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 large, inclusive primary serving families in New Parks, with an unusually strong emphasis on Early Years environment and routine. The school is part of the L.E.A.D. Academy Trust, having joined in 2024, and the trust context matters because it has coincided with visible investment in the youngest phase, including a refurbishment of Early Years learning spaces.
Leadership is stable and clearly signposted. The headteacher is Mrs Helen Nott, supported by a senior leadership team that includes a deputy headteacher and two assistant headteachers.
For admissions, the key headline is that Reception entry is competitive rather than extreme. In the most recent local application cycle provided here, there were 92 applications for 60 offers, which equates to 1.53 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. This points to steady demand from local families, plus the usual uncertainty that comes with distance and sibling patterns.
The strongest, most distinctive thread running through the school’s public information is a focus on creating calm, welcoming conditions for learning, especially for Nursery and Reception. The school has recently highlighted improvements to Early Years spaces, describing calmer classrooms and a more welcoming feel after refurbishment, with design choices aimed at making the rooms practical and comfortable for young children.
That emphasis on environment is matched by a fairly explicit picture of how the school wants children to feel. The safeguarding and personal development messaging talks about teaching children how to keep themselves safe, how to speak up if they feel unsafe, and how this is reinforced through taught programmes and assemblies rather than left to chance.
For families who value day to day communication, the SEND page sets a clear tone, it describes an open door approach for speaking to staff, and it frames support as something that involves parents early rather than only when difficulties escalate.
A final contextual point is scale. The academy is a sizeable primary, with capacity published at 472 pupils, which usually means wider friendship groups and more structured systems, but also less of the small school feel some families prefer.
For this review, the available results does not include current Key Stage 2 performance figures or a FindMySchool England ranking for primary outcomes. That means it is not possible to make evidence based claims about attainment compared with England averages, or about where the school sits locally on published results, without guessing. The more responsible approach is to focus on what is verifiable about curriculum intent, implementation, and external quality assurance, then explain what parents should look for when visiting.
The most recent published full inspection report associated with the predecessor school was carried out on 26 to 27 March 2019 and judged the school as Requires improvement overall, with Early years provision graded Good.
Ofsted’s current listing for the academy’s URN shows that there is no published report yet for the academy itself. In practical terms, families should treat the 2019 report as historical context rather than a definitive picture of today’s school, particularly given academy conversion and trust change since then.
What parents can do with confidence is probe for evidence in three places during any visit or conversation:
How reading is taught in the early stages, and how quickly children who fall behind are identified.
How writing stamina and vocabulary are built from Year 1 upwards, not only in English lessons but across the wider curriculum.
How teachers check retention, particularly in foundation subjects, and whether pupils can explain key knowledge confidently.
The school’s published curriculum information gives a clue about that last point, it refers to knowledge organisers and a curriculum built around skills, knowledge and character education. If those systems are consistently used, you should expect children, especially in Key Stage 2, to be able to explain what they have learned using accurate vocabulary, not just complete tasks.
The curriculum is presented as a blend of knowledge, skill development, and character education. The most useful takeaway for parents is not the slogan, but the implication that lessons should build cumulatively, with deliberate revisiting and practice, rather than constantly switching topics without retrieval.
The website makes it easy to see the intended breadth of subjects. Beyond English and maths, it lists modern foreign languages, computing, geography, history, design and technology, art and design, music, personal, social, health and citizenship education, and PE. For a mainstream state primary, that breadth matters because it indicates whether pupils will leave Year 6 with secure background knowledge in the wider curriculum, which in turn affects confidence in Year 7.
In Key Stage 2, routine and clarity look central. Year group pages outline daily routines and refer directly to knowledge organisers that set out key facts and vocabulary, plus an expectation that children can explain these confidently by the end of each unit. This is a strong sign of structured teaching, if it is implemented well, it tends to support pupils who need explicit clarity, including many pupils with SEND or English as an additional language.
In Early Years, the school highlights purposeful play and exploration. That can mean many things in practice, so the best family question is, how does the setting move children from play based learning into early phonics and number fluency without creating stress. The school’s published information for Nursery includes funded hours and session timings, which suggests the unit is designed to accommodate both part time and extended entitlement patterns, a practical detail that often shapes the daily rhythm of the room.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Requires Improvement
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Leicester City primary, most pupils will typically move on to a range of local secondary schools depending on address, sibling links, and admissions criteria. The most accurate advice for families is to check the Leicester City secondary admissions arrangements for your address, then sanity check the journey time and transport options.
What the school can and should be expected to do is focus on transition readiness. In practice, that means secure reading comprehension, writing stamina, number fluency, and enough wider curriculum knowledge that pupils can access secondary subjects like science and history without feeling lost from day one. The school’s emphasis on knowledge organisers and vocabulary recall is a positive indicator for that kind of readiness, if it is used consistently across year groups.
If your child has additional needs, transition planning becomes more important. The school’s SEND information refers to an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA) and links to mental health support teams, which suggests a level of pastoral structure that can be helpful during the Year 6 to Year 7 shift, particularly for anxiety.
Reception entry is coordinated through Leicester City Council rather than directly through the school. The school’s own admissions information is explicit that children attending Nursery do not transfer automatically into Reception, a separate school application is required.
For the 2026 to 2027 normal admissions round in Leicester City, the published closing date for infant and primary applications is 15 January 2026, and the offer date is 16 April 2026. These dates are set by the local authority, so they are the ones families should anchor to.
The school’s admissions policy confirms an agreed admission number of 60 pupils for Reception. Oversubscription is handled through published criteria including priority for children with an Education, Health and Care Plan that names the school, looked after and previously looked after children, and then criteria relating to catchment, siblings, and staff children, with distance used as a tie break.
