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.
Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
This is a large, Church of England voluntary controlled primary in Farnley, west Leeds, with nursery provision from age 3 and a full primary roll through to Year 6. A clear operational strength is how deliberately the school links family engagement, daily routines, and practical support, including breakfast and after-school care, to attendance and learning. In the most recent Ofsted inspection cycle, the school was evaluated as Good across every judgement area, including early years provision.
Recent admissions evidence indicates St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School can be oversubscribed. Families should check Leeds' latest allocation data, understand priority criteria, and use realistic backup preferences.
The school positions itself as a place where families sit at the centre of school life, with a strong emphasis on partnership, communication, and barrier removal. Ofsted’s published report describes a strong sense of community and highlights close working relationships with parents and carers, framed as a practical lever that supports attendance and learning.
Leadership visibility is built into the day-to-day routine. The school sets out that members of the senior leadership team are outside daily to assist, answer questions, and relay messages, and the entry and exit arrangements are carefully structured by year group. This tends to suit families who value predictable logistics at drop-off and pick-up, especially in a large primary where clear systems matter.
As a Church of England school, worship and spirituality are presented as a normal part of school culture rather than a bolt-on. The school also makes SIAMS documentation available to families, which is typically relevant for parents who want to understand how Christian distinctiveness is expressed in curriculum, worship, and community life.
Leadership details are transparently published. The headteacher is Jane Wainwright, and the wider senior leadership team structure is set out on the school’s website, including phase-linked assistant headteacher roles and an identified early years leader.
St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School's current KS2 profile is 50% at the combined reading, writing and mathematics expected standard, 10% at the combined higher standard, reading 70% expected (scaled score 104), maths 70% expected (scaled score 104), GPS 70% expected (scaled score 106), and science 80% expected. FindMySchool ranks it 10,999th of 14,978 primary schools in England for academic outcomes and 138th in Leeds locally.
St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School's current KS2 profile is 50% at the combined reading, writing and mathematics expected standard, 10% at the combined higher standard, reading 70% expected (scaled score 104), maths 70% expected (scaled score 104), GPS 70% expected (scaled score 106), and science 80% expected. FindMySchool ranks it 10,999th of 14,978 primary schools in England for academic outcomes and 138th in Leeds locally.
St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School's current KS2 profile is 50% at the combined reading, writing and mathematics expected standard, 10% at the combined higher standard, reading 70% expected (scaled score 104), maths 70% expected (scaled score 104), GPS 70% expected (scaled score 106), and science 80% expected. FindMySchool ranks it 10,999th of 14,978 primary schools in England for academic outcomes and 138th in Leeds locally.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
53%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The published Ofsted report describes an ambitious curriculum and states that pupils achieve well, which points to consistent expectations and a curriculum plan that aims to build knowledge over time.
What stands out in the school’s own published materials is the way learning support is framed as a family-facing system, not just an in-class one. For example, the school describes practical home learning mechanisms such as Reading Rucksacks in Reception and Key Stage 1, and structured access to online tools for mathematics and homework at Key Stage 2. The implication is a model where home routines are treated as part of the learning design, which can help families who want clear guidance and ready-made resources, but may feel more directed for parents who prefer a lighter-touch home learning approach.
There is also an explicit pattern of responding to parent and pupil feedback through specific actions. Examples include additional information sessions, curriculum-linked family evenings, and the introduction of school-wide clubs and activities that are then referenced back to pupil voice. This is useful context for families who value consultative leadership and visible iteration over time.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
Ofsted did not issue a single overall grade for this inspection. This score is derived from the published subjudgements.
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Leeds primary, Year 6 leavers typically move into a range of local state secondary schools through the Leeds coordinated admissions process, with family preference and distance playing a significant role in allocations. The school publishes guidance to families on applying for places and is explicit that Leeds City Council is the admissions authority for this voluntary controlled school, which means the process is LA coordinated rather than direct application to the school.
Transition preparation is also reflected in the school’s approach to communication. It publishes year-group quick guides and runs structured family information, which usually helps demystify the move to secondary, particularly for families new to the Leeds admissions system.
Recent admissions evidence indicates St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School can be oversubscribed. Families should check Leeds' latest allocation data, understand priority criteria, and use realistic backup preferences. For September 2027 Reception entry in Leeds, applications open on 1 November 2026, close on 15 January 2027, and offers are issued on 16 April 2027.
For September 2027 Reception entry in Leeds, applications open on 1 November 2026, close on 15 January 2027, and offers are issued on 16 April 2027.
Because this is a voluntary controlled school, Leeds City Council’s published oversubscription criteria apply. In practice, that typically means priority groups are applied first, and then remaining places are allocated using the published criteria (often including distance, siblings, and other policy-defined categories). Families serious about admission should treat distance as a real constraint in oversubscribed years and should use the official Leeds admissions materials to understand how priority is applied.
