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.
Leigh Central Primary School sits close to Leigh town centre and serves pupils aged 4 to 11 in a mixed, non-faith setting. The school moved into a new building in October 2009, and it shares the site with Leigh Central Children’s Centre, which matters for families wanting joined-up early years support and local services in one place.
The latest full inspection rated the school Good across all areas (quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years).
Academically, the picture is mixed but readable. At key stage 2 in 2024, 72.33% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 14.33% reached greater depth, compared with the England average of 8%. Reading is positioned as a core strength, with explicit whole-school routines and a strong early start.
On admissions, demand is real. In the most recent published figures used here for Reception entry, 76 applications resulted in 29 offers, which equates to 2.62 applications per place, and first preference demand exceeded places offered.
A clear message runs through the school’s own public material, every child should feel valued and respected, and home–school partnership is treated as central rather than optional. This emphasis is not just marketing language, it aligns with formal observations that new pupils settle quickly, relationships are positive, and expectations for conduct are explicit and consistently reinforced.
Day-to-day culture is shaped by high expectations for behaviour and routines. Pupils are expected to act thoughtfully and resolve minor disagreements with adult support. Bullying is described as rare, which is a useful indicator for parents, not because conflict never happens in primary settings, but because children appear to understand that staff will act quickly and consistently when it does.
Inclusion is a defining feature. Alongside mainstream classes, the school has a resourced provision called The Hive, established in September 2022 to support pupils with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and speech, language and communication needs (SLCN). The model described is practical rather than segregated, with a bespoke timetable for each child, a blend of small-group teaching and supported participation in mainstream lessons, and structured sensory breaks when needed. Interventions listed include Zones of Regulation, Attention Autism, Therapeutic Lego Club, Colourful Semantics, and fine motor programmes such as Dough Disco. For families with children who need predictable routines and specialist scaffolding, this level of transparency about what support looks like in practice is reassuring.
Leadership matters most in primary schools because it determines staff stability, classroom consistency, and the pace of improvement work. The headteacher is Mrs Dawn Hurst (also shown on official records). Public documents indicate she was in post by at least March 2017, and she remains the named headteacher in the most recent inspection documentation and on the school website.
For primary schools, the headline measure many parents look for is the percentage reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics at the end of Year 6. It is a blunt measure, but it gives a stable starting point. Scaled scores in reading and maths, and the percentage reaching the higher standard, add depth, especially for children who are either already advanced or who need targeted support.
Expected standard (reading, writing, maths combined): 72.33%, compared with an England average of 62%.
Higher standard (reading, writing, maths): 14.33%, compared with an England average of 8%.
Average scaled scores: Reading 103, Maths 102, GPS 105.
The implication is that core outcomes are above the England average, and the higher-standard figure suggests a meaningful proportion of pupils are being stretched, not simply guided to the threshold. For parents of children who are already confident readers and numerate, the published figures suggest there is some headroom beyond “meeting expected”.
Science is the outlier. 70% met the expected standard in science, below the England average of 82%. That does not necessarily mean science teaching is weak, but it does suggest either assessment outcomes dipped in that year, or that curriculum sequencing and retention in science may need additional attention.
Ranked 10,671st in England and 13th in Leigh for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking). This places the school below England average overall, in line with the wider percentile picture for this year’s ranking band. The important nuance is that the attainment snapshot above shows several positives, particularly in reading, writing and maths combined, even if overall ranking position is not in the upper tiers.
If you are comparing several local options, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you view these indicators side by side, including how much weight you want to give to combined measures versus subject-level details.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
72.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading is positioned as the organising “engine” of learning. The strongest indicators here are specific: early reading is explicitly prioritised, pupils practise regularly, books are chosen to match the sounds pupils are learning, and extra help is put in quickly when a child begins to fall behind. By the end of Year 2, most pupils are described as reading with fluency and expression. There is also a structured motivational hook, the “hundred books” challenge that pupils aim to complete by the end of Year 6. Taken together, that points to a school where reading is treated as a daily habit, not an occasional lesson slot.
Beyond English and maths, the curriculum is described as broad and ambitious, with careful sequencing in most subjects. Where it is less consistent, the improvement focus is also clearly defined: in a small number of subjects, the progression from early years into key stage 1 is not always engineered so that knowledge builds cleanly over time, which risks pupils repeating content rather than deepening it. For parents, the practical implication is that the quality of learning experiences is likely to feel strongest where subject leadership and sequencing are already established, with a smaller set of areas that are still being refined.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described for inclusion rather than withdrawal. Needs are identified quickly, and when appropriate, pupils follow the same ambitious curriculum as their peers, supported by targeted strategies and, for some, the more specialist timetable planning available through The Hive.
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, the main “destination” question is transition to secondary school rather than a formal set of named feeder destinations. The school’s own admissions and information pages emphasise visiting, early engagement, and structured settling-in routines for Reception, which usually correlates with stronger Year 6 transition planning too, even if the detail is not published openly.
If secondary transfer is a major concern for your family, the most useful next step is to cross-check your address against the relevant Wigan secondary options and their admission criteria, then ask directly about transition support, particularly for pupils with ASD or SLCN who may need additional planning.
Admissions for Reception are coordinated by Wigan Council rather than handled solely by the school. The school encourages families to visit before applying, and it typically runs an open day each November or December, with individual visits available outside that window.
For September 2026 entry (2026 to 2027 Reception cohort), Wigan’s published admissions timetable sets a closing date of 15 January 2026 for on-time applications, and applications are generally open from autumn into January.
