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.
Kilnwood Vale Primary School is a relatively new primary serving the Kilnwood Vale community near Faygate, with provision from age 2 through to Year 6. It is part of the GLF Schools multi-academy trust and opened in September 2019.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (5 to 6 December 2023, published 30 January 2024) judged the school Good overall, with early years provision rated Outstanding. That combination matters here because the nursery and Reception experience is a central feature of the school’s identity, and the inspection evidence points to careful planning, clear routines, and a culture where pupils feel safe and confident.
Demand for places looks healthy. For Reception entry, 97 applications were recorded for 60 offers, indicating an oversubscribed picture for the most recent. That ratio does not guarantee the same pattern every year, but it does suggest families should treat admissions as competitive and plan early.
This is a school still defining its long-term traditions, but not starting from scratch. The inspection evidence describes a warm, welcoming environment where pupils behave well, show respect to staff and classmates, and move through the day with clear routines. Those are the basics that parents feel immediately through calmer mornings, fewer classroom disruptions, and children who understand expectations.
A distinctive feature is how deliberately the school frames pupil support and belonging. Ofsted notes that pupils trust adults to keep them safe and feel confident sharing concerns with their identified “trusted adults”. In practical terms, that points to a pastoral system that is simple for children to use and easy for parents to understand, especially important in a growing school where year groups expand and new families join annually.
Playtimes are described as energetic and positive, supported by access to games equipment and sports clubs organised by “play leaders”. The implication is not just busy lunchtimes, but structured opportunities for leadership and cooperation. For some children, that sort of peer-led play scaffolding reduces friendship fallouts and helps quieter pupils find a way in.
The school also uses a house system and a rewards culture that pupils value. In a young school, a consistent recognition system can do a lot of heavy lifting: it helps pupils connect daily effort to visible outcomes, and it gives staff a common language for behaviour and participation.
Published performance measures are limited for this school, so any judgement about attainment needs to be anchored in what is verifiable. The most defensible academic picture comes from the inspection evidence: leaders and staff are described as having high expectations for academic achievement, supported by a carefully considered curriculum designed to help pupils build knowledge over time.
Reading is a clear priority. Ofsted reports that staff receive strong training, have the resources needed to teach early reading effectively, and check pupils’ progress rigorously, with additional help for those who find reading more difficult. In parent terms, that tends to show up as children bringing home decodable books that match what they are learning, plus a clearer sense of what to practise when progress stalls.
The inspection also identifies a real development point: in some subjects, curriculum changes are still relatively new, and gaps in knowledge are not always identified quickly enough. That is not unusual in newer schools as staffing, leadership roles, and curriculum ownership mature. The key question for families is how this affects their child. Pupils who thrive with well-sequenced teaching and clear revisiting of prior learning are likely to do well as these systems bed in. Children who need rapid identification of misconceptions may benefit from parents staying closely engaged with teacher feedback and asking how catch-up is structured when a child misses a step.
If you are comparing local schools, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you review verified performance indicators side-by-side, without relying on informal hearsay.
The strongest teaching evidence sits in early reading, mathematics, and the way learning is adapted to individual needs. The inspection describes a well-sequenced and ambitious curriculum across most subjects, supported by professional development planned in collaboration with the trust.
In mathematics, inspectors point to pupils, including children in early years, being supported to build secure number understanding. For parents, this typically translates into fewer “worksheet-only” lessons and more deliberate steps: concrete resources, structured practice, and teachers checking understanding before moving on.
Early years stands out. Children in the nursery are described as benefiting from exceptionally planned learning activities that prepare them well for next stages. Ofsted also references the nursery “book nook” and frequent adult reading through the day, signalling that language development and story exposure are integrated rather than bolted on.
The improvement priorities are also clear. In some subjects, not all teachers yet have the subject expertise to teach the intended knowledge confidently, which limits how well learning is checked as it builds over time. Parents choosing the school should be comfortable with a setting that is still sharpening consistency across all subjects, even while core routines and early years quality are strong.
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 school, the key “next step” question is transition to local secondary schools. Kilnwood Vale sits in the Horsham area and families typically look at a mix of local comprehensive options alongside selective routes where relevant, depending on the child and family preferences. The most useful action for parents is to check West Sussex admissions guidance early and map realistic travel routines alongside school fit.
Because this school is still relatively young, it is sensible to ask how transition is handled in practice: what Year 6 readiness looks like, how secondary liaison works, and what support exists for pupils who may find change harder. Those specifics are best confirmed directly with the school.
Admissions for Reception places in West Sussex are coordinated by the local authority, with a published timetable for September 2026 entry. Applications opened on Monday 6 October 2025 and the national closing date was Thursday 15 January 2026, with the national offer date on Thursday 16 April 2026.
For this school’s most recent admissions, demand exceeded places: 97 applications for 60 offers. The ratio indicates oversubscription rather than spare capacity. If you are hoping for a place in a future year, the practical implication is to treat this as a school where timing, preferences, and understanding the oversubscription criteria matter.
