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.
In Bracebridge Heath, just south of central Lincoln, this larger than average Church of England primary has grown into a two form entry school, with a nursery welcoming children from age three. The school’s own messaging places its Christian vision at the centre of daily life, with Dream big. Love God. Live well. shaping expectations and routines.
The latest Ofsted inspection (16 and 17 November 2021) judged the school to be Good across all areas, including early years. A key part of the school’s identity is its linguistic and cultural mix, the headteacher’s welcome describes a community of many nationalities and backgrounds. That context matters when interpreting outcomes and priorities, especially the emphasis on early reading and building vocabulary for pupils who are still developing English.
On published Key Stage 2 measures in the FindMySchool results, performance is close to England averages on the combined expected standard, with a notably higher proportion reaching the higher standard than the England figure. Ranked 10,389th in England and 46th in Lincoln for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data), it sits below England average overall ’s percentile framing.
This is a voluntary aided Church of England school, so faith is present in governance and in the language used to describe the school’s purpose. The published admissions policy anchors this clearly through its vision statement and the wider idea of church school distinctiveness, while still positioning the school as inclusive and welcoming to families of different backgrounds.
The scale is a practical feature. Two classes per year group from Reception to Year 6 creates a bigger peer group than many local primaries, which can suit children who benefit from social breadth. It also allows staffing structures like phase leadership, a clear safeguarding team, and a wider set of support roles that are visible in the school’s published staff list.
A defining characteristic is the school’s explicit focus on language and inclusion for pupils who are new to English. The Ofsted report describes pupils joining from many countries, being welcomed quickly, and being supported to pick up the essential vocabulary that helps them participate fully. The school’s own English as an Additional Language page reinforces this with translated materials and links intended to help families support language learning at home. The implication for parents is simple, this is a setting that expects linguistic diversity and plans for it, rather than treating it as an exceptional circumstance.
Leadership information is mixed across published pages, but the school’s website lists Mrs A Simmons as headteacher. Families may also notice older communications about leadership changes and interim arrangements, which suggests a period of transition in recent years, though the current public facing pages present a settled structure.
This review uses the FindMySchool results for results and ranking statements, and does not substitute third party summaries.
In 2024, 61.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The England average is 62%. That places the school essentially in line with England, fractionally below on this combined measure.
At the higher standard, 14.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. This is a clear strength. The practical implication is that, even when overall expected standard is around England average, there appears to be a meaningful group of pupils pushed beyond the expected threshold.
Average scaled scores are 103 in reading, 103 in mathematics, and 105 in GPS (grammar, punctuation and spelling). The combined total score across reading, maths and GPS is 311. These figures point to steady attainment, with GPS marginally the strongest of the three headline scaled measures.
Science shows 77% reaching the expected standard, compared with an England average of 82%. This is an area where the published measures suggest scope to strengthen consistency.
Ranked 10,389th in England and 46th in Lincoln for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data), the school sits below England average overall ’s percentile framing. That matters for expectation setting. This is not a results outlier on the combined expected standard measure, but the higher standard figure suggests some pupils are doing very well within the cohort.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
61.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The best evidence for what teaching looks like day to day comes from how the school describes its priorities, and how those align with external evaluation. A central thread is early reading and language development, particularly for pupils who arrive with limited English. The latest Ofsted report describes early reading as a top priority and highlights structured teaching of crucial vocabulary for pupils new to English.
The school also publishes curriculum materials by phase, including Foundation Stage planning, vocabulary lists, and structured overviews. For example, nursery documentation shows deliberate vocabulary selection and language modelling, and references specific approaches used to support communication and language development. The implication for parents is that early years provision is not treated as “just childcare”, it is presented as a planned learning phase with clear routines and language intent.
Given the school’s context, that focus is rational. A cohort with many languages spoken at home can make early literacy, vocabulary, and oracy foundational to later success in every subject. A school that executes this well can narrow gaps quickly, but it also means families should expect an explicit approach to phonics, reading practice, and language development across the early years and Key Stage 1.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For a state primary, the key transition question is which secondaries families are likely to consider, and how well the school prepares pupils for that move.
The school is in Lincolnshire, so secondary transfer routes will typically include local comprehensive options in and around Lincoln, and selective routes for families considering grammar school pathways, where relevant to their child and location. Because the school itself is not a grammar school and does not publish a named feeder list on the pages reviewed, families should treat “likely” destinations as primarily driven by home address and Lincolnshire’s admissions arrangements, rather than a single fixed progression route.
What the school can control is readiness. The emphasis on language development, early reading, and structured learning routines is generally aligned with smoother transition into Key Stage 3, particularly for pupils who have had to acquire English while also learning the wider curriculum.
This is a state school, there are no tuition fees. Admission to Reception is coordinated through Lincolnshire’s local authority process, with the school’s governing body as the admission authority and a published admission number of 60 for Reception.
There were 80 applications and 59 offers in the most recent admissions snapshot provided, with the route labelled oversubscribed and an applications to offers ratio of 1.36. That is competitive, but not at the level where only a tiny radius succeeds.
