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.
This is a large, established Barnet primary serving a mixed community in East Finchley, with an identity that is unusually explicit about children’s rights and responsibilities. The leadership team is well defined, and the current headteacher, Ziz Chater, has been in post since 01 September 2019.
The most recent inspection (October 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding judgements in key areas that matter day to day, including behaviour, personal development, and early years.
For parents, the headline is simple. It is a state school with no tuition fees, and it performs above England averages on the primary measures. Entry is competitive, and wraparound care is a real part of the offer, not an afterthought.
A “rights respecting” approach can be a poster on a wall or a working language that pupils actually use. Here it reads as the latter. The school’s Rights Respecting School status was re-accredited at Gold level in December 2023, and the website describes a culture where pupils learn rights language and apply it across school life.
This rights-led identity also shows up in community-facing projects rather than staying inside the gates. Destination East Finchley, running since Spring 2017, has pupils interviewing local businesses and linking learning to migration stories and local history, with partnerships including the Migration Museum of London and a permanent display at East Finchley Station mentioned in the project description. That kind of work is a useful signal for parents who want a school that takes citizenship and belonging seriously, without making it feel abstract or remote from pupils’ lives.
The school is also large enough to support a broad internal structure. The published “Who’s Who” lists phase and subject leadership roles (for example EYFS leadership, key stage leadership, curriculum leadership), which tends to correlate with clear routines and consistency across classes in bigger primaries. For families, the implication is that transitions between year groups are usually managed through shared systems rather than being dependent on one particular class teacher.
Facilities appear extensive for a state primary, with the school tour highlighting multiple core spaces, including a library, halls, playground space, a field, and a MUGA. That matters because in a big school, space is often the limiting factor on enrichment and sport. The presence of a MUGA and field supports both PE and after school clubs, and it helps explain why the extracurricular list can include multiple sports strands running in parallel.
On the primary measures outcomes are clearly above England averages, and the school sits comfortably within the top quarter of primary schools in England by this ranking.
A few figures illustrate the picture:
At Key Stage 2, 80.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%.
At the higher standard, 24.67% reached greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 8%.
Scaled scores are also strong, with reading at 108 and mathematics at 107, both above typical national benchmarks for the tests.
The FindMySchool ranking places the school 2,078th in England for primary outcomes and 34th locally in Barnet. These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.
For parents, the implication is not just that attainment is high, but that it is high in a way that is sustained across subjects. The combined measures and the scaled scores suggest breadth, not a single spike in one area. The higher standard figure is also meaningful, because it indicates that higher attaining pupils are being stretched, not simply secured at the expected threshold.
It is worth adding one early years indicator from the school’s own published data, because early years is judged separately in inspection and often matters to families choosing between nursery and Reception routes. The school reports 70% achieving a Good Level of Development in Reception in 2025, broadly in line with the national figure shown alongside it.
Parents comparing several Barnet primaries should use the FindMySchool local hub and comparison tool to view these outcomes side by side, rather than relying on general reputation alone.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
80.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Teaching and curriculum intent are described on the school website in a way that aligns with what strong primaries tend to do at scale: a planned progression model, clear sequencing, and explicit end points for knowledge and skills across subjects. The point for parents is that curriculum quality in a large primary depends on common language and shared planning, because consistency across three forms of entry is harder to deliver without it.
Reading is clearly treated as a pillar. In the October 2023 inspection report, the deep dives included reading, and the report text describes a structured approach to phonics and reading practice. On the school’s own curriculum pages, phonics is taught through Essential Letters and Sounds in Reception and Year 1, with daily timetabled sessions, and a continued focus in Year 2 through grammar, punctuation and spelling time alongside further support for pupils who need it.
Two practical examples on the website help show how reading is kept cultural rather than purely procedural. First, the reading for pleasure area includes poetry performance competitions across Years 1 to 6, which is a different kind of literacy confidence than decoding alone. Second, it references an online reading resource subscription for home reading, which usually supports consistency for busy families and for pupils who benefit from structured practice between school and home.
Beyond literacy, outdoor learning is not restricted to occasional enrichment days. The Forest School page states that pupils in Nursery, Reception, Year 1, Year 3 and Year 5 access the Forest School programme, overseen by qualified Forest School practitioners with additional support from staff and volunteers. That breadth across year groups matters. It suggests outdoor learning is planned into the curriculum journey rather than being a one-off experience.
The inspection report also points to curriculum work that connects learning to real life experiences and educational visits, including within the locality. In a community with diverse family histories, this approach often supports engagement, vocabulary development, and meaningful writing outcomes.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For a Barnet primary, the next step is rarely a single destination. Families tend to balance distance, admissions criteria, ethos, and in some cases selective testing or faith routes.
