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 lower school that puts community routines at the centre of the week, with assemblies and singing treated as a shared anchor point for pupils across ages 2 to 9. The school describes itself as a two-form entry setting and highlights specialist teaching in physical education and Spanish, plus Forest School within early years.
The most recent inspection outcome remains Requires Improvement, but it is not a blanket story. Behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision were graded Good, which matters for day-to-day experience in a school where children are still young and routines do a lot of the heavy lifting.
For families, the practical draw is clear. There is an in-house out-of-school club from 7.30am, with after-school care running to 5.30pm, and published session pricing that is straightforward to understand.
The school’s published values run through the calendar month by month, with a new value introduced each month, and children earning “Leedon Blues” that can be spent in a school shop for demonstrating those values in or out of school. Respect and perseverance are framed early in the year, with responsibility, honesty, and caring following.
This values structure is more than a poster exercise when it is paired with visible routines. External review content points to assemblies as a “very special” part of the day, and to singing as a shared experience that brings pupils and staff together. That kind of regular, whole-school rhythm often helps younger pupils settle quickly, especially those who are new to group learning.
The school also describes a small site bordered by housing and Brooklands Middle School, with a close working relationship between the two, which is relevant in a three-tier area where transition comes earlier than many parents expect.
Leadership is presented clearly on the school’s own pages, with Richard Benson named as head teacher. Where this matters for families is consistency. A stable leadership presence can make it easier to maintain routines, keep pastoral systems coherent, and sustain curriculum improvement work across multiple years, which is especially important in a school actively addressing improvement points from inspection.
Because this is a lower school (with pupils leaving at the end of Year 4), parents should not expect the same public end-of-primary results profile that a Year 6 school would have. That changes how you read “outcomes” here. The most useful lens is how securely children learn to read, write, calculate, and build learning habits that will transfer smoothly into the middle school phase.
Reading is positioned as a whole-school priority. The inspection report highlights early reading and phonics as an area where change is already having a positive impact, including close matching of reading books to the sounds pupils know, helping children build fluency and confidence.
The counterweight, and the reason the overall judgement remains Requires Improvement, is inconsistency as pupils move through the school. The same report describes variable quality in education across subjects, with gaps in knowledge forming when checking and addressing misconceptions is not consistently strong. For parents, the implication is practical: ask how teachers check learning in each year group, how quickly extra help is deployed, and how subject leaders monitor curriculum delivery beyond English and mathematics.
If you are comparing local schools, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can still help for side-by-side context (even where national end-of-primary measures are not a perfect fit for a lower school), particularly around inspection history and admissions pressure.
Curriculum intent is detailed on the school website and is unusually specific for a primary-phase setting. The school describes a themed approach, calling units “Learning Journeys”, and sets out design themes such as nurture and safety, health and wellbeing, and “low thresholds and high ceilings”, alongside independence and ambition.
In practice, there are named programmes. Mathematics is taught using Mathematics Mastery, English is based on high-quality key texts with Talk for Writing, and phonics follows Essential Letters and Sounds (ELS), described as a Department for Education approved scheme with progression through phases. This level of curriculum specificity is helpful for parents because it makes classroom approach easier to interrogate. You can ask, for example, how Talk for Writing is adapted for pupils who need more scaffolding, or how Mathematics Mastery is used to support pupils who grasp concepts quickly and need extension.
The inspection narrative also points to a newly planned, ambitious curriculum with sequencing in place from early years through Year 4, but with monitoring systems still developing. The implication is that the “what” is in place, but the “how consistently it lands” is the key question. Families considering the school should focus less on broad claims and more on routines: how teachers revisit prior learning, how they check understanding, and how leaders spot variability between classes early enough to respond.
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.
In a lower school, “destination” is immediate and local: the move into middle school. The school states that it works closely with Brooklands Middle School and that a majority of children move on there when they leave.
That relationship can be a real advantage. When schools coordinate expectations, it can reduce transition anxiety for pupils and simplify planning for parents, especially around curriculum continuity and pastoral handover. A good question to ask is how transition support works in practice for Year 4 pupils, including visits, shared events, and how additional needs are communicated and supported.
For children moving into a different middle school, parents should ask what information is shared, and whether there is any flexibility in transition plans for children who need more gradual change.
This is a state school, there are no tuition fees.
Admissions for the normal point of entry are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire Council, with the school directing families to the local authority’s admissions arrangements. The published deadline for on-time applications for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026.
