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.
Westwood First School serves children from age 5 to 9 in Leek’s three tier system, so its core job is to get pupils reading fluently, writing with confidence, and ready for the step up to middle school at the end of Year 4. The school’s identity is strongly values-led, with a long running Rights Respecting approach rooted in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and Gold reaccreditation confirmed in January 2023.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (19 and 20 September 2023) judged the school Good across all areas, including early years. Families considering Westwood should expect a structured day, clear routines, and an emphasis on character alongside academic foundations, with school life shaped by trips, clubs, and pupil leadership roles.
As a state school, there are no tuition fees. The practical costs to plan for are the usual ones, such as uniform, lunches, wraparound care, and trips.
A values-first culture is the clearest thread running through Westwood. The school’s stated aim, “To be the best we can be”, is not presented as a slogan, it is tied to equality, dignity, and respect, and connected explicitly to children’s rights. In practice, that makes day-to-day expectations easier for younger pupils to grasp. Behaviour routines can be framed as fairness and responsibility, not just compliance.
Pupil leadership is also used deliberately at an age where confidence can rise quickly when children are trusted with real roles. Westwood highlights responsibilities such as playground buddies and arts ambassadors, and these kinds of roles usually land well in a first school because they are concrete. A pupil can help a younger child at playtime, or support tidy, calm transitions, and see the impact immediately. The implication for parents is that personal development is not an add-on; it is built into how the school runs.
The Trust context matters here. Westwood is part of The Talentum Learning Trust, and the inspection report describes Trust involvement in understanding the school and providing support, including governance support and collaboration across schools. For families, this can be reassuring when it translates into stable systems, shared training, and consistent expectations.
Because Westwood is a first school, pupils leave at the end of Year 4, not Year 6. That matters for how parents interpret “results” conversations. The national end of Key Stage 2 tests take place at the end of Year 6, so they sit beyond Westwood’s age range. The more useful indicators for this phase are the quality of early reading, curriculum sequencing, and how reliably children build knowledge over time.
Reading is positioned as central to school life, with staff training in early reading referenced in the inspection evidence. For parents, the practical question is not only whether a child can decode, but whether reading becomes a habit. Schools that read stories regularly, make phonics practice routine, and choose books that align well to taught sounds tend to produce more secure, confident readers.
If you are shortlisting locally, it is sensible to treat Westwood’s outcomes as “readiness” outcomes. Does your child leave at 9 with strong reading fluency, accurate spelling habits, and enough mathematical confidence to manage a step up in pace? That is the real benchmark for this phase.
Parents comparing local schools may find it useful to use the FindMySchool local comparison tools to line up inspection profiles, admissions pressure, and school context side-by-side, particularly where direct test data is not a like-for-like comparison because of the different age ranges.
The strongest first schools make the early years and Key Stage 1 work feel intentional, not like a holding pattern before “proper learning” begins. Westwood’s curriculum intent, as described through inspection evidence, is structured and sequenced, with early years treated as the starting point for later knowledge. That is a useful sign, because gaps formed at 5 to 7 can be expensive to fix later.
Two themes stand out.
First, language and vocabulary. Early years teaching that deliberately immerses children in language, and builds vocabulary consistently, usually improves writing quality later on, because children have more words to think with. Second, routine practice. The school’s emphasis on punctual arrival because children otherwise miss daily phonics, reading, and spelling points to a consistent, systematic approach rather than occasional bursts of intervention.
For families, the implication is straightforward. If your child thrives on clarity and repetition, with small daily steps that accumulate, Westwood’s style is likely to suit. If your child struggles with routine, you will want to understand how the school supports regulation and engagement at the start and end of the day.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Westwood pupils move on at the end of Year 4, which is earlier than in areas with primary schools to Year 6. Transition, therefore, is not a single summer event, it is a key part of the Year 4 experience.
The best route for parents is to look at the middle school options you are likely to use and ask how the handover works in practice. A strong transition process includes shared information about attainment, pastoral notes, and practical familiarisation, so children know what the next environment feels like before they arrive.
If you are considering a move into the area or weighing up longer-term planning, treat Westwood as the first step in a pathway. A good first school choice is one that aligns with your likely middle school choice, because consistency matters for children at 9.
