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 two-form entry primary in Hitchin with a distinctive local identity, its name is tied to William Ransom, a Hitchin pharmacist and botanist whose story still features in school communications.
Academic outcomes, as measured in the latest published primary performance results, are strong. In 2024, 84.3% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 36% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared to 8% across England. Reading, mathematics, and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores were 109, 106, and 108 respectively. These outcomes help explain why the school sits above the England average, placing it within the top 25% of primary schools in England on FindMySchool’s ranking model.
Day to day, the school’s public-facing priorities are clear. A structured school day, explicit rules, and a push for independence and wellbeing sit alongside community initiatives, including its visible support for the Smartphone Free Childhood movement.
The atmosphere described in formal external reporting is of a calm, organised primary where pupils settle quickly into routines and adults focus on consistent expectations. There is a strong emphasis on positive relationships with families, and on pupils arriving ready to learn.
A practical set of school rules, Respect, Effort, Kindness and Safety, is positioned as a shared language for behaviour and community life. That matters in a large primary, because consistency is what stops a two-form entry setting from feeling anonymous. It also helps parents understand what the school is trying to build socially, not only academically.
Two school specific threads help it stand out locally. One is The Orbit, a school magazine with a pupil journalist team, which signals that pupil voice and writing for a real audience are taken seriously. The other is the school’s engagement with Smartphone Free Childhood. The school website sets out that, after parent discussion and local surveys, families supported a voluntary pact aimed at delaying smartphones until at least age 14, and that this work has become a wider town conversation. For many parents, this reads as a school willing to convene a community around a wellbeing issue, rather than leaving it to informal playground debate.
Leadership matters most when a school is balancing strong outcomes with improvement priorities. Tony Plunkett is named as headteacher, and the most recent inspection report states that he was appointed in September 2023. That timing is relevant context, because it frames how quickly new systems, particularly around inclusion, can realistically bed in.
This is a primary school, so the most useful hard numbers for parents are Key Stage 2 outcomes and scaled scores. In the latest available results for 2024, 84.3% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared to an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 36% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared to 8% across England. These are high-attainment figures, and they suggest that the core curriculum, particularly in English and mathematics, is working well for a substantial proportion of pupils.
Scaled scores reinforce that picture. Reading is 109, mathematics is 106, and grammar, punctuation and spelling is 108, all above the typical national reference point of 100. In practical terms, that points to secure literacy and numeracy foundations for many children by the end of Year 6, which usually makes the transition to secondary less bumpy, especially in subjects that rely heavily on reading comprehension and arithmetic fluency.
FindMySchool’s ranking model places the school 2,218th in England and 3rd in Hitchin for primary outcomes, based on official attainment data, which sits above the England average and comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England.
A useful way to read these numbers is to separate “expected standard” from “higher standard”. Expected standard tells you how many pupils are meeting age-related benchmarks across reading, writing and maths, and William Ransom’s figure is well above England’s. Higher standard tells you about depth, and here the school also outperforms England clearly. For parents of high attaining pupils, that suggests the school is not only getting children over the line, it is stretching a meaningful cohort beyond it.
None of this removes the importance of what happens day to day. A strong headline figure can hide variability for pupils who need targeted support, and it can also mask how well the school identifies learning needs early. That becomes particularly important in light of the most recent inspection’s emphasis on strengthening SEND identification and the effectiveness of some support programmes.
Parents comparing local schools may find it helpful to use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to view these measures side by side with nearby primaries, rather than relying on reputation alone.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
84.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is presented as deliberately shaped by staff and governors, with an explicit aim of helping children lead happy, healthy, constructive lives while also building secure knowledge and understanding of the world. That ambition is broad, but the detail sits in subject design and the routines around recap, practice, and progression.