Demand data indicates the school is oversubscribed, with 75 applications recorded against 46 offers in the available admissions snapshot. Competition at that level tends to make small differences matter, particularly where distance, sibling priority, or defined admission criteria come into play.
The school also promotes tours with the head teacher and has previously advertised a reception new parents evening and tour weeks in November for the relevant intake year. Those dates were published for the 2026 start cycle, so families should treat early November and mid-to-late November as typical timing, and check the current year’s calendar before planning.
For families trying to sanity-check their chances, the FindMySchoolMap Search is useful for measuring your distance consistently, then comparing it with historical offer patterns where available. (Distances can change year to year, so treat any single year as guidance rather than certainty.)
Applications
75
Total received
Places Offered
46
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Apps per place
Pastoral support is described as integrated into the curriculum, with a focus on social and emotional development alongside learning. The school outlines both whole-class approaches (PSHE and relationships education) and targeted interventions.
The published intervention menu is specific: nurture group, friendship group, emotional literacy work, self-esteem and confidence groups, self-regulation and resilience support, protective behaviours intervention, counselling, and play therapy. For parents, this is helpful because it points to a school that expects needs to vary and builds structured responses rather than improvising case by case.
SEND support is also discussed as early identification plus quick mobilisation of help, with adaptations aimed at keeping pupils on the same curriculum where possible, and external agency support used when needed.
The most recent inspection confirmed that safeguarding is effective.
Clubs and experiences matter in a lower school because they broaden confidence and language quickly. External review material lists clubs including gardening, film making, sports, and guitar lessons, and also references a choir performing at Wembley Arena. That combination is telling. It suggests extracurricular is not confined to a single pillar, and that pupils can access both practical activities and performance opportunities.
On the curriculum side, the school highlights specialist teaching in physical education and Spanish, and Forest School in early years. The implication for families is range: children who thrive through movement, outdoor learning, or language often do better when those experiences are not squeezed into the margins of the week.
The school day is published, but parents should note that two pages present timings differently. One schedule states an 8.40am start and a 3.15pm finish for pupils (Reception through Year 4). Another states doors open from 8.35am for drop-off and 3.30pm for pick-up, and adds an early finish on Fridays at 1.30pm. If you are arranging childcare, confirm the current pattern directly with the school.
Wraparound care is a clear strength. The out-of-school club opens at 7.30am and runs after school until 5.30pm. Published pricing is £4.00 for the before-school session and £4.00 per hour after school, with flexible booking described.
For transport, the school references multiple gates for drop-off and specific access for the early years setting. On a small residential site, it is sensible to assume parking and congestion can be a pinch point at peak times, so ask about safe walking routes and any preferred drop-off routines.
Inspection picture is mixed. The school remains Requires Improvement overall, with strengths in behaviour, personal development, and early years, but with inconsistency in the quality of education identified as the core issue to solve.
Lower school transition comes earlier. Pupils leave after Year 4, and the school expects many children to move on to Brooklands Middle School. This suits families comfortable with the three-tier rhythm; others may prefer a setting that runs to Year 6.
High demand relative to places. The available admissions snapshot shows oversubscription. If you are applying for the normal point of entry, be realistic about competition and keep backup preferences.
** Published pages differ on finish times and Friday arrangements. If childcare is tight, confirm the current schedule and wraparound availability before committing.
Leedon Lower School reads as a school with strong routines, clear values, and practical support for working families through a well-defined wraparound offer. The improvement task is consistency in teaching and curriculum delivery across the school, and parents should probe how monitoring, subject leadership, and classroom checking are now working day to day.
Who it suits: families who want a values-led lower school experience, with earlier transition into middle school, and who value structured wraparound care alongside a curriculum that names its methods and programmes.
It has clear strengths in day-to-day culture, especially behaviour, personal development, and early years provision, which were all graded Good in the most recent inspection cycle. The overall judgement remains Requires Improvement, driven by inconsistency in the quality of education as pupils move through the school.
Applications for the normal point of entry are made through Central Bedfordshire Council using the coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the published on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, with offer day on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The out-of-school club runs from 7.30am and provides after-school care until 5.30pm. Published pricing is £4.00 for the morning session and £4.00 per hour after school.
The published pupil timetable indicates an 8.40am start and 3.15pm finish, but another school page also references doors opening earlier and a different pick-up time, plus an early finish on Fridays. If your arrangements depend on precise times, confirm the current pattern directly with the school.
The school states that a majority of pupils move on to Brooklands Middle School and that the schools work closely together, which can help transition feel predictable for children.
Get in touch with the school directly
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