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 a genuinely small rural primary, with capacity for 42 pupils and a two-class structure that keeps daily life simple and relationships close. The school describes itself as the village’s only school since it was built in 1880, and it leans into that role with community links and local events.
The most recent inspection was on 07 February 2024, and confirmed the school continues to be Good, with safeguarding arrangements effective.
For families, the headline is fit. If your child thrives when adults know them well, enjoys outdoor learning, and benefits from being in a small cohort, this type of school can be a strong match. If you want large peer groups, lots of parallel classes, or on-site wraparound every day, you will need to weigh the trade-offs.
Small schools can feel very different from larger primaries, and the difference starts with scale. Here, the school runs as two mixed-age classes, Reception to Year 2 in one class and Year 3 to Year 6 in the other. The website also explains that Years 3 and 4 are taught separately from Years 5 and 6 each morning for core subjects, which is a practical way to keep teaching targeted even with small numbers.
The school’s language around values is consistent across the site, with “Shine Bright” used as an organising idea, including weekly Celebration Assemblies and a dedicated values award. (When schools do this well, it becomes a shared vocabulary pupils actually use, rather than a poster on the wall.)
Community connection is not a vague claim here. The school explicitly positions itself as central to village life, describing open mornings for former pupils, and using local venues for productions, performances, and meetings, including The Fleece Inn. That matters for pupils because community-facing events create real audiences and real purposes for work, especially in music and performance.
Leadership is clear on public pages: Mr Damien Bond is named as Executive Headteacher, and the school states he has been the current headteacher since 2022.
Published performance measures for this school are limited provided, so it is not possible to use recent Key Stage 2 figures here.
What you can use with confidence is external evaluation and its specificity. The 07 February 2024 inspection report describes high expectations, calm behaviour, and strong relationships, with pupils trusting adults to handle friendship issues before they escalate. It also highlights that pupils behave well in lessons and around school, and that attendance remains high.
The same report is clear about what still needs tightening. Two priorities are flagged: (1) making the most important knowledge in some foundation subjects more precisely defined and consistently revisited, and (2) sharpening the transition from early reading into wider fluency, so that pupils at early stages are not asked to do comprehension tasks on texts they cannot read smoothly.
If you are comparing local schools, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and comparison tools are useful for lining up context side-by-side, especially where results data and cohort size can make individual years look unusual.
A strength of the school’s published curriculum information is how concrete it is, particularly in early reading.
Phonics is taught through Little Wandle Letters and Sounds Revised. The school sets out a daily teaching model in Reception and Year 1, and describes “keep-up” sessions for pupils who need extra practice, plus small-group reading practice sessions three times per week, with an explicit focus on decoding, reading with expression, and comprehension.
The inspection report aligns with that emphasis on clarity and checking understanding. It describes teachers as adept at checking what pupils know, and responding quickly when misunderstandings appear, as well as clear modelling, for example in phonics and practical work. It also references daily starters in mathematics and structured retrieval in science, designed to help pupils remember key content over time.
Curriculum breadth is often where very small primaries either struggle or get creative. The school’s approach is to use mixed-age structures intelligently, and to lean on practical outcomes that let pupils demonstrate what they can do. The 2024 inspection report gives a useful example: a fashion show used to showcase design technology skills.
Outdoor learning is also positioned as part of the school’s core offer, with a Forest School programme led by an Outdoor Learning Leader (named on the curriculum page) and framed as practical, hands-on learning over time.
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 primary, the main “destination” question is transition into secondary, plus how confident and independent pupils feel by the end of Year 6.
The school builds transition readiness in practical ways, including explicit road-safety transition resources signposted on its admissions information pages, and routine opportunities for older pupils to “show off” their work in public formats.
One concrete secondary-facing link appears in the music programme: the school reports an invitation to perform alongside the Holmfirth High School Orchestra at Birmingham Symphony Hall as part of the Music for Youth Festival. That kind of experience can be a meaningful confidence-builder for pupils approaching secondary age.
For the practicalities of which secondary schools you can realistically access from your address, use Kirklees’s coordinated admissions guidance, and treat travel time as a real part of the weekly routine in a rural area.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Admission is managed through the local authority, Kirklees, rather than directly by the school.
The school’s own admissions page focuses on arranging a tour and then applying via the local authority route. For September 2026 Reception entry, Kirklees’ published timetable for schools shows:
Applications open on 01 September 2025
Deadline for on-time applications is 15 January 2026
National Offer Day is 16 April 2026
Demand is meaningful given the size. In the most recently published admissions data there were 10 applications for 4 offers for the Reception entry route, which equates to 2.5 applications per place and an oversubscribed status. That does not mean every year will look identical, but it does underline the reality that a very small school can be heavily subscribed even with modest absolute numbers.
