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.
Warmth and routine matter in an infant school, because early habits tend to stick. Here, that sense of steadiness is reinforced by a clear set of expectations about respect and care, alongside a curriculum that has been sharpened over recent years. In the most recent inspection cycle, the school was judged to have maintained the standards from its earlier Good judgement, with safeguarding confirmed as effective.
The context is distinctive for a state infant school. This is a Roman Catholic voluntary aided school within Archdiocese of Liverpool, serving pupils aged 4 to 7, in West Derby, Liverpool. Pupil numbers sit a little above the stated capacity, which is common in popular schools and reflects stable demand.
The most recent inspection report paints a consistent picture of a school that feels safe and upbeat for young children. Pupils are described as eager to get into class, and the school’s relationships with families are a visible strength, with parents and carers characterising it as “home from home”. (That phrase is from the report, not a marketing slogan, and it speaks to daily experience rather than a glossy promise.)
Expectations are framed in Catholic language, with children encouraged to show love and respect in practical ways, especially in the playground and shared spaces. The impact is less about formality and more about habit formation. When children are repeatedly guided to notice who is left out and to include them, social confidence develops early, which can make Reception and Year 1 feel less daunting for quieter pupils.
There are also markers of a school that wants children to see themselves as contributors, not just recipients. The inspection report highlights sustainability activity, including planting trees to improve the environment. It also describes a pupil enterprise committee, with children raising money through making and selling items. In an infant setting, those projects matter because they teach turn taking, basic numeracy, and the idea that effort can change something real.
Leadership is another part of the atmosphere. The head teacher is Mrs Jane Griffin, and the inspection record notes that a new head teacher and deputy head teacher were appointed since the previous graded inspection (October 2019). That is relevant because it helps explain why curriculum and assessment processes have been reworked with more precision.
Because this is an infant school (Reception to Year 2), the headline national metrics parents often look for at junior and primary level do not apply in the same way. The more meaningful question is whether early reading, writing, number sense, and learning behaviours are being secured so that pupils are ready for Year 3.
The most recent Ofsted inspection, carried out in November 2024 as an ungraded inspection, concluded that the school had taken effective action to maintain the standards identified at the previous inspection.
That same report also provides the clearest view of what is working well and what is still being tightened. Curriculum ambition is a stated strength, with key knowledge mapped and sequenced so teachers know what to teach and when. The practical implication for parents is consistency, even across a large four form entry intake, because planning is not left to individual interpretation.
Areas for improvement are specific and relevant to this age range. The report flags that, at times, the phonics programme is not delivered as precisely as intended, and that some writing errors, including letter formation, are not always addressed quickly enough. That is useful information for families, because it points to the kind of classroom detail that can make a big difference for confidence in early literacy.
Early reading is clearly positioned as a priority. Children begin learning to read from Reception, and the school matches reading books to the sounds pupils know, with extra support when pupils fall behind the pace of the programme. In practice, that typically means two things that parents notice quickly, first, children bringing home books they can actually decode rather than guess; second, quicker identification of who needs extra repetition and practice.
The curriculum approach is described as ambitious and carefully sequenced, and there is a strong emphasis on checking what pupils know and can do. The inspection report highlights the intent to spot errors and address them before moving on. This is particularly relevant for mathematics and early writing, where small misconceptions can harden into habits if left uncorrected.
Provision within classrooms also sounds deliberately structured. The report references “continuous provision” across early years to Year 2, including a Year 2 “research station” that pupils look forward to. In an infant school, a well designed provision model can be a quiet strength, because it allows children to practise language, reasoning, and fine motor skills repeatedly in ways that feel like play but are planned for progression.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as effective, with clear identification approaches and collaboration with external professionals. The practical impact for families is a school that is used to coordinating early interventions and support plans, which can matter a great deal when needs are emerging rather than already well documented.
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 families planning beyond Year 2, transition is a big part of choosing an infant school, because the end point arrives quickly. The school’s published SEND information report states that, from Year 2, most children transfer to St Paul's Catholic Junior School, with a comprehensive transition programme including joint activities across the year, particularly in the summer term.
That detail matters even for families whose child does not have additional needs, because it suggests the two schools have established routines for sharing information and easing the Year 3 step up. For parents comparing infant schools in the same area, it is sensible to look at the typical junior destination and then check how the junior school’s curriculum, pastoral approach, and logistics fit your family.
Demand is steady. For the most recent admissions cycle there were 221 applications for 120 offers, which equates to about 1.84 applications per place. That level of oversubscription usually means families should treat this as a first preference only if they are comfortable with the possibility of being allocated an alternative. It also makes it important to understand exactly what evidence is required for faith based criteria.
As a voluntary aided Catholic school, admissions are coordinated through the local authority, but the governing body uses information from the school’s Supplementary Faith Form to apply the oversubscription criteria. For Reception entry for September 2026, the school states that forms were available from 8 September 2025, and that the local authority preference form and the Supplementary Faith Form both needed to be submitted by 15 January 2026.