In mathematics, the school states that it follows White Rose curriculum overviews, organised into sequenced steps by year group. For parents, that usually translates into consistent representations and methods across classes, clear progression in calculation, and fewer gaps when children move year groups, since staff are working from a shared spine rather than individual preference. The benefit is most obvious for children who need repetition and structure, because consistent models reduce cognitive load.
Reading is a prominent strength in the latest inspection narrative. Pupils have access to a wide range of books and develop a love of reading, with early reading starting as soon as children join in early years, then building through Key Stage 1 into fluency for most pupils later on. The implication for families is simple: children who read confidently tend to access the whole curriculum more easily, from word problems in maths to comprehension in history and geography.
Early years is also described as settled and routine-driven, with a language rich environment and clear checks on what children know when they join, so gaps can be identified promptly. This matters because it is often where schools either get ahead of need, or spend years catching up later.
Where the picture is less secure, based on the latest inspection evidence, is the precision of identifying pupils’ SEND needs and the consistency of curriculum adaptations for those pupils. For parents of children with emerging needs, the key question is how quickly the school can move from noticing to specifying, and from specifying to adapting classroom practice in a way that is tracked and reviewed.
As a state primary in Hitchin, pupils typically move on to a range of local secondary schools, depending on family preference and admissions criteria. The next step is less about a single “feeder” destination and more about families understanding the local secondary landscape early enough to plan realistically.
What William Ransom can control is readiness. Strong KS2 attainment in reading, writing and maths tends to help children cope with the jump in subject specific vocabulary, longer written tasks, and more independent organisation in Year 7. For high attaining pupils, the higher standard outcomes suggest many will be arriving at secondary already confident with more demanding reading and reasoning.
Families who are considering highly competitive secondary options should pay attention to timelines and to the child’s temperament. The best preparation at primary is rarely intensive coaching, it is sustained reading, secure number sense, and the ability to manage feedback calmly. For parents shortlisting secondaries, it can help to map travel times and realistic admission routes early, then revisit in Year 5, rather than leaving it all to autumn of Year 6.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Hertfordshire County Council rather than directly by the school. The school’s published admission number is 60, aligning with its two-form entry structure.
For the relevant entry route, there were 205 applications for 60 offers, which is about 3.42 applications per place. First preference demand also exceeds offers, with a 1.14 ratio of first preferences to first preference offers, consistent with an oversubscribed school.
For 2026 entry, Hertfordshire’s timetable sets out that the online application system opens on 3 November 2025, and the on time deadline is 15 January 2026. Open events are typically advertised in November and December, with families advised to check individual school calendars for specifics.
. In oversubscribed years, small distance differences can matter, and the exact pattern varies annually. In practical terms, parents should use the FindMySchoolMap Search to measure their home to school distance accurately and to sense check how realistic their shortlist is across several nearby options.
Applications
205
Total received
Places Offered
60
Subscription Rate
3.4x
Apps per place
Pastoral culture is most credible when it shows up in routines, adult responses, and safety education, not only in policies. The most recent inspection narrative describes pupils who are calm and settled and a behaviour approach with clear expectations that are consistently upheld, with staff support when pupils struggle to manage behaviour. That combination, high expectations plus re-set support, tends to suit most children, including those who need firm boundaries.
Wellbeing is also framed through practical safety and relationships education. The school’s personal, social, health and economic curriculum is described as covering healthy relationships and local risks, including rail safety because the school is near a railway line. That detail matters because it shows an attempt to make safeguarding education specific to local context, rather than generic.
Pupil leadership roles are another lever for belonging, particularly for children who are not naturally academic high fliers. Peer mentors, peer mediators, and sports leaders are named as opportunities that help pupils build character and leadership skills.
The Smartphone Free Childhood work is also part of the wellbeing story, in a more modern way. By anchoring a voluntary parent pact and public discussion, the school is signalling that it wants families to have a shared approach to a topic that can dominate late primary social life. For some children, fewer smartphones in a peer group can lower social pressure. For others, it can feel restrictive if their friendship group outside school is already online.
