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.
Altarnun Primary School is a small state primary serving families around Altarnun, on the edge of Bodmin Moor, with a roll that sits well below its published capacity. The feel is deliberately close-knit, which matters in a school of this size, because relationships, routines, and consistency do much of the heavy lifting.
Leadership is provided by Mrs Lynsey Slater, who is listed as the headteacher in the most recent Ofsted documentation, and is also described by the school as Executive Principal. The school is part of Athena Learning Trust, which is relevant context for curriculum support, school improvement, and wider governance.
For families, the practical headline is simple: this is a state school with no tuition fees, with admissions coordinated through Cornwall Council for Reception entry.
Altarnun’s own language focuses on learning together, and that sits naturally with a small primary where pupils are known well across year groups. The published curriculum statements emphasise broad entitlement, clear expectations, and practical learning, rather than narrow test preparation.
A clear thread running through the school’s published material is reading. The pupil premium strategy describes a rebuilt reading approach, including daily routines in the early years and Key Stage 1, and structured phonics work aligned to Read Write Inc (often abbreviated as RWI in school improvement planning). For parents, the implication is that early literacy is treated as a whole-school priority rather than a single programme that sits only in Reception and Year 1.
Outdoor learning is another defining feature in the way the school presents itself. Forest School is referenced both in curriculum content and in wider inclusion and support documentation, suggesting it is not an occasional enrichment day, but a regular part of how learning is framed. In a rural setting, that combination can work particularly well for pupils who learn best through practical tasks, movement, and real-world contexts.
The school’s local community connections show up most clearly through activities that bring external adults and local groups into the school day. The curriculum page references Open the Book assemblies, which typically involve community volunteers presenting Bible stories in an accessible format, even in schools with no religious character. For families, this tends to feel like a community tradition more than a faith requirement, and parents retain the right to withdraw from Religious Education if they wish.
Altarnun’s latest formal outcomes are not published, so it is not possible to make reliable, data-led statements here about Key Stage 2 attainment or scaled scores. What can be said with confidence is that the school remains judged Good overall, and that the most recent inspection activity was an ungraded inspection in June 2025, which is used to check whether standards are being maintained.
The most useful way to interpret this, as a parent, is to focus on the underlying drivers the school itself highlights: a structured approach to reading, an emphasis on curriculum breadth, and deliberate development of writing, speaking, and vocabulary. If your child is moving into Year 5 or Year 6, it is reasonable to ask specifically how spelling, punctuation, and grammar are taught and corrected, because inspection documentation flags consistency in this area as important for improving extended writing quality over time.
If you are comparing local options, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub and the Comparison Tool to put nearby primaries side by side on the measures that are available, then validate the story through visits and conversations about curriculum and support. This is particularly helpful in rural areas, where small schools can look similar on the surface but differ in approach.
The school describes a broad and balanced National Curriculum offer, with variation in teaching methods depending on need. That flexibility is often a strength in small schools, because mixed-age dynamics and small cohorts can require staff to adapt more frequently than in larger two-form entry settings.
Several named elements stand out as distinctive:
Forest School resources are explicitly referenced within science, suggesting practical investigation and observation are part of how topics are taught.
Goblin Greenpower appears in the design and technology narrative as a real-world project, linking design thinking with engineering-style problem solving.
Charanga is named as the platform supporting music curriculum delivery, which usually means structured units, listening work, and performance progression rather than ad hoc singing only.
French is included at Key Stage 2, framed around practical communication and cultural awareness.
For parents, the implication is a curriculum that tries to make learning tangible and connected, rather than purely worksheet-driven. If your child is academically confident, the question to ask is how the school stretches the highest attainers within small cohorts; if your child needs more scaffolding, ask how staff identify gaps early, particularly in reading and writing.
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 primary school, the key transition point is into Year 7. The school does not publish a standard destination list on its site in the material reviewed, and in Cornwall the next-school pattern depends heavily on your address, designated areas, and transport logistics.
Practically, families should treat this as a two-part decision:
Designated area and likely secondary options: Cornwall Council’s designated area arrangements and admissions guidance shape what is realistic, particularly if you are relying on transport assistance or are considering schools that are not your nearest.
Child fit and travel tolerance: in rural settings, journey time can become part of daily wellbeing, especially for younger Year 7 pupils.
If secondary planning is central to your move, it is worth mapping your home location against likely secondaries and checking current admissions rules each year, because patterns shift.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Cornwall Council. The school’s admissions page signposts parents directly to the Cornwall Council process for September 2026 entry. For children born between 1 September 2021 and 31 August 2022, the published application deadline is 15 January 2026, with National Offer Day 16 April 2026.
