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.
Small schools live or die by clarity. With a published capacity of 70 pupils, Shobdon Primary School is sized so that staff can track each child closely, routines can stay consistent, and class groupings can be flexed sensibly when cohorts are uneven. That matters because small cohorts can also make year-to-year results look jumpy. Here, the most recent published Key Stage 2 picture is reassuring, especially in reading, where outcomes and scaled scores point to secure early literacy and a curriculum that builds skills steadily through the juniors.
The latest formal inspection found the school to be Good across all reported areas, including quality of education and safeguarding culture. Leadership is structured through a federation model, with an executive headteacher overseeing the schools within the partnership, a setup that can bring shared expertise and continuity in a rural area.
For families shortlisting village primaries in north Herefordshire, the question is usually fit rather than headline flash. This is a school for children who thrive with familiar faces, clear expectations, and a curriculum that takes reading seriously.
Shobdon’s identity is closely tied to being small, local, and practical. In a school of this scale, pupils quickly become known for what they enjoy and what they need, and older children often take on visible responsibility simply because there are fewer layers between pupil and staff. That can translate into confidence for pupils who like being trusted, and reassurance for parents who value straightforward communication.
The school sits within the Luston and Shobdon federation, and the leadership structure reflects that. The federation model is not just governance detail, it shapes how capacity is created in a small setting, for example by sharing curriculum leadership, policies, staff development, and specialist expertise across two schools rather than trying to duplicate everything in one small site.
Leadership is currently listed through the federation as Executive Headteacher Mary Freeman. Earlier official documentation for the school describes the executive headteacher appointment as beginning in September 2017, aligned with the federation arrangement, which helps explain the stability of the current model.
School culture in primaries is often best evidenced by what is prioritised. Here, the website emphasis on early reading leadership roles, structured subject pages, and practical wraparound arrangements signals a school that leans into core learning, routines, and family logistics rather than branding.
For a primary school, the most useful starting point is the combined reading, writing and mathematics measure at Key Stage 2, because it reflects whether pupils are leaving Year 6 ready for secondary school work across the basics.
In the most recent published results 66.67% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The England average is 62%, so Shobdon sits above that benchmark. At the higher standard, 23% achieved greater depth across reading, writing and mathematics, well above the England average figure of 8%. That higher standard figure is an important signal in a small school because it suggests the curriculum is not only supporting pupils to meet the expected threshold, it is also stretching those ready for more demanding work.
The underlying scaled scores reinforce the same story. Reading is 104 and mathematics is 102, both above the typical England reference point of 100 used for scaled scores. Grammar, punctuation and spelling sits at 105. In plain terms, that combination tends to reflect secure phonics foundations, a structured approach to reading comprehension, and consistent practice in spelling and sentence accuracy over time.
Rankings need careful handling. Shobdon is ranked 10,146th in England for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), and 7th within the local area. That places performance below England average overall within this particular ranking framework, while still showing several strong outcome indicators in the attainment measures above. The practical takeaway for parents is that small-cohort primaries can sit lower in rank even when the percentages look healthy, because one or two pupils can shift outcomes materially. It is sensible to read the rank alongside the attainment breakdown rather than treating it as the single story.
If you are comparing nearby primaries, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool are useful for lining up results side by side without switching between multiple sites.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
66.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Strong primary teaching is usually visible in sequencing, the order in which knowledge and skills are introduced and revisited. Shobdon’s results profile suggests a curriculum that keeps literacy as the organising spine, with reading and writing built deliberately year on year, and maths taught in a way that supports steady progress rather than last-minute Year 6 intensity.
A useful indicator is the balance between expected standard and higher standard outcomes. When higher standard is meaningfully above the England benchmark, it often implies pupils are being offered extension tasks that go beyond simple test preparation. In practice, that can mean more sophisticated comprehension work in reading, richer vocabulary, longer-form writing expectations, and maths tasks that require reasoning and multi-step problem solving.
Early reading is explicitly foregrounded through named leadership roles on the federation curriculum pages, which often correlates with consistent phonics routines and careful book progression, the unglamorous mechanics that tend to produce the most reliable reading outcomes over time.
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 Herefordshire primary, most families will be thinking about transition to local secondary provision, travel time, and how prepared children feel socially as well as academically. Shobdon’s attainment profile suggests pupils should move into Year 7 with secure basics, particularly in reading, which is the single most important enabler of secondary success across subjects.
