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 village primary where faith and community life sit naturally alongside a practical, outdoorsy approach to learning. The school’s Church of England character shows up in values and shared events, helped by the closeness of the village church across the road. Day to day, the shape of school life is rooted in enriched curriculum experiences, forest school, music, and a strong culture of clubs for a small setting.
On performance, Key Stage 2 outcomes stand out. In 2024, 84% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. Reading is a particular strength, with a reading scaled score of 107. Admissions data suggests demand outstrips places, with 40 applications for 17 offers in the latest published reception round.
Bosbury CofE Primary School reads as a school that leans into its rural setting rather than treating it as background. Forest school is not an occasional enrichment add on, it is structured around a dedicated site at the top of the field, and multiple staff hold Forest School Leader qualifications. That matters for families who want regular outdoor learning that is planned and safe, not just muddy play when the timetable allows.
The school’s website puts its values in plain, memorable language, Courage, Compassion, Creativity. This is the kind of trio that translates easily into classroom routines and assemblies, and it fits with the way the school describes pupil leadership. Opportunities like School Council, Arts Council, and playground buddies point to an expectation that pupils contribute to the life of the school, not just attend it.
Music is another defining thread. A specialist music teacher teaches classes weekly, and the choir is described as a flagship. Add drumming and drama groups that perform beyond the school, and you get a clear sense of a school where creative confidence is built deliberately, not left to chance. For some children, that is where primary school becomes the place they discover their voice.
Leadership is clearly signposted, with Mrs Ruth McManus named as headteacher on both the school website and the government’s official records service.
This is a state primary, so the most useful academic lens for parents is Key Stage 2. In 2024:
84% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%.
At the higher standard, 25.67% reached greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with the England average of 8%.
Reading is strong, 90% reached the expected standard and the reading scaled score was 107.
Mathematics is also solid, with a maths scaled score of 101 and 67% reaching the expected standard.
Science outcomes are high, with 95% reaching the expected standard.
These figures suggest a school where basic academic foundations are secure, and where a meaningful proportion of pupils are pushed beyond the expected standard.
On rankings, Bosbury CofE Primary School is ranked 11,060th in England and 6th in Ledbury for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This places it below England average in the overall primary ranking distribution, so it is worth interpreting the ranking alongside the 2024 outcomes above, which are clearly strong at Key Stage 2. In small rural schools, cohort size effects and year to year variation can also influence where a school sits in any single ranking year.
Inspection context is current. The latest Ofsted inspection (24 September 2024) graded Quality of education as Good, Behaviour and attitudes as Good, Personal development as Outstanding, Leadership and management as Good, and Early years provision as Good.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
84%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is presented as thematic and experience led, with the school explicitly referencing real life experiences such as visits to museums and galleries, festivals, and performances. The important question for parents is whether this style still delivers knowledge and skills progression. Here, the Key Stage 2 data provides reassurance, particularly in reading and combined outcomes.
There are also several specific curriculum features that make the day feel more varied than a typical small primary. Modern foreign languages are offered, and sports coaching is supported through an external foundation partnership. Swimming lessons are delivered off site at a local leisure centre, which is common in rural areas, but still a positive indicator that PE is organised rather than incidental.
For children who learn best through doing, forest school provides a second route into literacy and oracy, structured talk, instructions, explanation, reflection, and vocabulary that can then be drawn back into classroom writing. For children who need more help regulating emotions, the school describes Thrive support and a staff member trained in mental health support, with a school therapy dog named Otto referenced as part of that culture.
As a primary school, the key practical question is transition to secondary. Bosbury sits within Herefordshire, and pupils typically move on to local secondary schools serving the Ledbury area and surrounding villages. For many families, the decision is shaped less by choice and more by travel time and transport options, particularly in a rural setting.
One local secondary route mentioned in Herefordshire admissions documentation is John Masefield High School, which lists Bosbury as a feeder primary in its published policy material. This does not mean all pupils go there, but it does signal an established transition relationship that parents may want to explore.
For families considering selective or faith based routes later, the school’s emphasis on reading and pupil confidence can be an advantage, but it is sensible to treat those pathways as separate decisions with their own admissions criteria.
Bosbury CofE Primary School is part of Herefordshire’s coordinated admissions process for Reception. Applications are made through the local authority rather than directly to the school, and oversubscription is handled through the county’s published criteria. The school’s own admissions page is clear that the local authority applies oversubscription criteria when applications exceed places.
