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 primary that talks in practical language about success, and backs it up with a tight set of routines. The school’s own motto, We think big – we dream big – and we go for it! (stated as a guiding theme on its website), signals an ambitious, can do stance for pupils across Reception to Year 6.
In outcomes terms, the most recent published Key Stage 2 picture is encouraging. In 2024, 73.7% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 20.3% reached greater depth, well above the England average of 8%. (These figures help explain why many local families see it as a steady, results-conscious option.)
Governance and admissions sit with South Tyneside Council, and the school explains its oversubscription priorities in plain terms, including catchment, siblings, and distance from the main entrance.
This is a school that tries to make expectations memorable rather than complicated. The headline behaviour language is three simple rules, “Ready, Respectful, Safe”, used as the shared shorthand for daily conduct and classroom readiness. That style usually suits pupils who respond well to clarity and consistency, and it also tends to help anxious children who prefer to know exactly what “good choices” look like.
The wider tone is aspirational without being showy. The ethos statement emphasises high expectations, resilience, and learning from mistakes, with the idea that errors are an opportunity to improve. Parents who like growth mindset language, but want it grounded in routines rather than slogans, will recognise the approach.
There is also evidence of deliberate community-building. The school references its Bede Burn Buddies group as part of how it connects families and supports the wider community around the school. Separately, the school highlights inclusion-focused initiatives such as its Rainbow Flag Award information page, which signals attention to belonging and respectful language across the community.
Leadership information that is publicly verifiable points to continuity. The head teacher is Helen Smith. (A public South Tyneside feature also describes Helen Smith as head teacher at Bede Burn during the lockdown period, reinforcing that she has been in role for multiple years, even where an exact appointment date is not clearly published in accessible official pages.)
The most useful way to read performance here is to separate two things: attainment against England benchmarks, and relative ranking position (which can move depending on the exact methodology and the distribution of scores nationally).
73.7% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, versus 62% across England.
20.3% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined, versus 8% across England.
Average scaled scores were 104 in reading and 103 in maths and grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS).
For parents, the implication is straightforward. Most children at this school are leaving Year 6 with secure basics across literacy and numeracy, and a meaningful minority are stretching beyond the expected standard, especially in maths and combined higher standard measures.
Based on the FindMySchool ranking data, the school is ranked 10,582nd in England for primary outcomes and 8th in the Jarrow local area grouping (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), which places it below the England average band by percentile.
That combination can feel counterintuitive alongside above-average attainment percentages, but it is not impossible. Rankings often incorporate broader composite measures, cohort differences, and fine-grained score distributions. The practical takeaway for families is to focus first on the published attainment and scaled scores as the clearer indicators of pupil outcomes, then use rank as a rough comparator rather than a verdict.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
73.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum intent and implementation are presented through a structured set of subject pages and long-term planning materials on the school website, which suggests a deliberate attempt to be transparent about what is taught and when.
In day-to-day terms, the school’s approach is likely to feel organised and routine-led. Specific leadership roles are assigned across subjects and responsibilities, which can support consistency in curriculum delivery and assessment practices (for example, designated leads for maths, science, computing, history, and other areas are listed on the staff information pages).
Where this tends to matter most for families is how quickly children build automaticity in the basics. The school’s above-average GPS and maths indicators are consistent with settings where core skills are practised regularly and misconceptions are addressed early. Pupils who thrive under clear modelling, step-by-step practice, and frequent retrieval are typically well matched to that kind of environment.
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 state primary serving ages 4 to 11, the destination question is less about published lists and more about local transition patterns. Bede Burn sits within South Tyneside, and pupils commonly move on to a range of local secondary options depending on family preference, distance, and admissions criteria. Because the school is not selective, families considering selective routes would usually make those decisions and preparations outside the standard primary pathway.
What the school can control is transition readiness. With scaled scores above 100 and a higher-standard proportion well above England average, many pupils should arrive at Year 7 with secure literacy and numeracy foundations, which is the best predictor of a smooth start academically.
Admissions are coordinated by South Tyneside Council rather than handled solely by the school. For families, the key point is to treat the council timetable and forms as the primary route for Reception entry, and to use the school website mainly for understanding how oversubscription priorities are applied.
If applications exceed places, the school states that priority is considered in this order (summarised): looked-after children, home address within the defined catchment area, sibling links, medical considerations with evidence, then shortest distance from home to the main entrance.
For the primary entry route, the figures show 74 applications for 27 offers, with an oversubscribed status and an applications-to-offers ratio of 2.74. That is a meaningful level of competition for a school of this size. (A furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is not available for this school, so families should not assume proximity alone without checking the local authority’s current allocation details.)