Parents considering this school should use FindMySchool’s Map Search tools to sense-check travel and local alternatives, then ground that shortlist in the admissions timetable above. A small change in cohort size can shift availability significantly year to year.
Applications
10
Total received
Places Offered
4
Subscription Rate
2.5x
Apps per place
The strongest evidence here is relational. The inspection report describes pupils as polite and well-mannered, enjoying play at lunchtime, and trusting adults to resolve low-level friendship issues early. In a small school, that day-to-day trust can be particularly powerful, because pupils interact with the same adults consistently.
SEND support is also referenced in practical terms in the inspection report: pupils with special educational needs and disabilities learn alongside peers, needs are identified quickly, and staff use resources to support specific needs.
The school’s own pages also position staff training and workload awareness as leadership priorities, which can matter indirectly for wellbeing because stability and consistent routines are often what younger pupils respond to best.
Extracurricular life here is not about quantity, it is about specificity and participation.
The school states it endeavours to offer at least two after-school clubs each week on a term-by-term basis, with clubs running 3:20pm to 4:15pm on weekdays (depending on the term). Examples listed include Lego Club, Running Club, Athletics Club, Rounders Club, and a recycled-materials making club described as “Scrap-tastic”.
Music is unusually detailed for a small primary. The curriculum page sets out:
Use of digital tools (Purple Mash 2Beat and 2Sequence, plus GarageBand) for composition
A planned instrument pathway by year group, including ocarina, recorder and glockenspiel in Years 1 and 2, ukulele in Years 3 and 4, and violin in Years 5 and 6
Peripatetic lessons via Musica Kirklees, with the school stating over a third of children receive these lessons
The programme also lists participation in named events (for example local festivals and organised singing events), and includes community performance locations including local venues in Holme and Holmfirth.
Outdoor learning is another pillar. The school describes improvements to outdoor play provision including a climbing wall, a multi-use games area, an early years area, and a developing forest school area. For pupils, that translates into more opportunities for physical problem-solving and practical teamwork across ages.
The school day is clearly published:
Doors open 8:45am
Start 8:50am
Lunch 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Finish 3:20pm
Wraparound care is available, but it is not on-site. The school points families to Holmbridge Out of School Club and states it uses a school minibus to transport children to and from the provision, which is described as a few minutes away. The published session times are 7:30am to 9:00am, and 3:20pm to 6:00pm.
On travel, most families should expect a largely car-based routine, with rural roads and winter conditions being a real consideration in this part of West Yorkshire. If your child will use wraparound, factor in the handover logistics between school, clubs, and transport.
Very small cohorts. Capacity is 42 pupils overall, and the school runs as two mixed-age classes. That closeness suits many children, but it also means fewer same-age peers and limited places in entry years.
Wraparound is off-site. Before and after-school care is available via a separate provider, with transport by school minibus. For some families this is convenient; for others, it adds an extra layer to the day.
Reading transition is a live improvement area. The inspection report flags the need to sharpen the move from early phonics to wider reading fluency for some pupils. Ask how this is being addressed for children who need extra practice.
Foundation subjects consistency. The same report highlights that in some subjects, the most important knowledge is not always defined or revisited precisely enough. Parents who care strongly about curriculum sequencing should explore how subject planning is being tightened.
This school will suit families who value a small, village-rooted primary where relationships are close, outdoor learning is part of the plan, and music and community events give pupils real stages to grow confidence. It is less likely to suit families who want large year groups, lots of parallel classes, or fully on-site wraparound as standard. The limiting factor for many will be availability, because a tiny school can be oversubscribed even when application numbers look modest.
The most recent inspection on 07 February 2024 confirmed the school continues to be Good, and describes calm behaviour, strong relationships, and high expectations. It also sets out specific next steps, especially around reading fluency and sharpening curriculum precision in some foundation subjects.
Applications are coordinated through Kirklees rather than made directly to the school. For Reception entry in September 2026, the published timetable shows applications open on 01 September 2025, close on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
It can be. In the most recently published admissions data there were 10 applications for 4 offers for the Reception entry route. With very small cohorts, demand can change the picture quickly from year to year.
Wraparound is available through Holmbridge Out of School Club rather than on-site. The school states it provides minibus transport to and from the provision, and publishes session times for mornings and afternoons.
The school publishes a rotating after-school club programme, with examples including Lego Club, Running Club, Athletics Club, and Rounders Club, plus creative themed clubs. The music programme is also detailed, including planned instruments by year group and opportunities to take part in external events.
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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