To help children settle, the school describes a structured induction package for new starters, including a welcome meeting for families, INSPIRE sessions (taster sessions in the Reception classroom), and home visits. The practical implication is that families who engage early often get a smoother start, particularly children who are anxious about new environments or routines.
Demand is higher than supply in the most recent published figures used here for Reception entry, with 76 applications and 29 offers, and an oversubscribed status. If you are deciding whether to rely on this option, treat it as competitive and plan sensible alternatives on your local authority application.
85.2%
1st preference success rate
23 of 27 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
29
Offers
29
Applications
76
Pastoral content is best judged by whether children feel safe, whether adults act when issues arise, and whether wellbeing is supported as part of normal school life. The most recent inspection narrative describes pupils trusting adults to keep them safe, and it highlights a deliberate focus on mental health and wellbeing, including in early years. Pupils are taught to keep themselves physically and mentally healthy, and respectful behaviour is reinforced through school routines.
The resourced provision also matters here because it signals that the school has thought carefully about emotional regulation and communication needs. Interventions such as Zones of Regulation and social communication groups are as relevant to wellbeing as they are to learning, particularly for children who become dysregulated in busy classrooms or at unstructured times.
Leigh Central publishes a more detailed clubs offer than many primaries, and it is varied enough that most children should find something that fits. Sport is a major pillar and is organised in an accessible way, with short half-term courses designed to widen participation. The programme listed includes dodgeball, basketball, boxing, handball, bootcamp, “challenge champions”, football and athletics.
There is also a structured morning fitness option, Wake up and Shake Up, running 08:00 to 08:45 on Mondays and Fridays, aimed at getting pupils active before lessons. For working families, it can function as a light-touch pre-school routine, although it is not a full wraparound childcare offer.
Creative and cultural clubs are tangible too. Choir runs through much of the year, and pupils have previously had the opportunity to perform at the Young Voices concert in Manchester, which can be a genuinely memorable large-scale performance experience at primary age. Film Club and Recorder Club add lower-barrier entry points for children who want something social and creative without the intensity of competitive sport. Cooking Club is delivered as short courses focused on hygiene, preparation and healthy eating, with pupils taking samples home.
The school also references short-term clubs that have run previously, including STEM club, Minecraft, sewing and dance. The implication is that enrichment is not static, and it adapts to staff interests and pupil demand across the year.
The published opening times are 08:45 to 15:15, Monday to Friday, totalling 32.5 hours per typical week.
The school publishes its 2025 to 2026 holiday pattern, including an autumn start on 02 September 2025 and a spring start on 06 January 2026.
School meals are listed at £13.00 per week (£2.60 per day), with free school meals available for eligible families.
Active travel is actively promoted. The school reports Bronze level Modeshift STARS accreditation, encourages walking, cycling and public transport, and describes practical initiatives such as cycle and scooter parking, pedestrian training, and bicycle repair workshops. For families who drive, the travel guidance promotes “park and stride” to reduce congestion near the gates.
Dedicated breakfast club or after-school childcare hours are not clearly published as a standard offer. The school does publish morning activity provision and after-school clubs, but families needing guaranteed wraparound childcare should confirm availability, timings, and booking arrangements directly.
Competition for places. Reception entry is oversubscribed in the most recent published figures used here, at 2.62 applications per place. If you are set on this option, plan realistic alternatives on your application.
Science outcomes lag this year. The 2024 science expected-standard figure (70%) sits below the England average (82%). Parents of science-keen children may want to ask how science knowledge is sequenced and revisited across key stage 2.
Curriculum consistency varies by subject. The improvement focus highlights that a small number of subjects are still being refined so that learning builds cleanly from early years into Year 1 and beyond. Ask which subjects these are currently, and what has changed since the last inspection.
Wraparound clarity. The school day is clearly stated, and clubs are well described, but wraparound childcare provision is not presented as a standard service online. Working parents may need to triangulate school-based options with external childcare.
Leigh Central Primary School offers a reassuring combination for many families: a settled behaviour culture, a reading-first approach that is described in practical, specific terms, and a visible commitment to inclusion, including a resourced provision that supports pupils with ASD and SLCN. Results in reading, writing and maths combined are above England average, and the higher-standard figure suggests there is stretch for some pupils as well as support for those who need it.
It suits families who want a community primary with explicit routines, a clear focus on reading, and structured support for additional needs. The limiting factor is admission rather than what follows, so families should approach the application strategically and keep alternatives in view.
The most recent full inspection (June 2022) rated the school Good across all areas, including early years, behaviour, and leadership. Key stage 2 results in 2024 show 72.33% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%, with a higher-standard figure of 14.33% compared with 8% nationally.
Reception applications are coordinated through Wigan Council. For September 2026 entry, Wigan’s published timetable shows a closing date of 15 January 2026 for on-time applications. The school also indicates that admissions activity typically opens in early November and that it usually runs an open day in November or December.
Yes, in the most recent published figures used here for Reception entry there were 76 applications and 29 offers, which is more than two applications per place. In oversubscribed years, families should list multiple preferences and consider distance and other priority criteria used by the local authority.
In 2024, 72.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined (England average 62%). At the higher standard, 14.33% reached greater depth (England average 8%). Scaled scores were 103 in reading and 102 in maths, with 105 in grammar, punctuation and spelling.
The school lists a mix of sport and creative clubs. Sports courses include dodgeball, basketball, boxing, football and athletics, plus a Wake up and Shake Up morning activity on Mondays and Fridays from 08:00 to 08:45. Other named clubs include Choir (with past participation in Young Voices in Manchester), Film Club, Recorder Club, and short-course Cooking Club.
Get in touch with the school directly
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