Demand data indicates a small-number intake picture for the most recent available cycle, with 8 applications for 6 offers, and an oversubscribed status. In very small schools, those numbers can swing sharply year to year, so treat this as a signal rather than a stable trend.
If you are relocating, the practical step is to read Cornwall’s rules on address evidence and on-time versus late applications, then speak to the school about mid-year places if you are arriving outside the main entry point.
Parents considering a move should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand realistic travel distance options, then cross-check against Cornwall’s admissions criteria for the relevant year.
Applications
8
Total received
Places Offered
6
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
Pastoral support is referenced through routines and targeted support approaches in the school’s published SEND and inclusion materials. The SEND information report points to emotional coaching approaches, nurture-style social skills groups, and the use of visual supports and individualised strategies when needed.
The same documentation lists external agency links that are typical for mainstream primaries supporting a range of additional needs, including educational psychology and mental health support services. The implication for parents is that the school expects to work with outside professionals when appropriate, rather than attempting to manage everything internally.
Breakfast provision is also referenced as part of ensuring pupils start the day settled and ready to learn. If wraparound care is essential for your family, ask what is offered beyond breakfast, because after-school details are not clearly published in the core pages reviewed.
In a small primary, extracurricular quality is less about having dozens of clubs, and more about whether pupils get repeated chances to participate, perform, compete, and try unfamiliar things.
Altarnun’s published documents point to several concrete features:
Activity Week is referenced as a whole-school feature, which usually means a concentrated period of trips, workshops, and special events.
Wake and Shake is listed as a daily routine, signalling an emphasis on movement and readiness to learn.
Goblin Greenpower is positioned as a meaningful design and technology project, not just a one-off treat, which can be a strong hook for pupils who enjoy practical STEM learning.
The pupil premium strategy describes experiences such as live theatre in Plymouth and visits from local authors, suggesting enrichment is planned, not accidental.
Sport participation is framed around access for all pupils, with the sports premium statement describing clubs across lunchtimes and half terms, and use of external sports specialists.
For parents, the implication is a school aiming to provide breadth even with a small roll, using projects and planned experiences to widen horizons.
The published school day runs from arrival from 8.30am, registration at 8.45am, and home time at 3.15pm. Term dates for 2025 to 2026 are published on the school site, which is helpful for working parents planning childcare around holidays.
The school provides meals cooked on site, with a published cost of £2.30 per day, paid via ParentPay.
Breakfast club is referenced in official documentation. Details of after-school provision are not clearly published in the pages reviewed, so families who need late pick-up should ask directly what is currently available and on which days.
Transport is a practical consideration in this area; families commonly rely on car travel on rural roads, and public transport options can be limited depending on your exact location.
Small cohort dynamics. A small roll can be brilliant for confidence and belonging, but friendship groups are naturally limited. This suits some pupils very well, and feels restrictive for others, especially in upper Key Stage 2.
Writing consistency. Inspection documentation highlights the importance of reliably identifying and correcting spelling, punctuation, and grammar misconceptions to improve extended writing quality over time. Ask what has changed in practice, and how the school checks impact.
Wraparound needs. Breakfast provision is referenced, but after-school details are not clearly published in the core materials reviewed. If childcare is tight, clarify current offer, timings, and costs before committing.
Rural logistics. Attendance, clubs, and secondary transition all interact with travel time. It is worth modelling the daily run in winter conditions as well as in summer.
Altarnun Primary School will suit families who want a small, community-rooted primary with a strong emphasis on reading, practical curriculum experiences, and outdoor learning as a genuine part of school life. The school remains judged Good overall, with recent inspection activity focused on maintaining standards.
Best suited to pupils who benefit from close adult knowledge, clear routines, and learning that connects to real projects and the local environment. Families for whom wraparound care is essential, or who want the breadth of a larger cohort, should ask detailed questions early and compare alternatives carefully.
Altarnun Primary School is judged Good overall. The most recent inspection activity was an ungraded inspection in June 2025, which is used to confirm whether a school is maintaining standards following a prior graded inspection.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Cornwall Council. For September 2026 entry, Cornwall Council publishes an application deadline of 15 January 2026, with National Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
Breakfast provision is referenced in official documentation. Details of after-school provision are not clearly published in the core pages reviewed, so families should check directly with the school for current days, timings, and costs.
The published timetable shows arrival from 8.30am, registration at 8.45am, and home time at 3.15pm, with break and lunch times set out on the school’s school-day page.
The school’s published curriculum highlights Forest School resources used to support practical learning, the Goblin Greenpower project within design and technology, and Charanga to structure music teaching.
Get in touch with the school directly
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