The latest Ofsted inspection report confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular provision is a useful proxy for whether a school is thinking about breadth, confidence, and joy, not only core attainment. William Ransom publishes participation and a detailed schedule of clubs across the year.
The school reports that in 2024 to 25, 89% of children took part in clubs, tournaments and festivals as part of its extra-curricular offer, including 85% of children on the SEND register. The implication is that clubs are positioned as mainstream, not a niche add on for a small group.
The detail is also specific, which helps parents understand what “clubs” actually means in practice. Across published timetables, examples include Gardening Club, School Choir, Film Club, Mindful Colouring, Orbit Club, board games, dance clubs, dodgeball, mini tennis, cricket, and a wide range of year group sports sessions. For pupils who are not yet sporty, options like choir, film, gardening, and mindful colouring create routes into participation that are not dependent on confidence with competitive games.
The Orbit magazine adds another strand. A pupil journalist team, badges, and termly issues turn writing into something public and purposeful. That tends to suit children who like storytelling, interviewing, and structured creative tasks, and it can also draw in pupils who are quiet in class but confident in a club setting.
The school day is clearly set out. Gates open at 8:35am, school starts at 8:45am, and the day ends at 3:20pm, with the same start and finish time across Reception to Year 6.
Wraparound care is referenced on the school website, but the published page is image-led rather than text, so families may need to confirm current arrangements directly. An external provider, Rising Stars Wrap-Around Clubs, lists William Ransom as a location for breakfast and after-school clubs during term time.
For travel, the school’s site context matters. The inspection report notes proximity to a railway line and uses rail safety education accordingly, which is a useful clue that walking routes may cross busier corridors. Parents should check the most straightforward approach routes for their child, particularly if planning independent walking in upper key stage 2.
Recent inspection profile. The most recent inspection graded Quality of Education and Leadership and Management as Requires Improvement, even while Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, and Early Years were graded Good. Families should read this as a school with strong routines and many pupils achieving well, alongside specific leadership and provision areas that need tightening.
SEND identification and classroom adaptation. The inspection evidence is clear that systems for identifying pupils’ needs precisely and adapting learning consistently were not as effective as they need to be. If your child has SEND or emerging needs, ask detailed questions about assessment, target setting, and how adaptations are monitored across classes.
** With around 3.42 applications per place in the admissions here, entry pressure is real. Families should keep realistic alternatives on their list and avoid relying on reputation alone.
Strong KS2 outcomes, a structured approach to learning, and a high participation extracurricular offer make this a compelling option for many Hitchin families. The school also takes wellbeing and community norms seriously, from peer leadership roles to its Smartphone Free Childhood work.
Best suited to families who want a large, well organised state primary with high attainment and plenty of clubs, and who are comfortable engaging with a school that is actively refining its SEND systems and leadership oversight in response to the latest inspection findings. Competition for places is the limiting factor, so admission planning needs to be pragmatic as well as hopeful.
Results in the latest published results are strong, especially for combined reading, writing and mathematics, and the school ranks above the England average on FindMySchool’s primary outcomes model. The most recent inspection profile is mixed across different areas, which suggests many strengths in day to day routines and pupils’ experience, alongside clear priorities around leadership systems and SEND identification.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Families should still budget for typical costs such as uniform, trips, and optional clubs or activities where charges apply.
Applications are made through Hertfordshire County Council. The online system opens on 3 November 2025 and the on time deadline is 15 January 2026. Open events are typically listed in November and December, so check the school’s calendar for current dates.
Wraparound care is referenced by the school, but current operational details are best confirmed directly. An external provider, Rising Stars Wrap-Around Clubs, lists breakfast and after-school clubs at this site during term time.
In 2024, 84.3% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with 62% across England. At the higher standard, 36% reached greater depth across reading, writing and maths, compared with 8% in England. Reading, maths and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores were 109, 106, and 108 respectively.
Get in touch with the school directly
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