Liverpool City Council’s published timeline is also worth noting for families who applied late. The council states that late applications cannot be guaranteed for National Offer Day, and that the Reception National Offer Day date for this cycle is 16 April 2026.
If you are shortlisting several local options, FindMySchool’s Map Search can help you sanity check practicalities like travel time and day to day logistics before you commit to a ranking order. For faith schools with supplementary forms, it can also help to keep a clear checklist of what was submitted to whom, and when.
98.0%
1st preference success rate
100 of 102 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
120
Offers
120
Applications
221
In an infant school, pastoral work is often at its best when it is embedded rather than treated as an intervention. The inspection report points to a sensitive approach to helping pupils understand emotions, including a “cosy club” room that children can use to settle into the school day. That kind of calm reset space can be particularly helpful for children who arrive anxious, have difficulty separating at the gate, or need help regulating after busy playtimes.
The wider pastoral offer also includes practical wellbeing activity. The school’s mental health and wellbeing policy references a mindfulness afterschool club and adult led sessions such as yoga and mindfulness. For families, the key question to ask is whether these are occasional projects or part of a planned annual rhythm, because consistency tends to matter most for young children.
Safeguarding messaging is clear on the school website, and the most recent inspection cycle also confirms safeguarding effectiveness, which is a baseline expectation but still a meaningful reassurance.
The enrichment picture here leans towards community, faith, and wellbeing rather than the high competition model some parents associate with larger primaries. On the faith and service side, the school highlights Mini Vinnies, a pupil group linked to the St Vincent de Paul Society tradition of service, with an emphasis on prayer, discussion, and helping the local community.
Environmental and social justice themes also feature. The school promotes the Live Simply Award, framing it as a response to living simply, sustainably, and in solidarity with the poorest. In practice, this tends to translate into projects children can understand, such as litter, recycling, charity actions, and age appropriate global awareness.
For sport and wellbeing, the school’s PE information references after school options including multi sports, football, matball, dodgeball, and mindfulness. That breadth is useful in an infant setting because not every child is ready for team games, and having alternatives helps children find something they enjoy rather than feeling they have failed at sport.
There are also signs of opportunities that connect beyond school. Alder Hey Children’s NHS Foundation Trust has previously hosted performances involving the school choir, which suggests the school is willing to put pupils into real community settings, with all the confidence building that brings.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Parents should still budget for the usual extras, uniform, trips, and any paid clubs.
The school publishes compulsory opening hours of 8.30am to 2.50pm for Reception, and 8.35am to 2.55pm for Year 1 and Year 2.
Wraparound information is split. Breakfast club is clearly described, opening at 7.50am, and priced at £4 per day. After school provision is described as being delivered via partnership with multiple providers, with families directed to the office for current details, which is worth doing early if wraparound is a deciding factor.
For travel, West Derby is a residential area where school run traffic can be a bigger issue than distance itself. Families typically benefit from doing at least one practice run at drop off time, not just measuring miles, to understand congestion and parking realities.
Oversubscription is real. With 221 applications for 120 offers some families will not secure their first preference. Have a sensible second and third option you would be happy with.
Faith based evidence matters. This is a Catholic voluntary aided school; applications involve both the local authority route and a Supplementary Faith Form, with supporting documentation expected. Missing paperwork can change priority.
Early literacy delivery consistency. The most recent inspection highlights that phonics is not always delivered with the intended precision, and that writing errors are not always addressed quickly enough. Ask how this is being monitored across classes, especially in Reception and Year 1.
Wraparound may require extra effort to pin down. Breakfast club is well specified, but after school provision is described via external partners. Families relying on after school care should confirm availability, timings, and pickup arrangements early.
This is a large infant school with a clear Catholic identity and a strong emphasis on relationships, emotional security, and community contribution. The inspection evidence supports a school that has maintained its Good standard, with curriculum ambition and early reading prioritised, alongside a practical focus on children learning how to treat each other well.
Who it suits, families seeking a faith led infant experience where personal development, early reading, and structured routines sit alongside community and sustainability projects. The main challenge is admissions competitiveness and, for some, the extra steps involved in supplementary forms.
The most recent inspection activity (November 2024) concluded that the school had taken effective action to maintain the standards from its earlier Good judgement. Safeguarding was confirmed as effective, and the report describes a warm, safe environment with clear expectations for respect and care.
As a voluntary aided Catholic school, admissions are not simply a distance catchment model. Oversubscription criteria use faith and parish related evidence, alongside the local authority coordinated process. Families should read the current admissions arrangements carefully and ensure supporting documents are submitted on time.
Liverpool’s primary closing date for this cycle was 15 January 2026, and the school also required a Supplementary Faith Form to be returned by that date. National Offer Day for Reception places in Liverpool is 16 April 2026, with late applications processed but not guaranteed for offer day communications.
Breakfast club is offered, starting at 7.50am, and priced at £4 per day. After school provision is described as being delivered through partner providers, with families advised to contact the school office for current options and availability.
The school’s published SEND information report states that most children transfer to St Paul’s Junior School, supported by a structured transition programme with joint activities, particularly in the summer term.
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