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.
Opened in April 2011, Hope Primary was set up with a distinctive joint identity, Catholic and Church of England, serving the parishes of St Dominic’s and St Luke’s. That joint character matters in day-to-day life, not just the name, families choosing the school are generally looking for a values-led approach that blends worship, community expectations, and practical support for pupils.
On published KS2 measures, results are a clear strength. In 2024, 76.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. Scaled scores also sit above the England benchmark of 100 in reading, mathematics, and grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS). The school’s FindMySchool ranking picture is more mixed, with a position in the lower-performing band nationally, which suggests outcomes may vary depending on which attainment lens is used. That tension is worth understanding when comparing local options.
Daily operations look organised and predictable. The school day begins at 8.50am for Reception to Year 6 and ends at 3.10pm, and nursery sessions are split into morning and afternoon blocks. Breakfast provision is a headline practical benefit, with free breakfast offered in the hall each morning between 8.00am and 8.30am, supported through Magic Breakfast.
This is a primary that positions itself as a community school in the real sense, a place designed to serve families locally, with a specific faith identity woven through the week. The joint Catholic and Church of England character is stated clearly by the school, alongside the parish links, which gives families a good signal of what the culture is likely to feel like for pupils, assemblies, celebrations, and the wider sense of belonging.
Leadership is clearly identified on published sources, with Mr John Casson listed as headteacher. What matters for parents is not only the name, but the operating model that sits around it. Governance information on the school site describes a governing body structure with diocesan and archdiocesan representation as well as parents and staff, which is consistent with the school’s voluntary aided faith set-up and usually correlates with a strong focus on ethos, safeguarding governance, and community engagement.
A distinctive feature of the school’s identity is how it highlights wellbeing and wider school-life initiatives. The site signposts structured mental health and wellbeing work, and also showcases “Dexter’s Blog”, centred on the school dog, as a public-facing thread of school culture. For many children, these kinds of anchors make school feel friendly and secure, and for parents, they are often a proxy for how much attention the school gives to emotional regulation, routine, and relationships.
The tone from official reporting aligns with that general picture. The most recent inspection evidence describes a calm learning climate with pupils who are attentive, happy, and well cared for, and with strong relationships between pupils and staff.
For a primary school, the most meaningful published benchmark is KS2 attainment in reading, writing and mathematics combined, along with scaled scores and higher standard indicators.
In 2024, 76.33% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%. This is a strong headline measure for families who want reassurance that core literacy and numeracy are landing for most pupils.
Reading scaled score: 103
Mathematics scaled score: 104
GPS scaled score: 103
These sit above the England scaled score reference point of 100, suggesting pupils are typically leaving Year 6 with secure foundations across the tested areas.
At the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, 15.67% achieved this level, compared with an England average of 8%. That is a meaningful indicator for families with high-attaining pupils, particularly when it is supported by strong expected-standard outcomes as well.
Ranked 10,491st in England and 127th in Liverpool for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data), the school sits below England average overall when viewed through that composite lens. The important implication is not that results are weak, because the KS2 headline figures look strong, but that performance may be uneven across different measures or cohorts, and parents should compare like-for-like measures when shortlisting. One practical approach is to use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to place KS2 outcomes and rankings side by side with nearby primaries before deciding which open events to prioritise.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
76.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A school can post good KS2 outcomes in different ways. The most parent-relevant question is what daily teaching looks like, how consistent it is across classes, and how well it supports pupils who need more help or more stretch.
Hope Primary presents a fairly structured model. Published guidance on school day timings shows a clear timetable rhythm with separate break times by phase, which usually reflects a school that pays attention to flow and supervision rather than leaving the day to drift. That kind of operational structure tends to benefit pupils who like predictability and clear transitions, particularly in a larger primary setting.
In core subjects, the data points imply secure delivery of reading and maths, with 74% reaching the expected standard in each of those subjects at KS2, and a strong combined figure across reading, writing and maths. For families, the implication is that pupils who engage consistently with reading at home and keep up with maths fluency work are likely to find the curriculum manageable and progressive.
Wider curriculum breadth is also signposted, including Spanish and computing in the curriculum menu, which indicates the school aims for more than just tested subjects even if formal published detail varies page to page.
As a state primary, transition is less about named destination schools and more about how well pupils are prepared for the move to secondary and what the likely pathways are locally.
Hope Primary sits in Knowsley, and Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority. In practice, many pupils will move on to local Knowsley secondary schools based on where families live and the coordinated admissions process. Families considering the school should think ahead to secondary options early, particularly if they are weighing faith-based pathways, because the joint Catholic and Church of England identity can influence preferences around secondary schooling, parish links, and supplementary forms for faith places where they apply.
A useful question to ask at open events is how Year 6 transition is handled in practice, for example, whether pupils do secondary-style lessons, whether there are visits and joint projects, and how pastoral handover works for children with additional needs. Those details matter as much as raw attainment for the confidence of the move into Year 7.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. The key issue is eligibility and oversubscription.
Knowsley’s published timetable for September 2026 Reception entry sets the closing date at 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. The school’s website also publishes an admissions policy for 2026 to 2027, which families should read alongside the local authority composite prospectus so criteria and evidence requirements are understood early.
For the primary entry route, the school was oversubscribed in the latest available demand snapshot, with 65 applications for 46 offers, roughly 1.41 applications per place. The implication is straightforward: families should not assume a place is automatic even though the school is not operating on a selective basis.