2026 entry deadline (Reception)
South Tyneside’s published admissions booklet for primary school admissions states a closing date of 15 January 2026 at 4.30pm for primary school applications.
A sensible planning approach is to treat that January deadline as non-negotiable, and to aim to submit well in advance so there is time to correct any errors in address evidence or supporting documentation.
95.2%
1st preference success rate
20 of 21 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
27
Offers
27
Applications
74
The school positions safeguarding and online safety as a visible, parent-facing priority, with dedicated safeguarding pages and practical guidance resources. That tends to correlate with schools that expect parents to be active partners in behaviour, attendance, and online conduct, rather than seeing those issues as purely school-owned.
The ethos statement also explicitly links confidence and personal development to a broad set of activities, including academic, sporting and artistic routes to success. For many pupils, that mix can reduce pressure, because “doing well” is not limited to one narrow definition.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (8 March 2023) rated the school Good overall, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
The after-school offer is specific and schedule-based rather than vague. This matters because it tells you something about staffing capacity and what pupils can reliably access week to week.
Examples from the current clubs listing include:
Lego Club on Monday (open to Reception and Key Stage 1)
Film Club on Monday (open to Key Stage 2)
Choir on Tuesday lunchtime (open to Years 4 to 6)
Times Tables Club on Wednesday (open to Key Stage 2)
Football Skills on Wednesday (open to Years 1 and 2)
Colouring Club on Thursday (open to Reception and Key Stage 1)
Hockey Club on Thursday (open to Years 4 to 6)
The practical implication for families is that pupils can build both confidence and social belonging through structured, age-appropriate activities. A Key Stage 1 child has accessible entry points (Lego, colouring, football skills), while older pupils can move into clubs that support performance and study habits (choir and times tables) as well as team sport.
The school also has a named Forest School lead within its leadership team, which suggests outdoor learning is part of the wider enrichment offer, even where the club list itself is not labelled “Forest School”.
The school publishes a detailed school day timetable, which is helpful for working families planning wraparound routines.
Key timings include:
Breakfast club from 7:45am
School day starts at 8:45am
School ends at 3:15pm
The school states it is open for 32.5 hours per week
The website does not clearly set out an after-school childcare provision timetable beyond clubs, so families who need paid wraparound care should confirm current arrangements directly with the school before relying on it for work scheduling. (Clubs are valuable, but they are not always the same thing as childcare.)
Competition for places: The figures suggest 74 applications for 27 offers for the primary entry route, with an oversubscribed status. If you are outside the defined catchment, admission may be difficult without other priorities applying.
Ranking versus attainment nuance: KS2 attainment is above England averages, but the provided England ranking position sits in a below-average percentile band. Parents comparing schools should prioritise the actual attainment and scaled scores, then treat ranking as only one lens.
Structured expectations: The “Ready, Respectful, Safe” rule set and the emphasis on punctuality and attendance will suit many children, but pupils who struggle with rigid routines may need additional support during settling-in.
Wraparound clarity: Breakfast club timing is published, but full wraparound childcare details are not clearly set out alongside the timetable. Families needing guaranteed after-school care should verify what is currently offered.
A grounded, routines-first primary that combines a warm community tone with measurable KS2 strength, particularly in the combined expected standard and higher standard outcomes. It suits families who want clear expectations, a calm behavioural framework, and a school day structure that starts early enough to support working patterns. The limiting factor is admission, since demand indicators point to oversubscription, and priority rules (catchment, siblings, distance) matter.
The latest Ofsted inspection in March 2023 rated the school Good overall, and KS2 outcomes in the most recent published data are above England averages for the combined reading, writing and maths expected standard and the higher standard.
The school refers to a defined catchment area within its oversubscription priorities, alongside looked-after children, sibling links, medical considerations with evidence, and then distance from home to the main entrance. For the precise boundary, families should use South Tyneside Council’s published catchment mapping and admissions documents.
Breakfast club starts at 7:45am, and the school day ends at 3:15pm. The website lists a range of clubs after school and at lunchtime, but it does not clearly publish a full wraparound childcare offer alongside the timetable, so families needing childcare should confirm current arrangements directly with the school.
Admissions are coordinated by South Tyneside Council. South Tyneside’s primary admissions booklet states that the closing date for primary school applications is 15 January 2026 at 4.30pm.
The school’s club list includes options such as Lego Club (Reception and Key Stage 1), Film Club (Key Stage 2), Choir (Years 4 to 6), Times Tables Club (Key Stage 2), Football Skills (Years 1 and 2), and Hockey Club (Years 4 to 6).
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
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.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.