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.
Launceston Primary School is a relatively new state primary, opened to Reception in September 2021 and designed as a two-form entry school with capacity for 420 pupils. The language the school uses to describe itself is unusually specific for a primary, with “tinkering”, immersive learning, and “adventure at the core” presented as central to how pupils learn, rather than add-ons.
Leadership is clear and visible, with Mrs Kate Eyre named as Principal on both the school website and the official official records. The latest Ofsted inspection (24 to 25 January 2024, published 01 March 2024) judged the school to be Good overall, with Good also recorded for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
This combination, a new school with a clearly stated educational approach and a recent full inspection, makes it an option that parents can evaluate on current evidence rather than reputation alone.
Because the school opened in 2021, the “feel” here is shaped less by tradition and more by intentional design. The school describes a curriculum built around immersive learning and play, with “tinkering” and practical, open-ended activities positioned as core learning behaviours. That matters for day-to-day experience, it usually signals classrooms where making, exploring, and talking through ideas are expected, not treated as a reward after “real work”.
Outdoor learning is another defining thread in how the school frames its ethos. The Principal’s welcome places explicit emphasis on time spent in nature and learning outdoors, linking it to confidence, risk-taking, wellbeing, and early environmental stewardship. For families who want a primary that treats the outdoors as part of the curriculum, rather than an occasional trip, this is a meaningful indicator.
The school also sits within Athena Learning Trust, which provides the wider organisational context. Trust language about aspiration, character, and curriculum coherence is visible across the group, and Launceston Primary explicitly identifies as part of the Trust.
This is a school where published end-of-Key Stage 2 performance measures are likely to be limited or still emerging, simply because the school opened to Reception in 2021. In practical terms, parents should expect that the strongest “outcomes” evidence will be current inspection information and the school’s stated curriculum model, rather than several years of comparable Year 6 results.
External evaluation is, however, recent and comprehensive. Ofsted’s January 2024 inspection recorded Good across all judgement areas, including early years. For a newer school, that breadth matters, it suggests basic systems, classroom routines, and leadership oversight are functioning securely.
If you are comparing local options primarily on published attainment data, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool to keep the comparison like-for-like, especially where newer schools have less results history available.
The school’s curriculum page describes an ambitious, broad and balanced curriculum with an academic focus on mastering literacy and numeracy, alongside creative and expressive learning, with “adventurous learning” running throughout. The Principal’s welcome adds detail to what that looks like in practice, highlighting immersive learning, purposeful play, and practical problem-solving as intended habits of mind.
An important implication for families is fit. A curriculum built around open-ended tasks and “tinkering” can be excellent for curious pupils who learn best by doing and discussing. For children who strongly prefer highly structured, workbook-heavy learning, parents may want to ask how the school balances exploration with explicit instruction, particularly in phonics and maths.
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 Launceston, many families will naturally look at nearby secondary options, and Launceston College is the local Trust-linked secondary in the area. Cornwall operates designated areas (catchments) for many schools, and these boundaries can affect priority, so parents should check the current designated area mapping for their exact address rather than assume the nearest school is the designated one.
Transition support is typically led by the receiving secondary school; Launceston College describes structured transition activity, including events designed for Year 6 pupils to experience the school and meet tutor groups.
Reception entry is coordinated through Cornwall Council. For September 2026 starters, Cornwall Council’s published deadline for on-time Reception applications is 15 January 2026, with outcomes issued on National Offer Day, 16 April 2026. The school’s own admissions page directs families to the Council route for September 2026 applications and confirms that the process is now open.
Demand is currently a live factor. The most recent admissions shows 44 applications for 25 offers for the primary entry route, indicating oversubscription in the round captured. (No distance data is available for the last offer made, so proximity-based expectations should be treated cautiously.)
If your shortlist depends on very small differences in distance, use FindMySchool Map Search to check routes and distances consistently across all shortlisted schools.
Applications
44
Total received
Places Offered
25
Subscription Rate
1.8x
Apps per place
The strongest evidence available in the public domain is that the school has been inspected recently and judged Good across personal development and behaviour and attitudes. That points to consistent expectations and a baseline of safe, orderly routines.
For day-to-day family logistics, wraparound provision also matters for wellbeing. Launceston Primary offers breakfast club and after-school sessions on weekdays, with published session times and charges, including a reduced price for families eligible for free school meals in one of the after-school sessions.
The clearest published examples of enrichment at Launceston Primary come through wraparound and sports premium documentation.
Wraparound club examples listed by the school include Music Club and Bike Club. Sports and activity planning documentation also references additional clubs and activities such as football, multi-skills, and cricket, plus Balanceability for Reception children, and forest activities and gardening as part of widening opportunities. Another sports premium statement notes the school was investigating bringing in access to activities such as dance, judo, and fencing via local clubs, which suggests a willingness to broaden the offer as the school grows.
For parents, the practical implication is that enrichment here looks like a developing programme that is expanding with the school’s age profile. It may not have the long-established “named societies” of older primaries yet, but there is clear evidence of intentional activity-building, especially around music, cycling, and sport.
The school day is clearly set out. Doors open at 8.30am, registration is 8.45am, and home time is 3.15pm, with a published total weekly opening time of 33 hours and 45 minutes.
Wraparound care is available before and after school, with breakfast club from 7.30am to 8.45am and after-school sessions running through to 5.30pm on weekdays. School meals are cooked on site by Oasis Catering, with school dinners priced at £2.30 per day (free school meals provision applies as usual for eligible families).
A young school means limited long-run outcomes data. Opened in September 2021, so published end-of-primary results history is likely to be thinner than older schools, and you may need to rely more on inspection evidence and curriculum clarity.
Oversubscription is already present in the available admissions snapshot. With 44 applications for 25 offers in the captured round, families should plan realistically and list multiple preferences through Cornwall Council.
Curriculum style is distinctive. “Tinkering” and immersive learning will suit many children, but parents of pupils who prefer highly structured, tightly sequenced tasks should ask how structure and explicit instruction are delivered day-to-day.
Enrichment is building. The club offer is visible and practical (music, bikes, sport), but may feel lighter than longer-established schools simply because the school is still growing into its full age range.
Launceston Primary School is a modern, growing state primary with a clear educational identity centred on adventurous learning, purposeful play, and outdoor experience, backed by a recent Good Ofsted judgement across all areas. It suits families who want a younger school with an intentionally designed approach, and children who respond well to hands-on learning and exploration.
The main hurdle is admission, not quality. With oversubscription already evident and deadlines fixed by the local authority, families should apply early, list sensible backup preferences, and use distance tools to sanity-check practical feasibility.
Launceston Primary School was judged Good by Ofsted at its inspection in January 2024, with Good recorded across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
Cornwall uses designated areas (catchments) for many schools, and a child’s priority can depend on whether an address sits within a relevant designated area. Parents should check the current Cornwall designated area mapping for their exact address, as the designated school is not always the closest school geographically.
Applications are made through Cornwall Council. The deadline for on-time Reception applications for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, and outcomes are issued on National Offer Day, 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast club and after-school sessions (including timings and charges), which can be booked as wraparound provision for working families.
The school day is published as opening from 8.30am, registration at 8.45am, and home time at 3.15pm.
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.