The published admissions policy sets out a straightforward priority order. After children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, it prioritises looked after and previously looked after children, children of staff, siblings, then distance from home to school. Distance is calculated as straight line distance by the local authority’s admissions team.
A practical point for parents, attendance at the nursery does not confer priority for admission to Reception. That is explicitly stated in the policy and is worth knowing early, particularly for families assuming nursery attendance is a route into the main school.
For Lincolnshire primary applications for September 2026 entry, the local authority timetable states that applications opened on 17 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers sent on 16 April 2026.
The school also advertised Reception open days in December 2025 and January 2026 for the September 2026 intake.
As of 09 February 2026, those open day dates are in the past. Families looking for the next intake should expect open events to run in a similar winter window, but should check the school’s current admissions pages for the live schedule.
A helpful way to sanity check your position is to use FindMySchool’s Map Search and saved shortlist tools to compare distance patterns and keep track of deadlines across multiple options, especially when a school is oversubscribed.
100%
1st preference success rate
42 of 42 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
80
Pastoral evidence in desk based research is often indirect, but there are a few reliable indicators here.
Safeguarding roles are clearly listed, including a designated safeguarding lead and deputies. The school also publishes a safeguarding statement that emphasises vigilance, processes, and the expectation that all staff and volunteers share responsibility.
Behaviour and belonging are also part of the external picture. Inspectors in 2021 judged behaviour and attitudes as Good, alongside Good personal development, which fits a picture of a school where routines and expectations are consistent rather than permissive or chaotic.
For families new to the local area or new to the English school system, the practical reassurance is that the school is set up for a varied intake, including children arriving mid year or with limited English, and it presents that as normal rather than problematic.
The most distinctive extra here is the formal link with Lincoln City Foundation for after school provision. The school describes structured activities delivered for Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2 pupils, and also references an Ofsted approved after school provision located at the LNER Stadium. This is unusually specific compared with many primaries, where after school clubs can be dependent on staff availability.
The breakfast club arrangements are also clearly stated. Breakfast club is available from 7.45am, with gates closing at 8.20am, and a published cost of £2 per child. For working families, that level of detail matters, it reduces uncertainty about wraparound provision and the practical rhythm of the school day.
The school’s wider enrichment identity also shows up through programme badges and pages, including its International Schools Award page link and Rights Respecting School link on the main navigation. While those labels are not outcomes by themselves, they often correlate with active work on global learning, pupil voice, and structured assemblies and themes.
School day timings
A published whole school timetable sets out start of day registration at 8.50am across phases, and end of day at 3.15pm for early years and Key Stage 1, and 3.25pm for Key Stage 2.
Wraparound care
Breakfast club is available from 7.45am. After school provision is described through the Lincoln City Foundation arrangement, with collection from school and sign out at the provision site.
Meals
The school confirms that pupils in Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 receive universal free school meals, with ordering and payments managed through the school’s payment system for other items.
Oversubscription is real. With more applications than offers competition exists. Families should apply on time and treat proximity and criteria as decisive, rather than assuming places are generally available.
Nursery is not a guaranteed route into Reception. The admissions policy states that attending the nursery does not confer priority for a Reception place, so families using nursery should still plan as if Reception is a fresh application.
Outcomes are mixed across measures. The combined expected standard is around England average but science expected standard is below the England figure, while the higher standard figure is a clear strength. This mix can suit different children, but it is worth discussing how the school stretches high attainers while keeping consistency in foundation knowledge.
Language rich context can cut both ways. A school experienced with pupils learning English is a plus, but it can also mean a classroom mix where language development work is a constant priority. Some children thrive in that structured approach, others may prefer a setting with a narrower language range.
The Lincoln Bishop King Church of England Primary School is a sizeable, two form entry primary with a clear Christian vision, a nursery from age three, and a distinctive emphasis on early language and reading. The latest Ofsted judgement is Good across the board, and the school’s own materials show deliberate planning in early years language and vocabulary.
Best suited to families who value an inclusive church school ethos, want structured wraparound options, and expect their child to learn in a linguistically diverse cohort. The main challenge is admission, not because criteria are unusual, but because demand exceeds places.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (16 and 17 November 2021) judged the school to be Good overall, with Good grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. In the FindMySchool results, the 2024 combined expected standard at Key Stage 2 is broadly in line with England.
The school’s published admissions criteria prioritise distance once higher priority groups are considered, rather than relying on a named catchment area boundary. In practice, your home address and straight line distance can be decisive when the school is oversubscribed.
No. The school’s admissions policy states that attendance at the school nursery does not confer any priority for admission to Reception. Families should plan for a standard Reception application through Lincolnshire’s process.
Yes. The school publishes details of a breakfast club starting at 7.45am, and describes after school provision delivered through Lincoln City Foundation with structured activities.
For September 2026 entry, Lincolnshire’s timetable shows applications opened on 17 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026. For future years, dates tend to follow a similar pattern, but families should check the current local authority timetable and the school’s admissions pages for the live cycle.
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