Kindness is treated as a working value here, not a slogan. The most recent inspection describes a calm, purposeful school where pupils feel safe and happy, and expectations for achievement are exceptionally high.
Academically, results sit above England averages on the published primary measures, and the school’s overall performance places it comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England (25th to 60th percentile). In FindMySchool’s rankings based on official data, it is ranked 2,611th in England and 22nd in Liverpool for primary outcomes.
This is a state primary with nursery provision, serving ages 3 to 11. There are no tuition fees. For many families, the main practical question is entry. Reception places are in demand, with 164 applications for 59 offers in the most recent admissions data provided.
The school’s tone is shaped by routines and relationships. Official inspection evidence highlights pupils arriving with enthusiasm for learning, close staff knowledge of pupils and families, and a culture that keeps the day feeling orderly and focused.
A useful way to understand the atmosphere is through how the school talks about behaviour. Pupils are explicitly taught routines from nursery onwards, and this shows up as consistency rather than constant correction. Expectations sit high, but the feel is supportive rather than punitive, helped by pupils being given responsibility and leadership roles across the school.
Leadership has been stable through the period covered by the last two major inspection reports. Mr Tony James is the headteacher, and by February 2020 he had been in post since January 2020.
The headline primary figure is the combined expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics. In the latest published dataset provided, 87.67% of pupils met the expected standard, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 32% achieved greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%.
The subject-level picture is also strong:
Reading expected standard: 83%
Mathematics expected standard: 90%
Grammar, punctuation and spelling expected standard: 88%
Science expected standard: 92%
Scaled scores are also high, with an average scaled score of 107 in reading and 107 in mathematics (100 is the expected standard threshold).
Rankings put this in context. Using FindMySchool rankings based on official data, Malvern Primary School is ranked 2,611th in England and 22nd in Liverpool for primary outcomes, which aligns with performance that sits above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England.
Parents comparing nearby options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub page to view results side-by-side using the Comparison Tool.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
87.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A clear strength is curriculum structure. The most recent inspection describes a carefully constructed curriculum which identifies key knowledge and sequences it deliberately, helping pupils build connected understanding over time.
Reading is positioned as the foundation. The inspection evidence emphasises that phonics is delivered by trained staff, books are closely matched to pupils’ phonics knowledge, and fluency is expected by the end of Year 2. A practical extension of this is the school’s library offer, with access available before and after the school day.
Specialist teaching appears in specific areas. The inspection explicitly notes specialist teachers in music and physical education, which is often a differentiator in a primary context because it raises consistency and ambition in those subjects.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
As a state primary, pupils usually transfer from Year 6 into Year 7 at secondary school in the September following their 11th birthday, using the local authority coordinated process.
Transition is treated as a planned process rather than a single event. For pupils who need additional support, the school’s published SEND information describes transition meetings in the summer term of Year 6, with information shared with the receiving secondary school, and secondary SENCO involvement where appropriate.
Because the school does not publish a single named “destination list” for leavers in a way that can be verified consistently in official sources, families should shortlist secondaries early and use open events to sense fit, travel time and pastoral style.
Reception entry is via Knowsley’s coordinated admissions. For September 2026 entry (school year 2026 to 2027), Knowsley’s published timeline states: applications open 12 September 2025, the national closing date is 15 January 2026, and national offer day is 16 April 2026.
Demand data in the provided admissions dataset indicates the school is oversubscribed for primary entry. There were 164 applications for 59 offers, which is about 2.78 applications per place. The first-preference ratio (first preferences compared with offers) is 1.41, which also points to strong local demand.
There is nursery provision, but families should not assume that attending nursery guarantees a reception place. In community school arrangements published locally, nursery attendance does not automatically provide priority for reception.
For families navigating tight competition, the FindMySchoolMap Search is useful for checking exact home-to-school distance calculations when distance-based criteria apply in a local authority area.
Applications
164
Total received
Places Offered
59
Subscription Rate
2.8x
Apps per place
The inspection evidence points to pupils feeling safe and supported, with strong staff-pupil relationships and a culture where behaviour is calm and considerate. The safeguarding line in the most recent inspection is clear. The report confirms safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Provision for pupils with SEND is highlighted as a strength in the inspection, with precise adaptations described and strong inclusion in the wider life of the school.
Extra-curricular life has breadth, and the most recent inspection gives unusually specific examples for a primary, including darts and archery. That matters because it signals a programme that goes beyond the standard menu and gives different types of pupils a chance to find their thing.
Drama is a visible strand, with a dedicated Drama and Theatre Club for older year groups that meets weekly and feeds into performances. Sport is a pillar too, with school-published recognition for competitive outcomes (including the School Games Platinum Mark Award for 2023 to 2024).
For pupils who thrive on outdoor challenge and structured personal development, the school’s Lord Derby Award programme is positioned as progressive, with staged levels and a mix of physical, skills, community and adventurous elements.
For most children, the school day runs from 8.45am to 3.30pm, with nursery sessions operating on different timings. Breakfast club runs 7.30am to 8.45am.
Wraparound provision is clearly defined. The school publishes an after-school club for Years 1 to 6 running 3.30pm to 6.00pm. Holiday provision is also published, running (outside Christmas) Monday to Friday, 8.00am to 4.00pm, for pupils from Reception to Year 6.
Competition for Reception places. With 164 applications for 59 offers in the latest dataset provided, families should plan early and apply on time.
Nursery is not an automatic pathway into Reception. Families using nursery provision should still approach Reception admissions as a separate process, following the local authority timetable.
Open events can be seasonal. The school published an open day in early November 2025; families should expect open events to run around similar months, but check the latest listing before relying on dates.
Transport and routines matter. The timetable is structured with multiple break and lunch periods; pupils who benefit from predictability usually do well in this kind of rhythm.
This is a high-performing, well-organised state primary where culture and results reinforce each other. The strongest fit is for families who want a calm, values-led environment with above-average academic outcomes and a genuinely varied wider programme. The main constraint is admissions demand, so the shortlist needs realism and careful planning.
The evidence points to a very strong school. The most recent inspection graded all key judgements as Outstanding, and the published attainment figures provided are well above England averages, including 87.67% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined.
Applications are made through Knowsley’s coordinated admissions process. Knowsley publishes that applications opened 12 September 2025, closed 15 January 2026, and offers were released on 16 April 2026. Families outside Knowsley should apply via their home local authority.
No. Local authority published admissions arrangements make clear that attending a nursery class does not typically give priority for a Reception place. Families should apply through the normal Reception admissions route.
Yes. Breakfast club runs 7.30am to 8.45am, and the school publishes wraparound care for Years 1 to 6 running 3.30pm to 6.00pm. Holiday provision is also published for most school holidays.
In the provided results dataset, 87.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 32% achieved greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%.
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