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 one-form entry primary in central Horsham, this voluntary aided Church of England school combines an explicitly Christian ethos with academic outcomes that sit above England averages. It is also a genuinely popular local option, with more applications than places for Reception entry.
Leadership is current and clearly defined. The headteacher is Emma McLaughlin, who joined in April 2023.
Parents looking for a grounded, values-led school with strong Key Stage 2 performance, a structured approach to phonics and reading, and plenty of enrichment at lunchtime and after school, will recognise the appeal quickly. The practical reality is that admissions can be competitive, and faith-based criteria can matter in an oversubscribed year.
St Mary’s presents itself as a school where belonging and responsibility are taught alongside academics. Its published strapline is Let your light shine! (Matthew 5:16), which signals the tone: Christian language is present, but the aim is inclusive, community-minded education rather than a niche faith enclave.
Daily life is shaped by clear routines and pupil roles. The most recent inspection describes a calm, purposeful atmosphere where pupils are kind and respectful, and where those joining mid-year are helped to settle quickly. That matters for families moving into the area, and for children who need a predictable structure to feel safe and ready to learn.
The Church of England character shows up in specific opportunities rather than vague statements. SUPA Club, a lunchtime Christian club run for a term each year, is one concrete example, it uses Scripture Union resources and focuses on activities and discussion that deepen understanding of Christian faith. That sort of provision tends to suit families who value gentle, consistent reinforcement of Christian ideas during the week, while remaining workable for families who are comfortable with the ethos but not deeply observant.
The school has also invested in play as part of its culture. It has embarked on the OPAL Play programme, a two-year initiative aimed at improving the quality of playtimes. In practice, this signals that leaders are treating lunchtimes as part of the education offer, not simply a break between lessons. For many pupils, better play translates into smoother afternoons, fewer friendship fallouts, and more settled learning.
The performance data paints a consistently strong picture at Key Stage 2.
In 2024, 83.3% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 21.3% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, well above the England average of 8%. Reading is a clear strength: the average scaled score was 108, and 37% of pupils achieved the higher standard in reading. Mathematics outcomes are similarly positive, with 90% reaching the expected standard and an average scaled score of 106.
Those figures align with the school’s positioning as a high-expectations primary with structured teaching and a strong reading culture.
Rankings reinforce that story. Ranked 2,857th in England and 7th in the Horsham district local area for primary outcomes, this places the school above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England (FindMySchool ranking based on official data).
For parents, the implication is straightforward. Children who respond well to clear routines, systematic teaching, and a classroom culture that values reading are likely to do well here. Children who need more informal, self-directed learning all day may still thrive, but the school’s strengths are in consistency and structure rather than a fully child-led model.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
83.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
St Mary’s has been through meaningful curriculum work over recent years, and the evidence points to leaders taking a staged, realistic approach rather than trying to change everything at once. The latest inspection describes a planned review of curriculum sequencing from Reception to Year 6, with most subjects now mapped coherently and leaders intending to evaluate impact as the revised curriculum beds in.
Early reading and phonics are treated as priorities, and the school has shown it can respond quickly when outcomes dip. The same inspection references a recent dip in phonics outcomes at the end of Year 1, followed by a review of teaching and improvements in staff knowledge and consistency. This is the sort of “quality control” that matters in a small, one-form entry school. When teaching is consistent across classes, pupils get fewer mixed messages and move through reading stages more smoothly.
Reading for pleasure is also given deliberate attention. The inspection highlights investment in building a love of reading and a rejuvenated library, with staff modelling reading and encouraging reluctant readers. The implication is not just higher scores, it is confidence. Pupils who read widely generally write with more fluency, have stronger vocabulary, and find the wider curriculum easier because they can access texts more independently.
Support for additional needs is described as purposeful, with precise identification and training that helps staff meet needs in the classroom. The staffing structure includes an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA), which signals an extra layer of pastoral support for children who need help with emotional regulation, friendships, or confidence.
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 main transition is into secondary education at 11. The school supports that move in practical ways. A prior full inspection report references trips to local secondary schools as part of transition support.
Because secondary transfer patterns depend heavily on where a family lives and which admissions routes they choose, most parents will want to cross-check likely options via West Sussex County Council guidance and catchment information. A useful way to approach this is to shortlist secondaries first, then work backwards: consider travel time, pastoral fit, and whether a child is likely to thrive in a larger setting, then align that with your primary choice.
Admissions are coordinated by West Sussex County Council, with the key dates published clearly for September 2026 starters. Applications opened on Monday 6 October 2025, and the closing date was Thursday 15 January 2026 at 11.59pm. Offers are released on Thursday 16 April 2026.
Demand is real. For Reception entry, the school offered 30 places and received 77 applications in the measurement period, which equates to roughly 2.57 applications per place. In other words, the bottleneck is the admissions process rather than the educational offer once a place is secured.
