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.
High expectations run through daily life here, from behaviour routines to the way pupils talk about learning. The most recent inspection judged the school as Good, with Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development graded Outstanding, alongside Good judgements for Quality of education, Leadership and management, and Early years provision (inspection dates 18 and 19 July 2023).
Set in Barking and Dagenham, this is a large, established primary, with nursery provision from age three and a 20 place additionally resourced provision for pupils with cognition and learning difficulties (the Rainbow Class). The overall feel is of a busy, organised school that takes learning seriously, while still finding time for enrichment that goes beyond the usual primary offer, including Mandarin from Reception and a structured approach to pupil leadership roles.
Parents assessing fit should keep two things in mind early: first, demand is healthy and places are competitive; second, the school day is slightly staggered by phase, which can help families with multiple children but also shapes wraparound logistics.
The tone is purposeful, with pupils expected to meet clear standards for conduct and effort. Respect and kindness are repeatedly reinforced through routines and roles, and pupils are trusted with responsibility. Two examples stand out: a “safety squad” model and an older pupil group known as RAPS, who support younger pupils at playtimes. That sort of structured peer support tends to suit children who like knowing where they stand, and parents who value consistency.
There is also a clear emphasis on pupil voice. Pupils are encouraged to debate, consider other viewpoints, and engage with ideas that are more commonly seen later in schooling. For a primary, that matters because it signals an ambition that is not just about test preparation. It is about building confident communicators who can explain their thinking.
The school also positions itself as internationally minded. Mandarin is not a one off enrichment week, it is taught from Reception and supported by wider cultural links. That makes the atmosphere feel outward looking, and it gives pupils an early sense that languages and culture are part of everyday learning rather than an optional extra.
Nursery starts the journey in a structured way. The school describes a safe, secure and exciting environment for early years, with children beginning their education in a setting designed to build confidence and independence. For families who value early routines and a calm start at age three, that framing will be appealing.
The performance picture is strong, and it is backed by a clear set of Key Stage 2 outcomes.
In 2024, 82.3% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62.0%. At the higher standard, 21.7% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 8.0%. Science is also a strength, with 91.0% meeting the expected standard, ahead of the England average of 82.0%.
Scaled scores add detail: reading averaged 107, mathematics averaged 107, and grammar, punctuation and spelling averaged 108, indicating attainment above typical national benchmarks (where 100 is the national reference point).
Rankings reinforce this. Ranked 2895th in England and 10th in Barking and Dagenham for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), the school sits above England average, placing it comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England. For parents, the practical implication is that strong attainment is not confined to one subject, and the outcomes appear consistent with an academically focused culture.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
82.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading is treated as a core priority. Pupils use the library regularly and staff read aloud daily, which helps build fluency and engagement with books. Early reading and phonics are introduced from the start of Reception, with staff training and frequent checks to ensure pupils keep up. When children struggle, support is targeted and books are matched closely to the sounds pupils already know, reducing the risk of children guessing or losing confidence.
Curriculum thinking is generally careful and sequential. In most subjects, content is broken down into smaller steps, so pupils learn component skills before tackling more complex tasks. The advantage of this approach is straightforward: pupils retain more, and teachers can spot gaps earlier.
There is, however, an important nuance for parents who want the full picture. A small number of subjects were identified as needing stronger sequencing and better checks on what pupils remember over time. If your child is especially sensitive to curriculum changes, or you want reassurance about consistency across all subjects, it is worth asking how those areas have been strengthened since the most recent inspection.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, progression is typically into local secondary schools through the borough’s coordinated admissions system. The school does not publicly present a single named “destination list” as a primary prep might, so parents should plan on researching the range of realistic secondary options linked to their address and preferences.
Transition preparation is still visible in how Year 6 is structured. Personal development content includes age appropriate safety education, and pupils are supported to talk about risks beyond primary age, including topics that help readiness for secondary life and independence. For families, that usually translates into children who arrive in Year 7 better able to handle routines, relationships, and expectations.
If you are building a shortlist, the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools can help you compare likely secondary options side by side, using the same performance framework used here.
Demand is material. For the main entry route, the school is oversubscribed, with 112 applications for 47 offers in the most recent admissions results. That equates to roughly 2.38 applications per place, so families should approach the process strategically, with realistic backup preferences.
Nursery admissions are managed by the school office rather than the local authority. Children can usually start in the September after their third birthday. The nursery offer is described as 15 statutory hours per week, delivered as either a morning or an afternoon session during term time. Some families may be eligible for a 30 hour place, depending on working status, income, child circumstances, and immigration status.
If nursery requests exceed available places, priority is set out clearly, beginning with looked after children, then siblings, then strong medical or social grounds, then children living in the area served by the school, followed by other applicants. The key implication is that proximity and family links can matter, but the school also leaves room for exceptional circumstances.
Reception and main school admissions are coordinated by the local authority. For September 2026 entry, the application window runs from 01 November 2025 to midnight on 15 January 2026. Offers are released on the evening of 16 April 2026, and families must accept by 30 April 2026.