If you are weighing multiple schools and are close to boundary lines, a mapping approach helps. Use the FindMySchool Map Search to understand how your home location sits relative to likely local priorities, then cross-check against the published criteria from Knowsley and the school.
Hope Primary offers nursery provision. The school publishes nursery sessions as 8.30am to 11.30am in the morning and 12.20pm to 3.20pm in the afternoon. It also states there is currently no capacity to offer 30-hour places in the nursery due to demand. For parents, the practical implication is to plan childcare carefully and clarify availability early if you are relying on a specific pattern of funded hours or extended provision.
100%
1st preference success rate
44 of 44 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
46
Offers
46
Applications
65
Pastoral care is not one programme, it is the sum of routines, adult availability, and the signals the school sends about safety and belonging.
The most convincing evidence here is consistency across sources. Breakfast provision is positioned as a daily support, with free breakfast available each morning, which can be a meaningful wellbeing lever for concentration, punctuality, and reducing stress for families managing mornings. On top of that, the website signposts mental health and wellbeing support work and structured approaches like My Happy Mind, which suggests the school is actively building wellbeing language into daily life rather than only responding when problems arise.
The wider culture described in official inspection reporting also supports a calm, cared-for environment, with strong relationships between pupils and staff and pupils feeling safe. For parents of children who need reassurance and steady adult relationships, that matters as much as academic attainment.
Primary extracurricular life works best when it is not just a list of clubs, but a set of experiences that broaden confidence, physical development, and community connection.
Hope Primary highlights several named initiatives that make it stand out locally.
The school’s public-facing “Dexter’s Blog” and related communications point to a deliberate effort to use a school dog as part of the wider school experience. The key implication is cultural, pupils often respond well to these kinds of initiatives because they can support calm routines, conversational confidence, and positive behaviour modelling, especially for children who find emotional regulation harder.
The school has also referenced Commando Joe involvement, including “wake up shake up” sessions and lunchtime and after-school engagement. That implies a strong physical activity and character-building strand that goes beyond standard PE, and it may appeal to families with children who thrive on energetic, structured challenges.
Through sports premium reporting, the school states it has access to a pool for six weeks annually for swimming lessons, with small group sizes for younger pupils and larger groups for older pupils. For many families, that is a practical plus because it supports water confidence and safety, and it reduces the burden of arranging external lessons.
The navigation structure highlights Beach School and “SMILE: Hope in the Community”, indicating that outdoor learning and community engagement are part of the school’s offer. The benefit here is often confidence and resilience, particularly for pupils who learn best with practical, hands-on experiences.
The core school day for Reception to Year 6 starts at 8.50am and ends at 3.10pm. Nursery sessions run 8.30am to 11.30am and 12.20pm to 3.20pm.
Breakfast is available from 8.00am to 8.30am and is described as free for pupils, supported through Magic Breakfast. The website does not clearly publish an after-school childcare finish time in the same way, so families who need wraparound care beyond clubs should ask directly what is available term by term.
For travel, most families will approach on foot or by short local journeys within Huyton. It is worth checking parking and drop-off expectations at open events, particularly if you will be driving at peak times.
FindMySchool ranking versus headline KS2 figures. KS2 expected-standard outcomes are strong, yet the overall FindMySchool ranking places the school below England average on that composite. Parents should compare multiple measures, not just one headline, when shortlisting.
Competition for places. The latest demand snapshot shows oversubscription for the primary entry route. Families should work to the local authority timetable and have realistic back-up preferences.
Nursery capacity and hours. Nursery sessions are clearly structured, and the school states it cannot currently offer 30-hour nursery places due to demand. Families relying on extended funded hours should plan early and confirm what is available.
Faith identity is meaningful. As a joint Catholic and Church of England school, the ethos is likely to be more explicit than in a non-faith community primary. Families comfortable with that tend to find it a strong fit; others may prefer a secular setting.
Hope Primary School - A Joint Catholic and Church of England Primary School combines a clear faith identity with strong KS2 outcomes and practical wellbeing supports such as free breakfast. The culture signposted through initiatives like Dexter’s Blog, structured wellbeing work, and active programmes such as Commando Joe will suit children who benefit from routine, relationships, and purposeful enrichment.
Best suited to families who want a values-led primary experience in Huyton, and who are comfortable with the school’s explicit Catholic and Church of England character, while also valuing a strong core-academic baseline and everyday pastoral scaffolding.
The school’s most recent inspection on 12 December 2024 graded all key areas as Good, including early years provision. KS2 outcomes in 2024 were also strong on the combined expected standard measure, with 76.33% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics compared with 62% across England.
Reception entry is coordinated by Knowsley. The oversubscription criteria and any faith-related requirements are set out in the school’s published admissions policy and the local authority composite prospectus. Families should read both carefully, because allocation can depend on category and evidence, not only distance.
Applications are made through Knowsley’s coordinated admissions process. The published closing date is 15 January 2026, and national offer day is 16 April 2026.
Yes. Nursery sessions are published as 8.30am to 11.30am (morning) and 12.20pm to 3.20pm (afternoon). The school also states there is currently no capacity to offer 30-hour nursery places due to demand.
Breakfast is available each morning from 8.00am to 8.30am, described as free for pupils and supported through Magic Breakfast. For after-school childcare, the website does not provide a single clear, current finish time, so families should confirm the latest arrangements directly.
Get in touch with the school directly
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