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 Catholic primary on Bowerham Road that combines a clear faith-led identity with unusually strong attainment at key stage 2. In the most recent published results, 84% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, well above the England average of 62%. Nearly 45% reached the higher standard, far above the England average of 8%, which is a standout indicator of depth rather than just borderline passes.
It is also a practical choice for many working families. School starts at 8:45am and finishes at 3:30pm, with wraparound care running from 7:45am to 6:00pm. The out-of-school club is registered with Ofsted for up to 45 children under eight per session, which is a meaningful capacity for a one-form entry school.
Admissions are competitive. Recent demand data indicates oversubscription, with 100 applications for 28 offers for the relevant intake measure, a ratio of 3.57 applications per offer. That level of pressure shapes how families should approach timing, paperwork and realistic back-up options.
This is a school where the Catholic character is not a light layer. Admissions arrangements are explicitly framed around participating in the mission of the Catholic Church, while still welcoming applications from Catholic and non-Catholic families. In day-to-day life, that typically translates into regular worship, prayer, and a shared vocabulary of service and community contribution, rather than religion being confined to a weekly lesson. The school’s published approach to British values is also framed through the lens of respect, responsibility and making a positive contribution, with charity and service presented as normal expectations rather than occasional add-ons.
A notable feature is the way leadership is presented as part of the school’s stability story. Donna Shoulder is named as headteacher in official inspection documentation and on the school’s staff listings, with evidence on the school’s governance information indicating she has been in post since January 2021. That matters because the last full graded inspection before 2024 was in 2012, so leadership continuity and institutional memory are especially relevant for parents trying to understand whether past strengths are still “real” in the current era.
The 2024 inspection narrative describes pupils as happy, proud of their work, and confident in sharing what they have learned. Behaviour is described as calm and exemplary, with older pupils acting as role models for younger children. The practical implication for families is that this is likely to suit children who enjoy a settled, orderly environment, where expectations are consistently reinforced and routines are taken seriously.
A second strand is pupil voice and responsibility, which appears in earlier formal monitoring commentary as well as the school’s own descriptions of civic engagement. Examples referenced include roles such as school council representatives and an anti-bullying team, plus structured engagement with local civic institutions such as visits to the town hall and use of official ballot boxes for school council elections. This kind of pupil leadership tends to work best when adults genuinely expect children to act with maturity, and it can be a strong fit for pupils who like responsibility and clear roles.
The headline story is depth, not just competence.
In the most recent key stage 2, 84.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The England average is 62%, so the school sits materially above the national benchmark. The higher standard figure is even more striking: 44.67% achieved the higher standard compared with an England average of 8%. For parents, this usually signals that the curriculum and teaching are not only securing basic skills but also pushing a significant proportion of pupils into confident mastery.
Scaled scores reinforce that picture. Reading is 110, maths is 109, and grammar, punctuation and spelling is 110, with a combined total score of 329 across reading, GPS and maths. While scaled scores can feel abstract, they are useful because they indicate attainment across the whole distribution, not just who clears a threshold. Scores at this level tend to align with classrooms where recall is secure and pupils can apply knowledge fluently, rather than relying on last-minute exam technique.
Rankings place the school among stronger performers in England. It is ranked 674 in England for primary outcomes and 3rd locally within Lancaster in the FindMySchool ranking set based on official data. That percentile position corresponds to being well above England average, broadly within the top 10% range rather than simply “good for the area”. When a school is operating at that level, the practical question for parents often shifts from “Is it academically strong?” to “Is the style of ambition right for my child?”
It is also worth noting that the school’s results strength appears to be supported by the wider curriculum rather than achieved at the expense of it. The 2024 inspection narrative describes a curriculum designed with small, carefully sequenced steps and strong links to prior learning, which is a typical hallmark of schools that achieve both high attainment and a low level of learning anxiety.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
84.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
High results at primary level are often built on two foundations: early reading that works for almost everyone, and maths teaching that develops fluency rather than shortcuts. The 2024 inspection process included deep dives in early reading and mathematics, which suggests those areas were scrutinised in detail alongside wider curriculum design.
