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.
A school that puts kindness and belonging front and centre, then backs it up with clear routines and a structured approach to early learning. Mrs Brenda McCafferty has led since September 2013, providing long-term continuity through curriculum changes and shifting inspection frameworks.
Brookland serves ages 3 to 7, with Nursery, Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 on one site, and a close operational relationship with Brookland Junior School next door. That link helps with transition, but families still need to apply for a junior place, there is no automatic transfer.
Demand is a defining feature. The most recent admissions data available shows 234 applications for 87 offers, around 2.7 applications per place, so living locally and understanding the criteria matters.
The school’s stated motto, Be Kind, Grow Together, Learn Forever, is used as a practical anchor rather than a poster slogan. Alongside it sits a clear set of values, friendship, honesty, respect, responsibility, courage, and tolerance, which shape expectations for behaviour and how pupils talk about belonging.
The tone is purposeful but age-appropriate. Pupils are taught “golden rules” and are expected to follow them consistently in class, which supports calm learning for a young cohort and helps new starters settle quickly.
In early years, the school frames learning as child-centred and language rich, with play positioned as the core vehicle for development. That matters in practice because it shapes how staff balance adult-led teaching (for phonics and early number) with exploration and talk. The school also runs a key person approach in EYFS, which is particularly valuable for children starting Nursery at three, or joining Reception from different early years settings.
A further piece of “how it feels” comes from what is emphasised as everyday, rather than occasional. Reading is visibly prioritised, including a book swap style reading shed that supports access to books at home, and there is a strong emphasis on pupils taking on small leadership roles and responsibilities.
This is an infant school, so it does not have Key Stage 2 outcomes (Year 6) in the way parents may be used to when comparing primary schools. The most meaningful markers here are the strength of early reading, the quality of curriculum sequencing across Nursery to Year 2, and how well pupils are prepared for junior school.
The latest Ofsted inspection (8 and 9 May 2024) graded the school Good overall, with Personal Development graded Outstanding.
That “Outstanding” strand is not a small add-on at this age. It points to how well pupils learn respect for difference, how the school builds confidence and voice, and how enrichment is used to broaden horizons early.
Early reading is the school’s most explicit “engine room” priority. Phonics is taught through Little Wandle Letters and Sounds Revised (purchased in 2021), with daily sessions in Reception and continuing through Year 1, plus planned catch-up support to stop gaps from widening. The programme is described in detail for parents, including half-termly assessment checks and daily “keep up” intervention where needed.
This matters for families because it indicates a systematic approach rather than a loose “we do lots of reading” promise. A child who thrives with routine will usually do well with predictable daily phonics, clear progression, and books matched to the sounds they know.
Beyond phonics, reading is built through multiple routes. The school describes guided reading sessions (including ERIC, Everybody Reading in Class), story time, and structured approaches such as reading buddies and mystery reader. The result is that pupils encounter both decodable books for early fluency and richer texts for talk and comprehension.
In early years, the teaching picture is grounded in the EYFS framework but framed through the school’s approach: a language-rich environment, purposeful indoor and outdoor provision, and learning experiences shaped around children’s interests. The implication is a strong fit for children who learn through talk, play, and practical activity, while still benefiting from adult-led teaching in the essential basics.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families, the immediate “next step” question is Year 3, not secondary school. The school sits in a federation arrangement with Brookland Junior School on the same site, which helps continuity, familiar routines, and a smoother handover.
However, parents need to plan for the application process. There is no automatic transfer, even for pupils already at Brookland infants, although the school states that children attending the infant school have high priority for a junior place. Families should treat this as “helpful but not guaranteed”, then check the coordinated admissions rules and timelines with London Borough of Barnet.
A practical way to manage the transition is to shortlist early and use FindMySchool tools such as map-based distance checks and saved shortlists, especially if you are weighing the on-site junior route against other local options.
Brookland has two main entry routes, Nursery and Reception, and they operate differently.
Reception entry (September start) is coordinated by London Borough of Barnet. For September 2026 Reception entry, the published key dates include applications opening on 1 September 2025 and the on-time deadline of 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The school also signposts an official catchment area resource via the local authority and encourages visits before applying.
Nursery entry is handled directly by the school. For September 2026 Nursery entry, the published application form states a closing date of midday on 4 March 2026 for eligible birth dates.
The school also describes offering 15-hour and 30-hour Nursery places, which is helpful for working families planning childcare patterns as well as education.
