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 small, single-academy primary in Hetton-le-Hole with a clear focus on routines, reading fluency, and an ambitious wider curriculum that includes subjects such as music and local history. The most recent formal inspection picture is consistently positive across key areas, with every judgement recorded as Good at the September 2024 inspection point.
On outcomes, the school’s 2024 key stage 2 data sits above England averages on the headline combined measure. Nearly seven in ten pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, versus 62% across England. The scaled scores show a particularly strong centre of gravity in maths and GPS, with reading closer to typical. In FindMySchool’s England-wide primary ranking, the school sits below England average overall, and mid-pack locally within Houghton le Spring. (FindMySchool rankings are proprietary and derived from official performance data.)
Admissions demand looks real but not extreme. For Reception entry, there were 50 applications for 30 offers a ratio of 1.67 applications per place. That tends to translate into competitive years when local cohorts rise, and more breathing room when they fall.
This is a school that leans on straightforward expectations and community language. The inspection evidence points to pupils who behave well and manage their conduct with little adult intervention, which usually signals that routines are embedded rather than constantly re-taught.
The tone is also shaped by a strong personal development thread. Pupils are described as understanding equal opportunities and being able to talk about difference and belonging in confident, uncomplicated ways. That matters in a mixed community school, because it suggests that kindness and respect are not left to chance, they are explicitly taught and revisited.
Leadership is clearly identifiable. The headteacher is Mrs Laura Jackson, and the wider school website consistently presents a single-academy trust identity, rather than being one school among many in a large MAT.
With provision from age 3, early years is part of the school’s core offer rather than an add-on. The inspection grades early years provision as Good, and the daily timetable explicitly includes Nursery session end times, which is often a sign that operational detail for younger children is planned carefully.
The headline story in 2024 is “above England average overall, with strongest signals in maths and GPS”.
In 2024, 69.33% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The England average in the same measure is 62%. That places the school clearly above England average on the most widely used primary benchmark.
At the higher standard, 21.67% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 8%. That is a meaningful difference, and usually indicates that a cohort of higher attainers is being stretched effectively, not just supported to reach the expected threshold.
Reading scaled score: 102
Maths scaled score: 104
GPS scaled score: 105
The scores align with the combined outcomes. Maths and GPS look like consistent strengths, reading looks more mixed. That nuance matters for parents: a child who is already a fluent reader may find plenty of extension available; a child who needs structured support in reading is likely to benefit from a school that has explicitly prioritised improving fluency through key stage 2, which is a stated improvement focus in the latest inspection evidence.
In FindMySchool’s England-wide primary outcomes ranking, the school is ranked 10,132nd in England and 14th locally within the Houghton le Spring area. (These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.) The percentile band places the school below England average overall in the national distribution, so it is best read as a school with some strong outcome signals, but not one that consistently sits among the highest-performing primaries in England.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
69.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The teaching picture is best understood as “structured, improving, and ambitious in curriculum intent”.
Reading is the key developmental priority. The most recent inspection evidence highlights a strong start in early reading and a deliberate push to make that strength carry through to the end of key stage 2, with a focus on consistency and fluency. That usually shows up in practical ways: more systematic small-group work, tighter consistency in phonics and comprehension routines, and clearer expectations for independent reading volume.
Across the wider curriculum, the school aims high in what it teaches. The inspection deep dives included history and music, and the examples are specific enough to be meaningful. In history, pupils in Year 2 learn about mining in the local area, including child labour and technological developments such as the Davey lamp and the locomotive. In music, pupils apply knowledge of pitch and major and minor keys, which implies that teaching goes beyond singing songs and into real musical understanding.
There is also a curriculum refinement challenge that parents should take seriously. In some subjects, the “most important knowledge” is not always identified as clearly as it should be, which can affect how securely pupils build knowledge over time. In practice, that can mean variability between subjects in how well learning is sequenced and revisited.
As a primary, the main “next step” question is transition to secondary. The school sits within Sunderland local authority, and most pupils will typically move on to local Sunderland secondary schools, with final destinations influenced by family preference and the local authority coordinated admissions process for Year 7.
A helpful way to approach this, especially for families new to the area, is to shortlist likely secondaries early and then align primary transition planning around what each secondary expects in Year 7, particularly around reading stamina, handwriting, and maths fluency. The school’s emphasis on structured learning and improving reading fluency should support that transition well.
For families considering selective routes elsewhere, or faith-based secondaries, it is worth planning early. Even when a primary does not position itself as “test prep”, the reality is that transition choices often influence how families use Year 5 and Year 6 outside school.
This is a state-funded primary with admissions coordinated through the local authority route for Reception. Reception demand sits at 50 applications for 30 offers, which is oversubscribed at 1.67 applications per place. That generally means you should take the admissions criteria seriously, and treat the process as competitive in some years, particularly if local birth cohorts rise.
A furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is not provided for this school, so it is not sensible to make distance-based claims here. Families who are sensitive to distance cut-offs should use a precise distance checker tool before relying on a place, and then cross-check that with the local authority’s allocations and criteria for the relevant year of entry.
For Sunderland’s coordinated Reception admissions for September 2026 entry, the published council timeline states:
Application period: 29 September 2025 to 15 January 2026
National offer day: 16 April 2026
Exact open day dates vary year to year, and schools often publish them seasonally. It is sensible to expect open events to cluster in the early autumn term, then confirm the specific dates via the school’s own admissions information page.
Nursery is offered on site as part of the school’s early years provision. The school day page sets out Nursery session end points within the wider timetable, which is useful for working parents planning pick-ups and wraparound. For Nursery fees and session structures, schools typically publish this directly and update it over time, so it is best checked on the school’s Nursery prospectus and admissions materials rather than relying on third-party summaries.
100%
1st preference success rate
27 of 27 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
50
The clearest evidence points to calm behaviour and a culture where pupils understand expectations. That tends to reduce low-level disruption and helps children who like predictable routines.
Safeguarding is described as effective in the most recent inspection evidence, and the inspection also points to staff wellbeing being actively managed, which often correlates with stability and consistency for pupils.
Support for pupils with SEND is also described as timely and effective, with teaching adapted to remove barriers. For parents, the practical implication is that it is worth discussing the specifics early, because good SEND practice is highly individual: ask what support looks like in class, how targets are reviewed, and how reading support is delivered across key stage 1 and key stage 2.
The school’s enrichment offer reads as broad and well-used, rather than niche. The inspection evidence refers to pupils taking up opportunities in large numbers, and it names examples such as choir, gardening, art, and card games. Those are useful signals: choir suggests a genuine music culture, gardening often links to outdoor learning and responsibility, and structured games clubs can be a quiet strength for children who prefer calmer social spaces.
There is also a distinctive literacy angle through the school’s “Book Review Club” and wider reading-related pupil activities presented through its Kids Zone pages. The practical implication is that reading is not treated as purely a classroom task, it is framed as something pupils participate in and talk about, which can matter for motivation, especially for reluctant readers.
The published school day runs from 08:45 to 15:15, with “Wake and Shake” sessions from 08:30 Monday to Thursday. Nursery session end times are also set out within the timetable.
Wraparound care is clearly defined. Breakfast provision starts from 07:30, and after-school care runs to 17:30 Monday to Thursday and 17:00 on Fridays, with priced time blocks.
For transport, this is a local primary serving Hetton-le-Hole. Most families will be using short car journeys, walking, or local bus routes, so the practical question tends to be drop-off logistics and timing rather than rail connectivity. A quick check at pick-up time can be revealing, especially for families who need prompt handover into after-school care.
Reading consistency through key stage 2. The latest inspection evidence highlights that improving reading fluency through the end of Year 6 remains a key area of focus. If reading is a concern for your child, ask what targeted support looks like in Years 3 to 6, and how progress is checked.
Curriculum refinement in some subjects. In parts of the wider curriculum, the “most important knowledge” has not always been identified clearly enough, which can affect how securely pupils build knowledge over time. This is worth discussing if your child thrives on clear structure across every subject.
Competition for Reception places. Demand is higher than supply in the most recent admissions results. If you are applying for Reception, treat it as competitive and plan sensibly around your alternatives.
Nursery information changes over time. Early years provision is part of the offer, but Nursery session patterns and costs can change. Always rely on the latest school-published Nursery materials for current detail.
Eppleton Academy Primary School is a structured, community-minded primary with a consistent Good inspection profile and a results picture that is above England average on the combined key stage 2 benchmark, with particular strength in maths and GPS. It suits families who want a school day with clear routines, accessible wraparound care, and a curriculum that makes room for music, local history, and personal development, alongside the core basics. The main trade-off is that reading outcomes and curriculum sequencing are still areas being actively improved, so families with a child who needs especially strong reading acceleration should ask detailed questions about how that support works in Years 3 to 6.
It has a consistently positive official profile, with all key judgements recorded as Good at the September 2024 inspection point. On outcomes, 69.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in 2024, above the England average of 62%, with particularly strong signals in maths and GPS.
Reception places are allocated through the local authority coordinated process using published admissions criteria.
Yes. Breakfast provision starts from 07:30. After-school care runs to 17:30 Monday to Thursday and 17:00 on Fridays, with priced time blocks published by the school.
In 2024, 69.33% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. Scaled scores were 102 in reading, 104 in maths, and 105 in GPS, with the higher standard rate at 21.67% compared with an England average of 8%.
For Sunderland, the published timeline for September 2026 Reception entry states the application period runs from 29 September 2025 until 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026. Apply via the Sunderland local authority process, then follow the acceptance instructions provided with the offer.
Get in touch with the school directly
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