Distance cut-offs for the last offer can be a decisive factor for many primaries, but no verified last-distance figure is available for this school. In that situation, families should avoid assumptions based on street-level rumours and instead use the FindMySchoolMap Search to measure your home-to-school distance precisely, then validate current admissions reality with the local authority timetable and criteria.
Nursery entry is different from Reception entry in many schools. Here, nursery provision exists for two- and three-year-olds, and early years quality is a headline strength in inspection evidence. Parents should clarify how nursery places are allocated, how progression into Reception is handled, and whether any separate application steps apply.
98.3%
1st preference success rate
59 of 60 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
97
The safeguarding picture is straightforward: the inspection confirms safeguarding arrangements are effective. Beyond compliance, the culture indicators are more interesting. The “trusted adults” approach is explicitly referenced, and pupils are described as confident in sharing concerns. That matters for day-to-day wellbeing: small problems get surfaced earlier, and children have a clearer route to support.
Behaviour is described as good, with well-established routines and high expectations of conduct. For many children, predictable routines are a protective factor, particularly for pupils who feel unsettled by change or who need clear boundaries to stay regulated. The inspection also notes that the school is working to improve attendance for a small minority of pupils who attend less often than they should, which is a sensible focus because missed days compound gaps quickly in reading and maths.
Inclusivity and relationships education are also embedded through the curriculum, with pupils described as accepting of difference and understanding why they should treat each other well. In practical terms, families should still ask how bullying concerns are logged and followed up, but the overarching culture signals are reassuring.
Extracurricular life is referenced directly through playtime leadership and clubs. The inspection describes sports clubs organised by “play leaders”, alongside access to games equipment and structured play. That is a meaningful detail because it suggests lunchtime and playtime are not treated as dead time; leadership and participation are being cultivated in an age-appropriate way.
A second named feature is the school’s house system and rewards culture, which pupils value. Houses can be more than coloured badges if used well. They can support cross-year identity, provide a framework for competitions that are not purely sports-based, and give children a social anchor beyond their immediate class.
Trips, visitors and celebrations are also used to deepen learning in subjects including history, design technology and religious education, with Diwali given as a concrete example for early years. The educational value here is that curriculum content becomes easier to remember when it is tied to events, artefacts, and shared experiences, particularly for younger pupils.
Parents who want a very specific clubs list should request the current term’s programme directly from the school, as a verified published list was not accessible through the sources used here.
This is a community-facing primary in Kilnwood Vale, close to Faygate and the Horsham area, so daily logistics typically revolve around local walking, cycling, and short car journeys, with some families connecting via nearby transport routes between Horsham and Crawley.
A developing curriculum story in some subjects. While the curriculum is ambitious across most areas, inspectors identified that in some subjects teacher expertise and consistency are still catching up to the intended curriculum design. This may suit pupils who enjoy clear routines and steady progress, but parents may want to stay closely engaged if their child needs quicker identification of misconceptions.
Attendance focus is active. The school is working to improve attendance for a small minority of pupils. For families with children who are prone to school refusal or frequent absences, it is worth asking what early support looks like and how school-home communication works.
Oversubscription is a realistic possibility. Recent admissions figures indicate more applications than places. Families should plan early and treat admissions as competitive rather than assuming a place will be available.
Nursery details need careful checking. Early years quality is a strength, but nursery entry routes and progression expectations vary between schools. Clarify the process, especially if you are relying on nursery as a pathway into Reception.
Kilnwood Vale Primary School looks like a well-organised, fast-maturing primary with strong routines, a positive culture, and early years provision that stands out. It will suit families who value clear expectations, structured behaviour, and a carefully planned start to reading and number. The main challenge is admissions competitiveness, and for some families, comfort with a school that is still building consistency across every subject as it grows.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (December 2023, published January 2024) judged the school Good overall, with early years provision rated Outstanding. That combination suggests a strong foundation, particularly for nursery and Reception children, alongside a broader whole-school picture that is securely positive but still improving in some subject areas.
Reception applications for West Sussex are coordinated by the local authority. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 6 October 2025 and the closing date was 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. Families applying in future years should check the latest West Sussex timetable early in the autumn term.
Yes. The school has nursery provision for two- and three-year-olds, and the early years phase was rated Outstanding in the most recent inspection. Parents should ask directly about session patterns, admissions steps, and how nursery links to Reception transition. Nursery fees vary and should be confirmed via the school.
Recent admissions figures show more applications than places for the Reception intake recorded used here. That indicates oversubscription is plausible in some years. Exact cut-offs can vary, so families should avoid assumptions and check the current published criteria and timelines.
The inspection evidence describes good behaviour supported by clear routines and high expectations, plus a “trusted adults” approach that helps pupils share concerns. Safeguarding arrangements were confirmed as effective at the most recent inspection.
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