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.
This is a small primary where scale is part of the point. With around 80 pupils on roll against a capacity of 105, children tend to be known quickly and routines can feel settled. The school sits within The Spires Federation, which means some leadership and staff development runs across partner schools, while day-to-day life remains rooted in Dunston.
A Ofsted inspection in February 2023 confirmed the school continues to be Good, and safeguarding was judged effective. For families, a practical headline is the on-site breakfast and after-school provision that runs from 7:30am and extends to 6:00pm, which is unusually helpful for a smaller village primary.
The strongest impression, in official accounts, is of a small, community-focused school that takes pride in being personal and purposeful. In its February 2023 visit, the inspection team described leaders, governors and staff as proud of the school’s community role, with lessons geared towards aspiration and confidence. That combination, close relationships plus an outward-looking tone, tends to suit families who want a village school feel without narrowing children’s horizons.
As a Church of England school, faith is not an add-on. The school’s own messaging puts Christian belonging front and centre, using the language of “school family” and shared responsibility. The most recent Statutory Inspection of Anglican and Methodist Schools (SIAMS) report, dated 19 March 2025, highlights a culture of aspiration and a curriculum that supports resilience and confidence, with close links to Dunston St Peter’s Church. Importantly for mixed-faith families, the same report also notes pupils learning about world faiths and benefiting from first-hand visits that build respect for difference.
There is also a practical “small-school” reality here. Staffing, clubs, and even published performance information can vary more year to year in a school of this size because cohorts are small and teachers often wear more than one hat. That is not a weakness in itself, but it does mean parents should look for consistency in routines, curriculum planning, and communication, rather than expecting the breadth you would get from a much larger primary.
Published key stage data can be harder to interpret for a small primary because cohorts may be too small for stable patterns, and some figures are sometimes suppressed nationally to protect pupil privacy. In those situations, the best indicators become curriculum quality, reading foundations, and how effectively teaching identifies gaps and misconceptions.
The most recent inspection provides useful detail on what learning looks like in practice. Inspectors carried out curriculum “deep dives” in reading, mathematics and geography, which indicates those areas were scrutinised in depth through lesson visits, discussions and work sampling. The report also points to a clear improvement focus: leaders had identified that, at times, subject knowledge and activity choice were not consistently strong enough, and staff training was being used to strengthen teaching strategies.
For parents comparing local options, this is a good moment to use the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools to line up inspection outcomes, intake context, and any available attainment information side by side. Where numeric outcomes are limited by small cohorts, patterns in curriculum clarity, early reading approach, and safeguarding culture become more important than a single year’s headline measure.
Teaching priorities are described most clearly through the inspection lens and the school’s curriculum framing. The February 2023 inspection confirms leaders and staff are actively working on curriculum quality and on identifying misconceptions, with training used to tighten classroom practice where it is not yet consistent. The implication for families is straightforward: this is not a school coasting on goodwill; there is an explicit focus on how teaching improves over time.
The SIAMS report adds another layer, particularly around Religious Education (RE) and how faith character is expressed academically. It describes RE as having a high priority, supported by leadership and coaching, and delivered through a carefully organised spiral curriculum designed to work well in mixed-age classes. For a smaller primary, that matters. Mixed-age teaching can be a real strength when sequencing is tight and content is revisited deliberately; it can be more challenging when planning is loose. The report’s emphasis on structured planning suggests the school is taking the “small-school curriculum” challenge seriously.
A final practical point: the school’s wraparound care is run by school staff and uses the same expectations around behaviour and routines as the main day. For many children, especially Reception and Key Stage 1 pupils, that continuity can reduce anxiety and help the day feel coherent.
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 village primary, transition is shaped by Lincolnshire admissions patterns and family preference rather than a single named destination. Many pupils will move on to local secondary schools serving the surrounding Lincoln area, with some families also exploring selective routes available within Lincolnshire where appropriate. What matters most is preparation for the move: confidence with reading, independence in organisation, and the social maturity to manage a bigger environment.
The school’s size can help here. In a smaller setting, staff often know each child’s strengths and anxieties well, which can make transition planning more personalised. Parents should ask how Year 6 supports readiness for secondary, including organisation skills, reading stamina, and opportunities for leadership. If your child is considering selective testing routes, it is worth checking the county timelines early, as preparation and registration windows can come up quickly.
Entry is coordinated through Lincolnshire’s normal admissions process for Reception, with published county deadlines and a coordinated offer timetable. For the September 2026 intake, Lincolnshire’s guide sets the main application window as 17 November 2025 to 15 January 2026, with late changes accepted up to 12 noon on 12 February 2026; a later re-opening window runs from 17 April 2026 to 16 May 2026.
Demand is a real feature here. For the primary entry route provided, there were 35 applications for 13 offers, which equates to 2.69 applications per place, and the school is marked oversubscribed. That is not a guarantee that every year will be as competitive, but it is a clear signal that families should treat this as a “plan early” option rather than a fallback.
The school website promotes Reception 2026 open days and describes what families can expect, including classroom tours and a look at learning spaces such as the forest area, library, and sensory spaces. The open day page reviewed does not list specific calendar dates, so parents should check the latest updates on the school website for timings.