Demand data supports the idea that competition is real but not off the charts. With 92 applications for 60 places, you should expect some families to be disappointed in an oversubscribed year, even though the ratio is not at the level seen in the most oversubscribed city primaries. This is a good use case for FindMySchool’s Map Search, which helps families understand how their precise home location compares with typical distance based allocation patterns, even when the furthest distance at which a place was offered is not available.
Open events are not always published far in advance, and dates can become stale quickly. The school has previously advertised an Early Years open evening in December for a September intake, so families considering Nursery or Reception should look for open events around that time of year, then confirm the current year’s details on the school’s website.
100%
1st preference success rate
55 of 55 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
92
Pastoral care is easiest to evidence through published structures and specialist roles rather than general claims. Here, the school’s SEND information points to several concrete supports: enrichment activities for some pupils with SEND, an ELSA role, access to anxiety clinic counselling sessions for Year 6, and potential referral routes into NHS or local mental health support services. This combination suggests that wellbeing support is not an afterthought, and that there are stepped options rather than a single one size approach.
Safeguarding messaging is also unusually detailed for a primary school website. The safeguarding curriculum document describes teaching children how to stay safe and what to do if they feel unsafe, supported through taught programmes and assemblies, plus enrichment such as forest school sessions and a Year 6 trip referenced as part of safeguarding learning. For parents, the implication is that personal development is planned rather than reactive.
Attendance expectations are described clearly, including the expectation that appointments should be arranged outside school time where possible, plus links to education welfare support. This matters because in many primaries, consistent attendance is a leading indicator of progress for pupils who need routine and repetition.
Extracurricular life is where schools can reveal their priorities. Here, the evidence points to a blend of sport, creativity, and targeted enrichment.
For clubs, the school publishes after school club timetables and lists that include activities such as cricket club supported by Leicestershire County Cricket, and Little Voices music theatre for Years 3 to 6, alongside football provision. These named examples are helpful because they show the school is not only relying on in house staff, it is also bringing in external providers for specialist experiences.
For pupils who benefit from additional structure, enrichment is also framed as part of inclusion. The inclusion provision menu references targeted groups such as Lego club and nurture style provision, alongside other support activities aimed at emotional wellbeing and confidence. Even if your child does not need these supports, their existence often contributes to calmer classrooms because pupils who need extra help are not left to struggle silently.
In Early Years, the school highlights partnerships with local organisations and clubs in the context of health and wellbeing campaigns. While this is not the same thing as a full programme of trips and visitors, it does suggest that the school looks outward into the local community rather than operating as a closed bubble.
The school publishes detailed timings for Nursery and for the main school day. Nursery sessions are shown as morning 8.45am to 11.45am and afternoon 12.00 noon to 3.00pm, with funded 15 to 30 hours subject to eligibility.
For Reception and Key Stage 1, children arrive from 8.40am, register is at 8.45am and closes at 8.55am, with the school day finishing at 3.15pm. These timings, especially the firm register close time, matter for families managing work schedules and punctuality.
Breakfast and after school provision is referenced across policy and strategy documents, but the website does not present a single, always current page with the standard public timings for wraparound care. If wraparound is crucial for your family, ask directly about hours, booking process, and whether places are limited, particularly for Nursery and Reception.
Inspection information is dated for the predecessor school. The last published full inspection report connected to the earlier URN is from March 2019, and Ofsted does not currently show a published report yet for the academy’s URN. Families should read the older report as context, then look for current evidence through visits, conversations, and up to date school information.
Reception entry is oversubscribed. The available demand data shows more applications than places, 92 applications for 60 offers, so some families will miss out in a popular year. It is sensible to list realistic alternative schools on your local authority application.
Nursery does not guarantee Reception. Nursery places can be attractive, particularly with the session options and funded hours messaging, but the admissions policy is explicit that a separate Reception application is required.
The school is large. With a published capacity of 472, systems and structure matter. This can suit children who benefit from routine and breadth of peers, but some families prefer smaller settings with a more intimate feel.
St Mary’s Fields Academy looks most compelling for families who want a mainstream state primary with clear routines, a structured approach to curriculum knowledge, and visible attention to Early Years environment. The school’s published information suggests planned pastoral support, including emotional literacy and targeted wellbeing options, which can be a real differentiator for children who need extra reassurance.
Who it suits: families in and around New Parks looking for a large, inclusive primary with a strong Early Years offer and a practical, systems led approach to day to day schooling.
The available evidence points to a school with clear systems, a focus on wellbeing and safeguarding education, and visible investment in Early Years spaces since joining L.E.A.D. Academy Trust in 2024. The most recent published full inspection report linked to the predecessor school was in March 2019 and judged Requires improvement, while Ofsted’s current listing for the academy’s URN shows no published report yet, so families should rely heavily on current visits and up to date school information.
The school uses catchment as part of its oversubscription criteria, alongside priorities such as Education, Health and Care Plans, looked after children, and siblings. Where applications cannot be separated by criteria, distance to the school gates is used as a tie break. For the most accurate answer for your address, check Leicester City Council’s admissions information and ask the school how catchment is defined for the current year.
Applications for full time school places, including Reception, are made through Leicester City Council as part of the coordinated admissions process. If your child attends the Nursery, they do not move automatically into Reception, you still need to apply through the normal route.
Yes. The school advertises Nursery places with morning sessions 8.45am to 11.45am and afternoon sessions 12.00 noon to 3.00pm. It also refers to funded 15 to 30 hours for eligible families. For any paid additional hours and current availability, contact the school directly.
Yes. The school publishes timetables for after school activities, including examples such as cricket club supported by Leicestershire County Cricket and Little Voices music theatre for Years 3 to 6. Club offers typically change by term, so it is worth checking the most recent timetable.
Get in touch with the school directly
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