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.
St Mary’s CofE Academy Stotfold is a two-form entry lower school serving pupils from Reception to Year 4 (ages 5 to 9), with around 300 places overall. It is a Church of England academy and sits within the Central Bedfordshire three-tier system, so most children move on to a middle school for Year 5.
The latest Ofsted inspection (4 and 5 February 2025) concluded the school had taken effective action to maintain the standards identified at the previous inspection, with pupils described as safe, happy, and ready to learn.
For families, the day to day offer is broader than lessons alone, a long list of clubs, residential and curriculum visits, and on-site wraparound childcare via S.M.A.S.H. Club for before and after school care.
The school’s ethos is explicitly Christian and community-oriented. A clear signals-and-values style runs through the website, including the Golden Rule from Matthew 7:12, and a long list of stated aims around learning, respect, responsibility, and spiritual development through collective worship and religious education.
Pastoral culture is reinforced in practical ways. The 2025 Ofsted report describes a warm welcome and a staff team that invests time in understanding pupils’ needs and interests, with particular success for pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities. That matters in a lower school, where children are still learning how to be at school, not just what to learn.
There are also some distinctive “small school” touches that parents tend to value. The school runs both a School Council and a Science Council (with named representatives by class and year group), which adds a sense of pupil voice and responsibility even at a young age. The Pets As Therapy element is unusually concrete too, with Alfie, a qualified therapy dog, supporting reading and confidence.
Because St Mary’s is a lower school ending in Year 4, it does not have the standard Year 6 Key Stage 2 outcomes that many primary school comparisons rely on. The most relevant “results” evidence here comes from curriculum quality signals and external evaluation rather than published SATs measures.
From Ofsted’s recent evidence base, pupils are reported to achieve well overall and to be suitably prepared for the next stage of education, with staff supporting pupils to access an ambitious curriculum.
Teaching priorities lean strongly into early reading and curriculum sequencing, which is exactly where a lower school can have outsized impact. In the 2020 inspection letter, reading is positioned as central, with phonics taught well and books matched carefully to the sounds pupils know, plus support for children who fall behind. While that is an earlier report, it remains useful context alongside the 2025 finding that standards have been maintained.
The school also frames learning as broader than English and mathematics. On the enrichment side, pupils are offered structured opportunities beyond lessons, including a residential and visits to museums, zoos, theatres, and local places of interest, which often link well to history and geography topics at this age.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is a lower school, so the key transition is into Year 5 at a middle school. Central Bedfordshire historically operates a three-tier model, with lower schools through Year 4, then middle schools for Years 5 to 8.
For Stotfold-area families, local middle options typically include schools such as Etonbury Academy (age range 9 to 19, admitting from Year 5) and Pix Brook Academy (listed by the local authority among middle schools). Which school a child moves to depends on admissions criteria, catchment arrangements, and place availability in the year of transfer.
The school’s own admissions page also flags information for Year 4 parents about transfer to middle school for 2026, which is a helpful prompt for families to engage early with the next-step process.
St Mary’s is a state-funded school with no tuition fees. Admission for Reception is coordinated through the local authority process. Central Bedfordshire’s key dates for September 2026 entry set the on-time application deadline at 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026, and late allocation offer day on 1 June 2026.
Demand data indicates the school is oversubscribed in the most recent admissions figures provided, with 83 applications for 56 offers, which equates to about 1.48 applications per place.
The published admissions number for Reception is 60 places, which is a useful anchor when weighing how competitive places may feel year to year.
Parents shortlisting should also use FindMySchool’s Map Search tool to sense-check likely travel distance and practical viability, especially in oversubscribed local areas where small differences in location can matter.
Applications
83
Total received
Places Offered
56
Subscription Rate
1.5x
Apps per place
Safeguarding messaging is prominent on the school website, including clear signposting of designated safeguarding leads and an emphasis on strong vetting for staff and regular visitors.
In the wider wellbeing picture, the Ofsted evidence describes a culture of mutual respect and kindness, with pupils behaving well and staff support available when children have worries. That blend of expectations and reassurance is often what parents want from a Reception to Year 4 setting.
Extracurricular breadth is a clear strength and, importantly, it is specific rather than generic. The school lists clubs including BLAST, STEM Science, Lego, choir, drama, tennis, netball, running, Spanish, and spelling or times tables support for Years 3 and 4, plus a range of sports clubs.
Trips and experiences are part of the offer too. Ofsted describes activities including a residential and educational visits to museums, zoos, theatres and local areas of interest, which helps broaden experience for younger pupils.
Community links are unusually explicit for a school of this size. The school highlights involvement in Stotfold Festival Week and the Stotfold Mill Weekend, plus church links and visits to the library. That tends to suit families who value a school that feels embedded in its town rather than operating as a standalone institution.
Term dates for 2025 to 2026 are published on the school website. Autumn term runs from 03 September to 19 December 2025, spring term from 06 January to 27 March 2026, and summer term from 14 April to 17 July 2026.
Wraparound childcare is a defining practical advantage. S.M.A.S.H. Club operates on site and provides before and after school childcare within the school building. Families should confirm session times and availability directly with the provider, particularly for September starts when demand can spike.
School meals are cooked on site, with a published current price of £2.95 per day for lunches.
Three-tier transition at Year 5. Children leave after Year 4, so parents need to engage early with middle school planning and admissions, especially if siblings attend different settings.
Oversubscription pressure. Recent admissions figures show more applications than offers, so a place should never be assumed without a realistic plan B.
Faith foundation. The Church of England identity is central and visible, through collective worship, values language, and community links. Families wanting a fully secular approach may prefer alternatives.
St Mary’s CofE Academy Stotfold reads as a calm, structured lower school where care and expectations sit side by side, backed by maintained Ofsted standards and a clear values framework. It suits families who want a Church of England ethos, strong wraparound options, and plenty of clubs and visits in the early years. The main hurdle is admission competition in oversubscribed years, plus the need to plan confidently for the Year 5 transition into the middle school system.
The school is currently rated Good, and the most recent Ofsted inspection (February 2025) found it had taken effective action to maintain the standards identified at the previous inspection. Published evidence also points to a caring culture where pupils feel safe and are ready to learn.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority, and catchment arrangements can vary by year and by the wider pattern of demand. The school publishes admissions information and a catchment map via its admissions page, and Central Bedfordshire provides the wider admissions framework.
Yes. S.M.A.S.H. Club operates on the school site and provides before and after school childcare within the school building. Availability and booking arrangements should be checked directly with the provider.
For Central Bedfordshire coordinated admissions, the on-time deadline for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026. Late allocation outcomes follow later in the cycle.
Because St Mary’s is a lower school, pupils usually transfer to a middle school for Year 5. Local authority information lists middle schools in the area, and Etonbury Academy is an example of a school admitting from age 9 (Year 5). Actual destinations vary by admissions outcomes and family preference in the year of transfer.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
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.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.