Because St Mary’s is voluntary aided, its oversubscription criteria include faith-based priorities alongside the usual statutory priorities. The published admissions policy sets a Reception Published Admission Number (PAN) of 30 and prioritises, after looked-after and previously looked-after children, children whose parents worship regularly within defined church categories, as well as siblings and children of staff. Distance is used as a tie-breaker when categories are oversubscribed.
The practical implication: families who are active within local churches may have an advantage in a very oversubscribed year, but the school also makes clear that families of other faiths, or no faith, can still apply and be considered. If St Mary’s is a serious preference, it is worth reading the admissions policy in full and making sure any supplementary form requirements are completed correctly and on time.
Parents trying to sense-check their chances should also use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check distance precisely, then compare it with recent local allocation patterns, even when a school does not publish a single “safe” distance, because year-to-year demand can shift.
87.5%
1st preference success rate
21 of 24 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
77
Pupil wellbeing is described in practical, observable terms rather than slogans. Pupils report feeling safe, happy and supported by adults, and the atmosphere is described as calm and purposeful. That tends to correlate with consistent behaviour expectations, clear adult presence at social times, and fast intervention when friendships start to wobble.
The school’s approach to personal development is also presented as structured. The inspection describes a thoughtful programme that balances statutory relationships education with the school’s religious context and helps pupils understand life in culturally diverse Britain. For parents, this is a useful marker of how the school handles sensitive topics: not by avoiding them, but by teaching them within a clear values framework.
Safeguarding is treated as a core system rather than a paper exercise. The latest Ofsted inspection (7 and 9 January 2025) concluded the school had taken effective action to maintain standards and confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Wraparound care exists but is not run directly by the school. Breakfast and after-school care is provided by an external company. Families who need early drop-off or late collection should confirm the current sessions, availability, and booking approach directly via the provider’s information linked from the school’s site, as these arrangements can change over time.
Extracurricular life is unusually specific and well-organised for a one-form entry primary, with clubs spanning sport, arts, outdoor learning, and coding.
In Autumn Term 2025, the school listed clubs including Choir (Years 2 to 6), Book Club (Years 5 to 6), Forest School (Reception to Year 4), Pottery (Years 4 to 6, lunchtime), Karate (Years 1 to 6), and coding clubs for both Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2 age ranges. The detail matters because it tells you how enrichment actually works: which year groups can access what, and whether clubs run at lunch or after school.
Forest School is a strong fit with the school’s wider approach to learning and character, it gives pupils a space to take managed risks, practise teamwork, and build independence. Paired with the OPAL Play programme, it suggests leaders are intentionally using outdoor time to improve behaviour, wellbeing, and readiness to learn.
Sports provision also looks outward-facing. The school works with Horsham Sports Services for Schools to provide clubs and inter-school tournament opportunities. For confident, sport-oriented children, that can be an early taste of representing the school, building resilience, and learning to win and lose well.
The school day is clearly published: gates open at 8.30am, the school day starts at 8.45am, and the end of day is 3.15pm, with Reception finishing at 3.10pm.
Its setting is described as being in the heart of Horsham town centre, which often suits families who prefer walkable routines and local community links, rather than a long car commute.
Because wraparound care is externally run, parents should treat it as a separate service with its own booking, policies, and capacity.
Oversubscription pressure. With 77 applications for 30 Reception offers in the measurement period, the limiting factor is admissions rather than school quality. Families should apply on time and keep backup options on their list.
Faith-based priorities can matter. As a voluntary aided Church of England school, regular worship and related criteria can influence priority in an oversubscribed year. This can suit families who already have church links; for others, it is important to read the policy carefully and be realistic about likely allocation pathways.
Curriculum change is still bedding in. Leaders have revised curriculum sequencing and intend to evaluate impact across subjects. That can be positive, but it also means some approaches may still be settling into a steady rhythm.
St Mary’s suits families who want a values-led primary where reading culture, structured teaching and calm routines support strong Key Stage 2 outcomes. It is also a practical choice for parents who value central Horsham location and a wide menu of clubs for a one-form entry school. Best suited to children who do well with clear expectations and enjoy being part of a school community with visible Christian life; the main hurdle is securing a place in a competitive admissions round.
Its Key Stage 2 outcomes sit above England averages, and the school ranks within the top quarter of primary schools in England on the FindMySchool measures. The most recent inspection outcome also indicates standards were maintained, with safeguarding confirmed as effective.
As a voluntary aided school, admissions are not simply “catchment first”. When there are more applicants than places, the published criteria prioritise categories including looked-after children, some faith-based priorities, siblings, children of staff, and then distance as a tie-breaker within categories. Parents should read the admissions policy carefully to understand how priority works.
Applications are coordinated by West Sussex County Council. For September 2026 entry, the published timeline shows applications opening on 6 October 2025, closing on 15 January 2026, and offers released on 16 April 2026. Families should also check whether a supplementary form is needed for the school’s voluntary aided criteria.
Breakfast and after-school care is available via an external provider rather than being run directly by the school. Parents should check the current sessions, booking arrangements and availability via the provider information linked from the school website.
Get in touch with the school directly
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