Nursery admission works differently. The school has published that it has had nursery places available and asks families with children currently age 3, or turning 3 by July 2026, to register interest via the school office, with follow-up nearer the time the child turns 3.
Applications
142
Total received
Places Offered
60
Subscription Rate
2.4x
Applications per place
Pastoral care here is closely linked to safeguarding culture, family communication, and consistent routines. The school publishes its safeguarding team structure and identifies deputy designated safeguarding leads by role, which is a useful signal for families who want clarity on who holds safeguarding responsibility day-to-day.
The school’s published “You said, we did” format also provides a window into wellbeing priorities: additional meetings for families of pupils on the SEND register, targeted staff training for higher-level SEND needs, and inclusive competition opportunities such as Panathlon challenges. This suggests a pastoral model that blends formal support structures with participation and inclusion in wider school life.
The school is unusually explicit about the variety and intent of its enrichment, and it gives parents concrete examples rather than general statements. Recent school communications describe free after-school activities including Computing Club, Construction Club, and Wildlife and Gardening Club.
Computing is not positioned as purely curricular. The school’s own updates show pupils creating presentations and building digital confidence through club activity, which is a practical pathway for children who like structured creative tasks and want to develop keyboard and presentation skills early.
Sport is treated as both broad access and competition. The school states it now offers a sports club every evening after school, and it lists a wide set of inter-school competition entries, from football and athletics through to handball and cricket. It also describes ice skating opportunities for Years 3 and 4 and BMX or mountain biking opportunities for Years 5 and 6. These specifics matter because they indicate that enrichment is built into the annual rhythm, not left to ad hoc trips.
There are also signs of deliberate investment in outdoor and practical learning. The school describes introducing science rucksacks for home activities, investing in large planters, and creating a science garden, plus running a science club for Years 3 and 4.
The school day is carefully structured. The published weekly opening time is 33.75 hours, and the school day begins at 08:50. Doors open at 08:30, with start and finish times varying slightly by year group, including nursery session times for morning and afternoon places.
Wraparound care is available and clearly priced. Breakfast club operates from 07:00, with different daily charges depending on arrival time, and after-school club runs from 15:30 with pick-up options through to 17:30.
Transport-wise, this is a west Leeds location close to major routes through Armley and Farnley, so many families rely on walking, buses, or short car journeys. The school has also referenced local concerns around parking and traffic management, which is a typical pinch point for larger primaries.
Recent admissions evidence indicates St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School can be oversubscribed. Families should check Leeds' latest allocation data, understand priority criteria, and use realistic backup preferences.
Outcomes are solid rather than top-tier. Key Stage 2 measures sit modestly above England averages on the combined expected standard, but the FindMySchool rank places the school below England average in the distribution. This can still be a good fit, but it is worth aligning expectations, especially for families prioritising elite attainment profiles.
Highly structured routines. Entry and exit are tightly organised by year group, with clear gates, doors, and times. Many families love this clarity; others may prefer a looser feel.
Faith character is real. As a Church of England school, spirituality and worship are part of the school’s stated identity. Families should make sure this aligns with what they want day to day.
This is a large Leeds primary that puts systems and family partnership at the centre of its model, and the evidence points to consistent expectations, strong routines, and an unusually specific enrichment offer. Best suited to families who want wraparound care, clear operational structure, and a school that communicates in detail about what it does and why. The main constraint is admission competition at Reception in oversubscribed years.
St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School's current KS2 profile is 50% at the combined reading, writing and mathematics expected standard, 10% at the combined higher standard, reading 70% expected (scaled score 104), maths 70% expected (scaled score 104), GPS 70% expected (scaled score 106), and science 80% expected. FindMySchool ranks it 10,999th of 14,978 primary schools in England for academic outcomes and 138th in Leeds locally.
For September 2027 Reception entry in Leeds, applications open on 1 November 2026, close on 15 January 2027, and offers are issued on 16 April 2027.
Recent admissions evidence indicates St Bartholomew's CofE Voluntary Controlled Primary School can be oversubscribed. Families should check Leeds' latest allocation data, understand priority criteria, and use realistic backup preferences.
Yes. Breakfast club starts at 07:00 with different daily charges depending on arrival time, and after-school club runs from 15:30 with pick-up options through to 17:30.
The school has nursery provision from age 3 and asks families to register interest via the school office for children who are age 3, or turning 3 by July 2026, with contact nearer the time. Nursery session times are published as a morning session (start window 08:30 to 08:40, finish 11:30) and an afternoon session (start window 12:30 to 12:35, finish 15:30). For nursery fee details, use the school’s official information.
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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.
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