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.
With a published capacity of 56 pupils, this is a genuinely small primary where children are likely to be known quickly and where mixed-age friendships can become a quiet strength. The school sits in the Kingsbridge area and serves local families in and around West Alvington, with a nursery offer that begins at age two.
The most recent published inspection activity is an Ofsted ungraded inspection dated 03 June 2025, which concluded the school had taken effective action to maintain the standards identified at the previous inspection. The last graded Ofsted inspection outcome, from March 2020, was Good across the main judgements, including Early years provision.
Academic performance data for primary outcomes is limited in the available results for this school, so the best current public picture comes from the school’s curriculum intent, the way early reading and mathematics are led, and the external assurance provided through inspection evidence.
Small schools can feel intensely personal, for better or worse. Here, the published ethos and day-to-day structures point towards the kind of close-knit environment many parents actively seek. The school’s Christian distinctiveness is positioned as embedded across the curriculum, with collective worship and religious education (RE) explicitly described as drivers of that ethos.
The stated Christian vision, framed as “Growing and Flourishing Together”, is paired with a clear set of named values: Friendship, Honesty, Respect, and Responsibility, each linked to a biblical reference. For families who want a Church of England setting where faith language is normalised rather than occasional, that clarity is helpful. For families who prefer a more neutral approach, it is equally useful to know what the school is trying to be.
In safeguarding culture, the school publicly references participation in Operation Encompass, which is designed to support children who may have been exposed to domestic abuse incidents attended by police. That is a practical marker of joined-up working, particularly relevant in small communities where early support can matter.
Leadership information is mixed across official and school-published sources. Ofsted’s 2020 report states the headteacher at that time was appointed in September 2019, and lists the headteacher name as Katie Coombe. The school website currently presents Hannah Ruston as Head Teacher. The simplest parent takeaway is that leadership capacity is shared and may have changed title or post over time, which is common within small-school trust structures.
What can be said, grounded in inspection and published curriculum intent, is that early reading and mathematics have been treated as priority areas for several years. The March 2020 inspection report describes pupils doing well in mathematics and reading, alongside a curriculum designed to be demanding and to build key knowledge and skills across subjects.
The more recent ungraded inspection in June 2025 did not convert the school to a graded inspection and instead reported effective action to maintain standards. In practical terms, that tends to suggest stability in the core areas parents care about, rather than a school in decline or a school requiring rapid intervention.
The curriculum is described as organised by subject domains, with links made where appropriate, aiming to help pupils “develop as historians, musicians and the like”. That is a useful signal for parents who worry that small primaries can become overly narrow, with everything squeezed by the basics. In principle, a subject-led structure also helps when staff are covering multiple ages, because it supports coherence and progression.
In early years, the school is registered for nursery education for two and three year olds, and the 2020 graded inspection included Early years provision as Good. The nursery page emphasises learning through play, language-rich interaction, and a “key person” style approach consistent with the Early Years Foundation Stage, with staff referred to as practitioners.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is a state school within Devon’s co-ordinated admissions system, with the trust as admissions authority and Devon County Council coordinating the normal round and in-year processes.
For September 2026 primary intake in Devon, the published application window opens 15 November 2025 and closes 15 January 2026. provided for this school, Reception-route demand looks modest, with 4 applications and 4 offers recorded, and an undersubscribed status. (No distance data is available for the last offer.)
Parents who are actively shortlisting should still sanity-check the practicalities: small schools can be sensitive to cohort size, and numbers can fluctuate year to year.
A good practical step is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand your likely travel time and to compare nearby primaries if you are weighing up several small rural options.
Applications
4
Total received
Places Offered
4
Subscription Rate
0.3x
Apps per place
In a small primary, pastoral support is often delivered through relationships rather than layers of staff. Even so, the school sets out a safeguarding approach that includes Operation Encompass, which is specifically designed to improve support where children have been affected by domestic abuse incidents.
The earlier Ofsted evidence also points to staff knowing families well and working creatively with families and community to support safeguarding. Ofsted confirmed in March 2020 that safeguarding was a strength, with leaders focused on supporting pupils, families, and the local community.
Small schools sometimes struggle to offer breadth, but this school’s published programme is concrete and easy to understand. The extra-curricular page lists a termly after-school pattern that includes Premier Sports after-school club (Tuesday), Art club (Wednesday), and Sporty Stars after-school club (Thursday). Those are specific, named options, which is preferable to vague promises.
Music is also clearly structured through visiting teachers, with peripatetic lessons offered in guitar, piano, and violin, arranged directly with families. That matters in a small setting because instrument learning can become a major confidence-builder, especially for quieter pupils.
Separate school communications also reference pupil roles such as school librarians, which is a small but meaningful indicator of responsibility and peer support opportunities in day-to-day school life.
The school day is clearly published. Gates open at 8:30am and close at 8:45am; lunch is 12pm to 1pm; pupils are collected at 3:15pm. Chestnut Nursery closes at 3pm, and the school describes a typical week as 32.5 hours.
On costs, this is a state school with no tuition fees. For meals, the nursery page states a school dinner cost of £2.75 per day. Other common costs to plan for are uniform, trips, and optional music lessons, which vary by family.
Very small scale. With a capacity of 56, cohort sizes can be tiny. That can be brilliant for confidence and individual attention, but some children want a larger peer group and more activity choice.
Christian distinctiveness is central. The school explicitly frames collective worship, RE, and Christian values as embedded across curriculum life. Families wanting a more secular approach should weigh this carefully.
Wraparound clarity. Breakfast Club is referenced, but wraparound detail is not consistently published in one place. If you rely on childcare at the edges of the day, confirm the current offer early.
Limited published performance metrics. If you like to benchmark results numerically, you may need to rely more on inspection evidence, curriculum information, and what you learn from a visit and conversation with staff.
This is a small Church of England primary where the published ethos is coherent, the curriculum intent is subject-led, and the extra-curricular offer is specific rather than aspirational. The most recent Ofsted activity, in June 2025, indicates the school has maintained its standards.
Best suited to families who want a close-knit setting, are comfortable with a clearly expressed Christian character, and value a nursery-to-primary throughline in a small community environment. The key due diligence points are wraparound care detail and whether the scale fits your child’s social needs.
The school’s last graded Ofsted inspection (March 2020) judged it Good, including Good early years provision. A more recent Ofsted ungraded inspection dated 03 June 2025 reported that the school had taken effective action to maintain the standards identified at the previous inspection, which is generally a sign of stability.
As a state primary in Devon’s co-ordinated admissions system, places are typically allocated using the published oversubscription criteria rather than a guaranteed catchment entitlement. The school participates in Devon’s normal round and in-year admissions processes, so it is important to check Devon’s criteria and how they apply to your address.
Yes. The school is registered for nursery education for two and three year olds and describes Chestnut Nursery as offering funded part-time and full-time sessions for eligible children, alongside paid sessions. Nursery fees vary, so use the school’s nursery information to understand the current offer.
Devon’s published timetable for starting primary school in September 2026 opens 15 November 2025 and closes 15 January 2026. Parents should apply through the local authority’s process and treat late applications as higher risk.
The school publishes a termly pattern of after-school clubs including Premier Sports, Art club, and Sporty Stars. It also offers peripatetic music lessons in guitar, piano, and violin, arranged directly with families.
Get in touch with the school directly
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