What parents should do next is practical. Ask the school which secondaries pupils most commonly move on to, and how transition is handled for a small cohort where friendship groups can be tight. In small schools, transition support matters because pupils are often moving from a familiar setting into a much larger environment. Good primaries prepare children for that change with visits, routines around independence, and a clear expectation that pupils can organise themselves.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Herefordshire, not directly through the school, and Shobdon is described as oversubscribed in the most recent entry-route snapshot. In that results, there were 18 applications for 10 offers, a ratio of 1.8 applications per place. That is not a mass-market competition level, but it is enough to make early planning sensible if you are outside the immediate village.
The school’s admissions page signposts the familiar local-authority pattern, with applications typically opening in September and closing on 15 January for entry the following September. For September 2026 entry, that usually means applying in autumn 2025 with a January 2026 deadline, but families should always confirm the exact dates on the local authority portal for the current cycle.
If you are weighing proximity-based allocation, use FindMySchoolMap Search to check your likely distance to the school gates and understand how that compares with historic patterns in the area. Shobdon’s last-distance figure is not available provided, so distance-based expectations should be tested using the current admissions arrangements and local authority guidance rather than assumptions.
83.3%
1st preference success rate
10 of 12 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
10
Offers
10
Applications
18
Pastoral strength in small schools is often about speed of response. When staff numbers are limited but stable, concerns can be spotted quickly and addressed before they escalate. The latest inspection outcome supports a picture of a school meeting expected standards of safeguarding and wider provision, and rated Good across the published areas.
For parents, the key practical question is how the school supports pupils who need extra help, academically or emotionally, given the limited scale. Ask about how additional needs are identified, what targeted support looks like in mixed-age classes if those occur, and how the school works with external services. In rural areas, that coordination can matter as much as what happens in the classroom.
In small primaries, enrichment has to be planned carefully. Too many clubs can be unsustainable, too few can feel limiting. Shobdon’s wraparound and club structure looks designed for feasibility: after-school clubs are advertised as running from 3.15pm to 4.15pm, and there is also an After School Squad provision extending to 4.45pm, which is more directly about childcare and supervised activities.
Forest School is a defining feature. The school describes it as giving children time outdoors to learn practical skills, including safe tool use and fire lighting, alongside cooperative work and confidence building. That is not just a nice-to-have. Done well, Forest School supports oracy, teamwork, and resilience, particularly for pupils who learn best through doing and for those who benefit from regulated time outside.
The federation also highlights Eco-Schools activity and a wider set of curricular and enrichment pages. In a small school, these programmes can act as shared language across year groups, so older pupils can model routines and younger pupils can step into them quickly.
The published school-day outline shows an 8.45am start with the school day ending at 3.15pm. Breakfast Club is listed as starting at 8.00am and running until the school day begins, supporting families who need earlier drop-off. After School Squad runs from 3.15pm to 4.45pm, with advance booking required.
Transport is an everyday consideration in rural Herefordshire. The right question is not simply distance, it is whether the school day and wraparound timetable aligns with work patterns and with any older siblings’ travel to secondary schools. The school website includes a transport section for families to consult, and it is worth checking that alongside local authority arrangements.
Small-cohort volatility. Results can shift year to year when cohorts are small. Look at several indicators together, including the balance of expected and higher standard outcomes, and ask how the school tracks progress across mixed attainment levels.
Oversubscription risk. The most recent admissions snapshot indicates more applications than offers. If you are not local, apply early and be realistic about allocation rules and priority criteria.
Wraparound scope. The school offers Breakfast Club and an after-school option, but timings may not cover all working patterns. Check whether the club mix varies by term and whether places are limited.
Federation structure. Federation leadership can be a strength, but parents should understand who is on-site day to day and how decisions are made between the two schools within the partnership.
Shobdon Primary School suits families who want a small, rural primary with clear routines, a strong emphasis on reading, and practical enrichment such as Forest School. The most recent published attainment indicators are reassuring, especially at the higher standard, and the latest inspection outcome is Good across all areas reported. Best suited to children who benefit from familiar relationships, consistent expectations, and a setting where being known is part of the design.
The most recent inspection outcome was Good, with the school rated Good across the published areas including quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. The most recent published attainment profile is also positive, particularly in reading and in the higher standard measure at Key Stage 2.
Primary admissions are managed through Herefordshire’s coordinated process, and places are allocated using the published oversubscription criteria when applications exceed places. The best approach is to read the current local authority criteria carefully and confirm how distance, siblings, and other priorities are applied for the relevant year of entry.
Yes. Breakfast Club is listed as starting at 8.00am, and After School Squad is listed as running from 3.15pm to 4.45pm, with booking required. After-school clubs are also described separately, typically running 3.15pm to 4.15pm.
Applications are made through Herefordshire’s coordinated admissions process. The school indicates the usual pattern of applications opening in September and closing on 15 January for entry the following September. Always confirm the exact dates for the current cycle with the local authority.
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Disclaimer
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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