Competition level (Reception): the published figures indicate 234 applications for 87 offers, and the demand level is oversubscribed. If you are applying from outside the immediate area, it is worth taking a realistic view and building a broader list of acceptable preferences.
Visiting and open events: the school publishes school tour dates in early 2026, including 24 February 2026 and further dates through June 2026. These tours are typically bookable through the school office, so treat dates as fixed but confirm availability.
100%
1st preference success rate
68 of 68 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
87
Offers
87
Applications
234
At infant level, pastoral strength is usually expressed through consistency: predictable routines, clear expectations, and trusted adults who know pupils well. The school’s approach to behaviour uses shared rules and language, and pupils are encouraged to report worries to staff, which supports both day-to-day confidence and safeguarding culture.
Inclusion is a stated priority. Pupils with special educational needs and disabilities are described as being supported through thoughtful adaptations, including tools such as visual timetables and structured workstations, with staff expected to tailor support so pupils can access the same curriculum wherever possible.
Personal development is a clear signature. Pupils are introduced to understanding and respecting different faiths, supported by visits to local places of worship. At this age, the implication is that the school is building social understanding early, not postponing it to later key stages.
Safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Enrichment is unusually concrete for an infant school, both in what is offered and how regularly pupils access it.
One defining feature is swimming. Pupils benefit from swimming lessons each year in an on-site pool, which is rare for a state infant setting and meaningfully expands what “PE” looks like at ages 4 to 7.
Clubs and activities show a mix of creative, sporting, and STEM-style options. The school lists provision such as Forest School, Mother Nature Science Club, Robotics, Let the Children Sing, Games Design, Spanish, and Yoga Zone, alongside sport options. This variety works well for children who need to “find their thing” early, while also giving parents practical after-school coverage when clubs run at the right times.
There is also evidence of age-appropriate stretch. A Year 2 residential visit is referenced as part of the wider offer, which suggests the school is willing to introduce independence gradually, in a structured, well-supported way.
Reading culture sits here too, not only in lessons. The school promotes borrowing from the library, daily reading structures, and family involvement, with an expectation of short, consistent home reading. For children who enjoy stories and routine, that ecosystem can be a genuine confidence-builder by the end of Year 2.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees.
For 2024 to 2025 timings, Breakfast Club runs from 8.00am to 8.45am for Reception to Year 2. Classroom doors open for a soft-start at 8.45am and pupils are expected in class by 9.00am, with the day ending at 3.15pm for Reception to Year 2.
Breakfast Club is priced at £5 per session, with a pupil premium discount rate published as £3 per session.
After-school wraparound operates on site until 6.00pm via an external provider, and a range of additional clubs are offered through external providers at extra cost.
Competition for places. With 234 applications for 87 offers in the latest available admissions data, entry pressure is real. Families should plan multiple preferences and understand how oversubscription criteria work.
Curriculum consistency beyond the basics. The most recent inspection evidence highlights that, in some subjects beyond English and mathematics, assessment and subject leadership oversight are not yet consistently sharp. For some children this will not be obvious day-to-day, but parents who want uniformly strong subject depth across the curriculum should ask how this is being addressed.
Junior transfer is not automatic. The close link with Brookland Junior School is a plus, but families still need to apply for Year 3 places and track the local authority timeline.
Wraparound costs vary. Breakfast Club has a published per-session price, but after-school and enrichment clubs are largely run by external providers, so costs and availability can change term to term.
Brookland’s core strengths are clarity of routines, a serious approach to early reading, and a personal development offer that stands out for an infant setting. The school is best suited to families who value structured early learning plus broad enrichment, and who can engage early with admissions planning in a high-demand pocket of Hampstead Garden Suburb.
Securing a place is the limiting factor, so treat visits, catchment understanding, and realistic preference lists as part of the process, not an afterthought.
The school was graded Good at its 8 and 9 May 2024 inspection, with Personal Development graded Outstanding. That combination usually signals a school where pupils are safe, expectations are consistent, and wider development is planned rather than incidental.
Reception applications are coordinated by London Borough of Barnet. For September 2026 entry, the published on-time deadline is 15 January 2026 and offer day is 16 April 2026.
Nursery admissions are handled by the school. The published Nursery application form for September 2026 entry gives a closing date of midday on 4 March 2026.
Yes. Breakfast Club runs on site from 8.00am to 8.45am for Reception to Year 2, and after-school care operates on site until 6.00pm through an external provider.
Many families aim for Brookland Junior School on the same site, but there is no automatic transfer. You must still apply for a junior school place, following the local authority’s timeline.
Get in touch with the school directly
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