Reading is described as central to curriculum life in the 2024 inspection report, with pupils taking pleasure in listening to stories selected to inspire them. In practice, schools that do this well usually have three characteristics: a consistent phonics approach in the early years, a strong culture of reading aloud and discussion beyond decoding, and deliberate choices of texts to broaden vocabulary and background knowledge. For a child, the implication is that reading is less likely to be a narrow “skill” and more likely to be treated as a gateway into history, geography, science and religious education.
The curriculum sequencing point matters too. Where schools identify small steps, link back to prior learning and check understanding carefully, pupils are less likely to develop gaps that only show up late in Year 5 or Year 6. That usually leads to calmer classrooms, because pupils are not constantly trying to keep up without the prerequisite knowledge.
In addition, the school’s published curriculum navigation shows discrete subject areas including modern foreign languages, computing, design technology and a dedicated Catholic curriculum strand. The implication is that, despite being a one-form entry primary, subject breadth is structured and not left to chance.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Lancashire state primary, most pupils will move on to local secondary schools through the local authority process, with options typically including both faith-based and non-faith provision depending on family preference and eligibility. For Catholic families, the key practical issue is often how faith criteria, supplementary forms and parish evidence work at secondary level, and whether siblings or parish boundaries affect priority.
The transition strength here is likely to be academic readiness. The 2024 inspection narrative explicitly describes pupils being well prepared for the next stage of education, and the key stage 2 outcomes support that claim. For parents, that usually means two things: pupils are likely to arrive in Year 7 secure in core literacy and numeracy, and they are more likely to cope with a quicker subject-by-subject pace.
Families comparing options can use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools to benchmark likely destination schools side by side, especially if you are weighing faith-based routes against proximity-based routes.
Reception admissions are coordinated by the local authority, while the governing body is the admissions authority for this voluntary aided school. The published admission arrangements for the September 2026 intake confirm an admission number of 30 pupils, which aligns with the school’s one-form entry profile.
Where the school is oversubscribed, priority is applied through published criteria. These include looked-after and previously looked-after children, baptised Catholic children in specific named parishes (including Thurnham and Galgate, within the parish framing used), baptised Catholic children living outside the parish, then other children with siblings, then other children. Distance is used as a tie-break, measured in a straight line as defined by the local authority’s system.
For Catholic applicants, the important operational point is paperwork. The admission arrangements state that evidence of Catholic baptism is required and must be received by 1 March at the latest for Reception entrants, and that failure to provide the supplementary information may result in the application being considered against lower priority criteria. For parents, this means the application is not just “tick Catholic on the form”. It is a process with document deadlines that can affect outcome in a tight year.
For September 2026 Reception entry, the wider Lancashire timetable states that the national closing date for primary applications is 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026. Lancashire’s published admissions information for 2026 to 2027 also sets out follow-on deadlines such as waiting list requests and appeal timing.
The supplied demand data shows the Reception route as oversubscribed, with 100 applications and 28 offers for the relevant measure, producing 3.57. applications per place While that does not tell you everything about your individual chance, it does indicate that families should plan early, submit on time, and consider realistic alternative preferences rather than relying on a late or incomplete application.
Parents should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check practical distance realities from your front door, even when faith criteria apply, because distance can still matter within categories when there is a tie.
100%
1st preference success rate
27 of 27 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
28
Offers
28
Applications
100
Pastoral care in a primary context is often best judged through three lenses: whether pupils feel safe, whether adults respond quickly to worries, and whether the school culture supports kindness without tolerating low-level disruption. The 2024 inspection narrative points to a settled environment with pupils reporting feeling safe and well cared for, alongside strong behaviour norms and respectful interactions.
Safeguarding is also explicitly addressed in the published 2024 report, with the statement that the arrangements for safeguarding are effective.
From a parent’s point of view, a Catholic primary with strong results can sometimes feel highly structured. In schools where structure is combined with warmth, children often benefit from predictable routines and clear boundaries. The best indicator here is that the school’s formal narrative does not describe behaviour management as a major issue; instead it suggests learning time is protected and distractions are rare.
The school also publishes guidance linked to mental health and wellbeing, and the breadth of welfare staff listed alongside class staff suggests that staffing is not limited to classroom delivery. Families with children who need additional emotional reassurance often find that the availability of trained, named adults beyond the class teacher makes a tangible difference, especially in early years and during family transitions.
