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 smaller-than-average infant school with nursery provision, serving families in Heacham and the surrounding area. The age range runs from 3 to 7, so pupils typically move on after Year 2, which makes transition planning an important part of the journey. It is part of West Norfolk Academies Trust, and the school describes its approach as knowledge rich, designed to broaden experiences for children who may start with lower language and experiential baselines.
The most recent full inspection was in December 2022, with a Good judgement across all graded areas including early years.
Admissions demand is real even at this small scale. For the main entry route, there were 33 applications for 21 offers, which equates to roughly 1.57 applications per place. That tends to translate into limited flexibility for late movers and families relying on places becoming available mid year.
The school presents itself as purposeful and structured, with a strong emphasis on early reading and language. The published curriculum messaging places a clear bet on building background knowledge and vocabulary, and the school explicitly frames this as a way to reduce inequality of opportunity and widen children’s horizons.
A notable feature for an infant setting is how explicitly the school ties classroom learning to wider personal development. Its British Values page highlights democratic learning and pupil voice, and school news items show this being put into practice through visits and civic themed work.
Because the school is an infant school (Nursery to Year 2), it does not sit the key stage 2 assessments that many parents associate with headline primary performance measures. This means there is no comparable Year 6 results profile to weigh up here, and families should focus instead on the strength of early reading, phonics, language development, and readiness for junior school.
The latest inspection evidence points to consistent approaches in key stage 1 subjects such as reading and mathematics, with additional small group support used to help pupils catch up quickly if they fall behind. The same inspection also set out specific improvement priorities, particularly around sequencing in a small number of subjects and sharper checking of how well pupils with SEND are learning.
Reading is presented as a central pillar. The prospectus describes a systematic phonics approach using Read Write Inc, alongside targeted language support through Nuffield Early Language Intervention, and structured writing work.
The curriculum approach is described as knowledge rich and carefully sequenced, with subject specific lessons across areas such as geography, history, science, computing, design and technology, and the arts. The school links this to children making connections between subjects and being ready for the next stage of learning.
For families, the practical implication is that this is likely to suit children who do well with routine, repetition, and explicit teaching in the early years. It can also suit families who value broad cultural and topic exposure early, particularly where a child’s experiences outside school may be narrower.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school ends at Year 2, the key progression point is transfer into a junior school setting for Year 3. In Norfolk, this is a familiar pathway in areas that retain separate infant and junior schools.
The school’s own materials and trust context indicate close alignment with local partner schools in the area, which can help continuity in values and curriculum language. In practice, parents should still check the specific junior school options linked to their home address and consider travel logistics, as Year 3 transition is a bigger step than moving up a year within one site.
Applications for Reception places are made through Norfolk County Council’s coordinated admissions process, rather than directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, the council’s published deadline for on time applications is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The school is oversubscribed on the available demand data, with 33 applications for 21 offers on the main entry route, so families should treat deadlines seriously and avoid relying on late movement. If you are shortlisting multiple options, the FindMySchool comparison tools can help you keep track of admissions pressure and practical fit side by side.
100%
1st preference success rate
21 of 21 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
21
Offers
21
Applications
33
A small school can be an advantage for pastoral responsiveness, because staff tend to know children and families quickly, and routines are easier to keep consistent. The latest inspection evidence indicates safeguarding record keeping and required checks on staff and volunteers are in place.
One area to watch is SEND monitoring. The 2022 inspection improvement points included a need for leaders to check more sharply how thoroughly pupils with SEND are learning, and to adjust support more quickly where needed. For families of children with emerging needs, it is sensible to ask how targets are set, reviewed, and communicated, particularly across transitions between nursery, Reception, and key stage 1.
The school publishes a clear after school activities offer, which is useful for working families and for children who benefit from structured play. Recent examples include Dance, Creative Club, and Singing, each running in a short after school slot.
The wider enrichment story is also framed through curriculum experiences. The school’s materials emphasise trips, workshops, and planned cultural capital as part of broadening horizons, particularly given the context of limited access to the wider world for some children.
The published school day for Reception to Year 2 runs from 8.35am to 3.10pm, with the weekly compulsory time stated as 32.5 hours. Nursery sessions are described as flexible, with options spanning morning, afternoon, and extended day patterns depending on entitlement and arrangements.
Wraparound care details (for example breakfast club or later after school provision beyond the club slot) are not clearly published in the sources accessed, so families who need care outside the core day should check directly with the school before relying on it.
Oversubscription at a small scale. With 33 applications for 21 offers on the main entry route, availability can tighten quickly, and late applications tend to be disadvantaged.
Improvement priorities to ask about. The latest inspection highlighted curriculum sequencing in a small number of subjects and stronger checking of learning for pupils with SEND. It is worth asking what has changed since then, and how leaders track impact.
Transition after Year 2. Moving to Year 3 in a different setting is a major step. Families should ask how the school prepares pupils for junior transfer and how information is shared with receiving schools.
Wraparound clarity. After school activities are published, but fuller childcare style wraparound is not clearly set out in the sources accessed, so confirm early if you will need it.
Heacham Infant and Nursery School suits families who want a small, structured early years and key stage 1 setting with an explicit focus on language, reading, and building background knowledge. It is also a practical choice for those who value published after school clubs and a clearly set out school day. The main decision point is fit around transition after Year 2, and the biggest hurdle for many families is securing a place in an oversubscribed intake.
The most recent full inspection in December 2022 judged the school Good overall, including Good for early years. It is a small infant setting, so families should focus on early reading, language development, and readiness for junior transfer rather than key stage 2 outcomes.
Admission is coordinated by Norfolk County Council, and oversubscription criteria apply when demand exceeds places.
Applications are made through Norfolk County Council. For September 2026 entry, the on time deadline is 15 January 2026 and offers are released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school describes flexible nursery sessions and references government funded early years hours for eligible families. For current session patterns and any charges for hours beyond entitlements, families should confirm directly with the school.
The school publishes a programme of short after school clubs. Recent examples include Dance, Creative Club, and Singing, running after the end of the core day.
Get in touch with the school directly
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