If you are shortlisting based on proximity, use the FindMySchool Map Search to measure your address-to-gate distance accurately. Even when exact cut-off distances are not published for a given year, precise distance checking is still valuable for comparing likely priority between nearby options.
100%
1st preference success rate
12 of 12 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
13
Offers
13
Applications
35
The strongest safeguarding signal is the most direct one: the February 2023 inspection judged safeguarding arrangements effective. Beyond that headline, the school’s own materials emphasise a culture of belonging and inclusion, framed through the language of a school family and shared responsibility.
A small school can be a protective factor for wellbeing when it is well-led. Issues are often spotted earlier, staff can coordinate quickly, and children who need reassurance may find the environment less overwhelming than a large setting. The counterbalance is that friendship groups are smaller, so social bumps can feel bigger. Parents should look for clarity on how the school manages minor conflict, friendship issues, and behaviour expectations, particularly in mixed-age classes where maturity gaps can be wider.
For Church of England families, worship and RE form part of the school’s rhythm, but the SIAMS report also stresses pupils’ understanding of different faiths and respect for differing views, helped by visits and first-hand experiences. That breadth can be reassuring for families who value a clear Christian character alongside wider cultural literacy.
Extracurricular life is unusually well defined for a small primary because clubs are published term by term, with clear dates and target year groups. For Term 3 of 2025/26, examples include Choir Club (open to all years), Cooking Club (open to all years, with limited places), a Wake Up multi-sport session in the morning, and an after-school multi-sport club for Years 3 and 4. This is the sort of practical detail parents can plan around, rather than the vague “lots of clubs” promise you often see.
Forest School is another distinctive strand. The school describes a structured programme with 12-week blocks designed to meet Forest School principles across seasons, with planned access for different age groups over time and additional after-school opportunities. The implication is that outdoor learning is being treated as a sustained curriculum experience rather than an occasional enrichment afternoon.
Facilities referenced in school communications include a forest area, a library, and sensory spaces, all mentioned explicitly in the Reception open day information. A local character assessment of Dunston also describes the school building as a typical single-storey 1970s building, extended in recent years, with grounds shaded by semi-mature trees. For many children, that combination, practical building, decent outdoor space, and a planned forest programme, will matter more than high-spec architecture.
The school day runs from 8:50am to 3:20pm, with gates opening at 8:45am. Wraparound care is a significant practical strength: Breakfast Club runs 7:30am to 8:45am at £5, with a drop-off-only option 8:20am to 8:45am at £2.50; after-school provision includes an early session to 4:20pm at £4.50 and a later session to 6:00pm at £10.
The school’s setting on the edge of Dunston means many families will be travelling from nearby villages as well as the immediate community. When assessing feasibility, factor in peak-time congestion on rural lanes and the practicality of drop-off and collection with wraparound as a buffer on busier days. For term dates and diary planning, the school website is the best source for the most up-to-date calendar.
Oversubscription pressure. Recent demand signals are strong, with 35 applications for 13 offers provided. Families should apply on time and keep realistic back-up options in place.
Small cohort dynamics. With a modest roll, peer groups are smaller and year-to-year variation can be more noticeable. This can feel supportive and personal, but it can also mean fewer friendship “lanes” if a child falls out with a close friend.
Consistency in teaching expertise. The February 2023 inspection notes that subject knowledge is not always as secure as it could be and that activity selection is not consistently optimal, even though leaders have identified this as a priority and training is in place. Families should ask how this has been addressed since the inspection.
Faith character is real. As a Church of England school, worship and RE are part of the core offer, with close links to the local church. For most families this will feel welcoming, but those seeking a strictly secular setting should weigh fit carefully.
This is a small, oversubscribed village primary with a clear Church of England identity, practical wraparound care, and published term-by-term enrichment that gives families something concrete to plan around. The inspection picture is stable at Good, with a clear improvement focus on strengthening teaching consistency. It suits families who want a personal, community-rooted primary experience, value faith-informed ethos, and need childcare coverage around the school day. The main challenge is admission, so early planning matters.
The most recent Ofsted inspection in February 2023 confirmed the school continues to be rated Good, and safeguarding was judged effective. The school’s small size can support strong relationships and quick communication, and the SIAMS inspection in March 2025 also highlights a culture of aspiration and well-organised RE in mixed-age classes.
Lincolnshire admissions are coordinated through the local authority, and priority is usually determined by the published admissions policy for the relevant school type. Because demand can vary year to year, it is worth checking the latest oversubscription criteria and using a precise distance tool when comparing options.
Yes. The school publishes on-site wraparound care with Breakfast Club from 7:30am and after-school provision running to 6:00pm, with priced sessions and clear timings.
Applications are made through Lincolnshire’s coordinated admissions process. The county guide for the September 2026 intake sets the main application window as 17 November 2025 to 15 January 2026, with an extended late-change deadline up to 12 February 2026.
Clubs vary by term and are published with dates. Examples from the 2025/26 programme include Choir Club, Cooking Club, and multi-sport sessions, alongside a structured Forest School programme delivered in blocks across the year.
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