Demand indicators suggest the school is oversubscribed, with 40 applications for 17 offers and a subscription ratio of 2.35 applications per place in the latest available round. This is not a large absolute number, but for a small school it still signals competition.
For September 2026 entry, Herefordshire’s published timetable states that applications opened on 15 September 2025 at 9am and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is available for this school. In practice, rural admissions often depend on a mix of criteria and travel patterns, so families should focus on the precise local authority criteria and, where relevant, sibling and distance rules.
A practical tip: parents can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity check travel routes and local alternatives, especially if you are weighing more than one village school within realistic driving distance.
100%
1st preference success rate
17 of 17 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
17
Offers
17
Applications
40
A small school can be a good fit for children who benefit from being well known by staff and from having consistent routines across the year groups. The school highlights inclusion and a significant special educational needs focus, alongside Thrive support. The most relevant implication is that pupils who need early support with emotional regulation may find a more joined up approach than in a larger setting, provided the right staffing is in place.
The latest inspection profile supports a strong focus on personal development, and the school also references practical safety readiness, including staff training for first aid and medical needs.
Faith and wellbeing are also linked here. As a Church of England school, collective worship and Christian distinctiveness are part of the identity, but the tone presented is broadly inclusive and community oriented, rather than narrow or exclusionary. The school also reports a top grade in its most recent SIAMS inspection in April 2023, which is useful context for families who care about how deeply faith is integrated.
This is the area where Bosbury differentiates itself most clearly, especially given its size.
Forest school is a headline feature, supported by a dedicated site and multiple qualified staff. The school also references newer additions that reinforce the practical, hands on feel, including a greenhouse and a pond project. For children who are curious and energetic, this kind of provision can make a real difference to engagement, and it often benefits children who find formal desk based learning harder early on.
A specialist music teacher teaches each class weekly, and the choir is presented as well established. Add drumming and drama groups that perform out in the community, and it becomes easier to picture a school where performance is normalised, not a once a year production. For quieter children, structured choir and ensemble work can be a gentle way into confidence. For more extrovert pupils, it is simply a place to thrive.
The school points to strong participation in clubs, including the claim that over 80% of children attend an after school club. In a small primary, that suggests a culture where enrichment is the default rather than the exception. Leadership opportunities like Arts Council, School Council and playground buddies also suggest that pupils are expected to take responsibility in age appropriate ways.
The school day is described as running from 8:40am to 3:20pm. After school clubs are stated as running until 4:00pm, and a drumming club takes place before the school day on Fridays.
Because the school sits in a village context, travel planning matters. Many families will drive, and some will walk from within the immediate village. Rural roads can make short distances feel longer at peak times, so it is worth doing a trial run at drop off and pick up time before committing to a move.
Oversubscription pressure. With 40 applications for 17 offers in the latest reception admissions data, entry can be competitive. If you are relying on a place for childcare planning, have a realistic second option.
Rural logistics. Village schools can be wonderful, but travel time and winter road conditions matter. Consider whether your daily routine can handle disruption, especially if you commute out of area.
Faith context. The Church of England character is a genuine part of school life, including Christian distinctiveness and worship. Families who want a wholly secular setting may prefer a community school.
Bosbury CofE Primary School suits families who want a small, community rooted primary with strong Key Stage 2 outcomes and a clear commitment to outdoor learning, music, and pupil leadership. It is particularly well suited to children who respond to practical learning and creative confidence building, not just workbook routines. The main constraint is admissions competition in a small school, and the everyday reality of rural travel.
The school’s 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes are strong, with 84% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. The most recent Ofsted inspection in September 2024 graded Quality of education as Good and Personal development as Outstanding, alongside Good judgements in other areas.
Reception applications are made through Herefordshire’s coordinated admissions process rather than directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, Herefordshire states the application window opened on 15 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The latest available admissions data shows 40 applications for 17 offers, indicating oversubscription. In small rural schools, demand can vary year to year, so it is sensible to check the most recent local authority admissions information as well.
The school presents its Christian distinctiveness through values, worship and community links, including proximity to the village church. It also reports a top grade in its SIAMS inspection in April 2023, which may matter to families looking for a clearly faith shaped setting.
Outdoor learning is a defining feature through forest school, alongside gardening and nature projects like a greenhouse and pond initiative. Music is also prominent, with a specialist music teacher and a well established choir, plus performance opportunities through drumming and drama groups.
Get in touch with the school directly
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