A strong primary is not only about SATs. It is about building confidence, belonging and breadth. Here, extracurricular and enrichment appear to be a genuine part of school life, with both sport and wider experiences visible in school content and official commentary.
The school’s own updates and club posts reference structured after-school provision such as football for Years 3 and 4, plus netball for Years 5 and 6. These are useful because they show age-specific opportunity rather than a generic claim that “clubs exist”. Pupils who thrive in team settings get repeated chances to practise cooperation, resilience and respectful competition.
There is also evidence of competitive participation through involvement in cricket competitions via local school sport networks. For pupils, competitions can be an important route to confidence, especially for those who are not always the loudest in class but enjoy representing their school in a defined role.
The school has run themed weeks and visiting experiences such as the “Aqua Explorers” activity during science week, where pupils learned about local sea life through hands-on rockpool experiences. That kind of enrichment tends to make science and geography feel connected to the Lancaster coastal context rather than remote textbook content.
Earlier formal commentary also refers to educational visits and residential experiences, including trips connected to outdoor environments. For many children, residentials and structured visits are where independence grows fastest, and where friendships deepen in a way that does not always happen within the classroom routine.
The school’s published description of community contribution includes Mini Vinnies fundraising for the Lancaster Shelter for the Homeless, plus organised charity activity such as Mission Together, Mary’s Meals, and Operation Christmas Child shoebox appeals. In a Catholic primary, this service strand is often the practical heart of the ethos. For pupils, it gives meaning to assemblies and RE by linking them to concrete action.
The school day runs from 8:45am to 3:30pm, with gates opening at 8:35am. Total weekly operating hours are stated as 33 hours and 45 minutes.
Wraparound care is a key practical strength. Breakfast club runs 7:45am to 8:45am, and after-school club runs 3:30pm to 6:00pm on weekdays in term time. The out-of-school club is registered with Ofsted to have 45 children under the age of eight at each session.
Transport and access are typical for a Lancaster city primary on a main road. Many families will find walking and bus options workable from the surrounding Bowerham and Scotforth areas, but as always, drop-off traffic is likely to be a practical factor at peak times.
Admissions paperwork matters. For baptised Catholic applicants, the supplementary information form and evidence requirements are not optional in an oversubscribed year, and the published arrangements include a baptism evidence deadline of 1 March for Reception entrants.
Competition for places is real. Recent demand data indicates oversubscription, with 100 applications for 28 offers and a ratio of 3.57 applications per offer. Families should plan on-time submission and include realistic alternative preferences.
High attainment can bring pace. With key stage 2 outcomes significantly above England averages, the learning pace may feel quick for some children. This tends to suit pupils who enjoy challenge and routine, but families of children who need a gentler academic tempo should explore support and differentiation in early conversations.
Wraparound care is strong, but places are finite. The club is registered for up to 45 under-eights per session, which is substantial, but not unlimited. If wraparound is essential for your work pattern, ask early about availability and booking routines.
This is a high-performing Lancashire Catholic primary that combines ambitious outcomes with a clear ethos of service and community responsibility. It suits families who want a faith-centred education with consistently strong attainment and practical wraparound care that supports working routines. The biggest challenge is admission, not the education once a place is secured, so planning early and getting the faith-route paperwork right is central to a realistic application strategy.
Yes. It is rated Outstanding in its most recent full inspection, and key stage 2 outcomes are well above England averages, including a notably high proportion reaching the higher standard.
As a voluntary aided Catholic school, places are prioritised through the published oversubscription criteria, including Catholic baptism and parish links, with distance used as a tie-break where needed. There is no single simple “catchment” in the way a community primary might use one.
Applications are coordinated by the local authority. The national closing date for primary applications is 15 January 2026 and offers are issued on 16 April 2026. If applying under Catholic criteria, you also need to complete the school’s supplementary information form and provide the required evidence by the stated deadlines.
Yes. Breakfast club runs 7:45am to 8:45am and after-school club runs 3:30pm to 6:00pm in term time. The provision is registered with Ofsted for up to 45 children under eight per session.
School starts at 8:45am and finishes at 3:30pm, with gates opening at 8:35am.
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