For families who are new to the borough system, it is sensible to treat these dates as fixed points in the calendar. If you are moving house, consider using FindMySchool Map Search tools early, so your distance and realistic options are clear before you lock in preferences.
100%
1st preference success rate
46 of 46 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
47
Offers
47
Applications
112
Pastoral systems here are closely tied to behaviour routines and adult availability. Pupils are confident that staff will listen when worries arise, which is a simple but powerful predictor of day to day wellbeing. The emphasis is not just on compliance, it is also on self regulation, sharing, and collaboration, beginning in the early years.
Safeguarding culture is described as a priority, with staff training and clear reporting expectations. The practical takeaway for parents is that pastoral care is structured, and pupils are taught how to identify risk, including online safety.
Inclusion is a visible strength. The school highlights early identification of special educational needs and disabilities, with staff working alongside external specialists such as therapists and educational psychologists. The Rainbow Class, the additionally resourced provision, supports pupils from Reception to age 11, staffed by specialist teachers and a range of support staff. For families considering this route, it signals a school that expects pupils with additional needs to achieve well, not simply to be accommodated.
Extracurricular life is anchored in sport and enrichment, with a clear emphasis on participation.
Sporting clubs listed by the school include football, cricket, netball, multi sports, basketball, gymnastics, curling, athletics, and dance. A further multi sports club is run for children with special educational needs and disabilities, which reinforces the inclusive approach rather than treating inclusion as a classroom only concept.
Mandarin is the headline differentiator. It is taught to all children from Reception onwards by a native Mandarin teacher, with a structured programme that builds from stories and songs in early years to National Curriculum language study in Key Stage 2. Extra clubs extend this work, and pupils in Years 5 and 6 have the opportunity for a 10 day visit to China linked to their learning. The educational value here is clear: language learning is sustained, cumulative, and tied to real purpose rather than isolated vocabulary lists.
Pupil leadership roles add another layer. The safety squad and RAPS create practical responsibility that suits children who like contributing and being relied upon. Over time, that can strengthen confidence, empathy, and social problem solving, which often matters as much as academic attainment in long term outcomes.
The school day is clearly defined and slightly staggered. Nursery sessions run 8.30am to 11.30am (morning) and 12.00pm to 3.00pm (afternoon). Reception finishes at 3.00pm, Years 1 and 2 finish at 3.05pm, and Years 3 to 6 finish at 3.10pm, with an 8.50am registration start.
Wraparound care is available. Breakfast club starts at 7.45am, with a charge of £3.00 per day. An after school childcare club runs from 3.15pm to 6.00pm on school days, operated by Sun and Moon After School Club Scheme Ltd, with sessions priced at £12.00.
For travel, the school states it is around a 15 minute walk from Dagenham Heathway tube station, and local bus routes serve Alibon Road, including the 173, 174 and 175.
Competition for places. With 112 applications for 47 offers in the most recent admissions results, demand is meaningful. Families should plan preferences carefully and include realistic alternatives.
Curriculum consistency across all subjects. The overall curriculum is structured well, but a small number of subjects were identified as needing better sequencing and checks on long term knowledge retention. Ask how this has been addressed if it matters for your child.
Wraparound logistics and costs. Breakfast and after school childcare are available, which helps working families, but it comes with recurring costs (£3.00 per day for breakfast club, £12.00 per after school session). It is sensible to cost this out over a term if you expect regular use.
A large school experience. With a published capacity of 678, pupils benefit from scale, but some children prefer smaller settings. Consider whether your child thrives in a busy environment with many peers.
This is a large, academically strong primary with a disciplined feel, above average KS2 outcomes, and an unusually coherent international strand through Mandarin from Reception. It will suit families who want high expectations, clear routines, and plenty of structured opportunities, including leadership roles and sport.
The main hurdle is admission rather than education quality. For families who secure a place and value both results and enrichment that feels purposeful, it can be a compelling option.
Yes, it has a Good overall judgement from the most recent inspection (July 2023), with Outstanding grades for behaviour and personal development. Academic outcomes are also strong; in 2024, 82.3% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, well above the England average of 62.0%.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Barking and Dagenham, and allocations follow the borough’s published oversubscription criteria rather than a simple “catchment map”. Because the school is oversubscribed, families should review the local authority criteria and use mapping tools to understand how their address may be prioritised.
Yes. Nursery admissions are handled directly by the school. Children usually start in the September following their third birthday. If applications exceed places, priority begins with looked after children, then siblings, then children with strong medical or social grounds, then local area considerations.
Yes. Breakfast club starts at 7.45am, and an after school childcare club runs from 3.15pm to 6.00pm each school day. Charges are published as £3.00 per day for breakfast club and £12.00 per session for the after school childcare club.
The school describes early identification of needs and work with external specialists. It also runs a 20 place additionally resourced provision for pupils with cognition and learning difficulties, known as the Rainbow Class, supporting pupils from Reception through to age 11.
Get in touch with the school directly
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