets where needed.
If you are comparing multiple schools, FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature is a useful way to track practical differences like wraparound logistics, SEN pathways, and the local authority timetable in one place.
Competition for places. The latest available demand data shows 203 applications for 62 offers. If you are applying outside the most favoured criteria, build a realistic shortlist and include back-up preferences.
A Good profile under the new inspection framework. The April 2025 inspection graded all key areas as Good. Families specifically seeking a top-graded judgement in every area should read the report carefully and decide what weight to place on the stated improvement priorities.
Writing consistency across subjects. The inspection highlights that spelling, punctuation and grammar knowledge is not always applied consistently across the wider curriculum. If your child is already a confident writer, ask how the school stretches writing beyond phonics and early transcription.
Understanding of faiths and religions. The inspection notes pupils’ understanding of different religions is limited. For some families this is minor at infant age; for others it will shape how they think about personal development and curriculum breadth.
Westfield Infant School, Hinckley combines a structured early reading model with a clearly defined values culture and a significant inclusion offer through its resourced provision. It suits families who want a calm, routines-driven start to school, especially where phonics consistency and early language development are priorities. The main challenge is admissions competition; securing entry is where the difficulty lies.
The most recent inspection in April 2025 graded all key areas as Good, including early years provision, and reported safeguarding as effective. The school’s reading approach is clearly structured, and pupils with additional needs are supported through targeted interventions and an integrated resourced provision.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still plan for usual costs such as uniform, trips, and optional clubs. Wraparound care is provided by an external provider and is charged separately.
Applications are made through the local authority. For Leicestershire, the application window runs from 1 September to 15 January, with offers released on national offer day in April. Check the local authority timetable each year, as dates are published as part of the coordinated admissions process.
Yes, via an external wraparound provider. Breakfast provision starts at 7:30am and after-school care runs until 6:00pm. Charges vary by session length, so it is worth checking availability and the current booking arrangements well ahead of time.
The 24-place Resource Base is for pupils with EHCPs and is integrated into school life. Admissions are managed through the local authority SEND route rather than the standard Reception application. Families usually need an EHCP that names the resourced provision, and placement decisions are made by the local authority in consultation with the school.
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