Reception entry is coordinated through Staffordshire’s admissions service rather than directly by the school. Even if a child attends the pre-school provision on site, families still need to complete the Reception application through the local authority route.
Demand for places is meaningful. In the most recently reported cycle, there were 86 applications for 41 offers, which equates to about 2.1 applications per place. That ratio is high enough that parents should approach admission as competitive rather than routine, particularly if the number of places is stable year to year.
For September 2026 entry in Staffordshire, the published local authority deadline for primary applications is 15 January 2026, with National Offer Day on 16 April 2026. If you are relying on this school as a housing decision factor, the FindMySchoolMap Search can help you understand how your address sits relative to other applicants, but it is still important to treat allocations as year-specific.
Applications
86
Total received
Places Offered
41
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
At first school age, “pastoral” often means practical responsiveness. Can staff spot early anxieties, help children settle, and intervene before a small friendship wobble becomes a long-running fear of school?
Westwood’s rights-respecting emphasis supports a child-friendly language for talking about behaviour and relationships. The school also encourages families to raise concerns early and describes an open-door approach, with class teachers as the first port of call. This matters because issues at this age are often best resolved quickly with low drama and clear routines.
Safeguarding is confirmed as effective in the most recent inspection evidence. For parents, the useful follow-up question is operational rather than philosophical: what are the channels for sharing concerns, and how does the school communicate when incidents happen?
For younger pupils, enrichment works best when it is frequent and concrete. Westwood’s enrichment profile is built around trips and clubs, with examples including theatre visits, museums, and gardens, plus clubs such as choir, sports, and arts.
The calendar also signals the kind of “big moments” that stick in primary-aged memories, such as performance events and organised trips. These experiences do more than entertain. They build vocabulary, give children something to write about, and help them practise social confidence outside the classroom.
Pupil responsibility roles also sit in this space. Playground buddies and arts ambassadors are not just badges. They are structured opportunities to practise leadership safely, which often helps quieter children find a voice and helps confident children learn service, patience, and responsibility.
The school day timings are clearly defined. Doors open at 8.40am, the school day starts at 8.50am, and the day ends at 3.20pm, with gates opening for collection at 3.10pm.
Wraparound care is available on site but is run by a separate provider, Westwood Pre-School and Kid’s Club. Morning drop-offs can start at 7.30am and after-school collection runs up to 6.00pm. This arrangement can be convenient for working families, but it is worth checking booking processes and availability early, especially if you need multiple days per week.
Parking expectations are strict. The school asks families not to park on the school grounds and highlights the safety and legal issues around stopping on zig zags and yellow lines. If you drive, plan your approach and build in time for a short walk.
It is a first school, not a primary to Year 6. The move to middle school at the end of Year 4 suits many children, but parents should plan for an earlier transition and understand the pathway options.
Admissions pressure is real. With 86 applications for 41 offers in the latest cycle, places cannot be assumed, and timelines matter.
Early reading consistency is a key watchpoint. The inspection evidence highlights the importance of matching reading books closely to taught sounds. Ask how this is managed now and how families are guided to support reading at home.
Wraparound care is separate. On-site provision is helpful, but it is not run directly by the school, so processes and policies may differ.
Westwood First School looks like a well-organised first school with a clear values framework, strong attention to early foundations, and a broad, memorable set of experiences for younger pupils. Best suited to families who want a structured start to schooling, value a rights-respecting culture, and are comfortable planning schooling as a pathway through the Leek three-tier system. The main challenge is securing a place in a competitive admissions picture.
Westwood First School was judged Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection in September 2023, with Good grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. The school also presents a strong values identity through its Rights Respecting approach, which shapes expectations and pupil responsibility.
Reception applications are coordinated through Staffordshire’s admissions service rather than being made directly to the school. If your child attends the on-site pre-school, you still need to submit the formal Reception application through the local authority route.
For children starting school in September 2026, Staffordshire’s published closing date is 15 January 2026. Offers are issued on National Offer Day, 16 April 2026.
Yes, wraparound care is available on site, but it is run by a separate provider. Morning drop-offs can start at 7.30am and after-school collection can run up to 6.00pm. Families should check availability and booking arrangements directly with the provider.
Children can come into school from 8.40am, the school day starts at 8.50am, and the day ends at 3.20pm, with gates opening for collection at 3.10pm.
Get in touch with the school directly
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