The school provides a structured Year 5 secondary transfer information pack, including an open evenings schedule for local secondaries and a transfer leaflet for the 2026 cycle. Even though the published open evening dates relate to the relevant admissions cycle, the broader pattern is consistent year to year. Open evenings are typically concentrated in September and early October, with applications due around the end of October for Year 7 entry the following September.
The open evening schedule referenced through the school’s materials includes several nearby options that are commonly on East Finchley families’ lists, such as The Archer Academy, Christ's College Finchley, and Bishop Douglass Catholic School. For families considering selective routes, the Barnet area also has well-known grammar options, and the published schedule includes several selective schools’ open evening entries.
The most useful practical takeaway is process rather than prediction. Start exploring secondary options early in Year 5, keep an eye on open evening windows in early autumn, and treat published schedules as a guide that needs re-checking on each school’s own site for the current year.
This is a state school, so the key admissions question is not fees, it is places.
Nursery applications are handled directly through the school, using the nursery application form route described on the admissions information pages. The school also makes an important point clearly in its FAQs: a nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place.
For eligible families, the nursery information includes the standard free entitlement framing, and the nursery page describes a pattern of five three hour daily sessions across the week. This is useful for parents planning childcare around work patterns, especially when combined with wraparound care options.
Reception applications are coordinated through Barnet Council. For September 2026 entry, the published Barnet timeline states that applications opened on 01 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026 and an acceptance deadline of 30 April 2026.
This results shows the school as oversubscribed on the primary entry route, with 195 applications for 78 offers, which is 2.5 applications per place. The implication is straightforward. Families should treat this as a competitive allocation and should list preferences strategically, including a realistic local option, rather than assuming proximity alone will secure a place.
If you are trying to understand how realistic an offer might be from a given address, the FindMySchoolMap Search is the right tool to use, because it helps you check your precise distance and local context, then compare it with recent allocation patterns where available.
100%
1st preference success rate
70 of 70 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
78
Offers
78
Applications
195
A rights-based ethos only matters if it changes how children experience school when they are anxious, struggling socially, or finding behaviour boundaries difficult. The evidence base here is stronger than a generic values statement.
The wellbeing page lists two learning mentors by name, Lyn King and Vikki Ingram-Lakey, and describes support that includes one to one work, lunchtime support for pupils who find outdoor play challenging, and availability to parents and carers when needed. For many families, that is the difference between “pastoral care exists” and “pastoral care is accessible”.
Safeguarding processes are also described in practical terms, including named safeguarding leads and deputies, and a clear statement that staff training is updated at least annually. In the October 2023 inspection report, safeguarding is judged effective.
The rights respecting work also appears to be structured rather than symbolic. The Rights Respecting Steering Group described on the website includes children, staff, governors and parents or carers, and it runs assemblies and coffee mornings. That governance-plus-pupil structure often helps keep wellbeing work consistent across a large school, because it anchors it in routines and shared language.
A school of this size can easily become purely operational unless it invests in enrichment that makes pupils feel known. Here, the extracurricular offer is unusually detailed, and it spans practical skills, sport, languages, and creative activities.
The published clubs list includes, among others:
Lego Club and Origami Club
Science Club
Cooking club (Rookie Cooks)
Arabic Club, plus French, Spanish and other language options
Art Club
Tag Rugby Club, football, and netball strands, with the MUGA and field referenced as activity spaces
A gymnastics club link via a named academy
These named options matter because they help parents judge fit. A pupil who is happiest building and making has clear options, and a pupil who wants active clubs has multiple routes rather than a single crowded football slot.
Community and leadership opportunities also show up in ways that are more specific than “pupil voice”. Global Ambassadors work described on the website includes fundraising (for example a whole school readathon) and local community links, including support for an asylum seeker drop-in and visits to a local care setting. Separately, volunteers are described as providing classroom support and one to one reading support, backed by training and resources.
Outdoor learning through Forest School also supports the wider curriculum. The Forest School access described for specific year groups suggests that pupils experience outdoor learning at multiple points in their primary journey, not just in early years.
The published school day schedule is granular by year group. Nursery sessions run 08:40 to 11:40 (morning) and 12:40 to 15:40 (afternoon). Reception and Key Stage 1 run 08:55 to 15:25, and Key Stage 2 finishes at 15:30.
Wraparound care is clearly present. The FAQs describe provision from 07:30 to 18:00 from Nursery through Year 6, and the breakfast club page states the school-run breakfast provision starts at 07:30, with a daily charge of £4.25 for the relevant age groups, while the youngest children and early Reception are supported through the separate provider arrangement described.
Term dates for the 2025 to 2026 academic year are published on the website, which is helpful for parents aligning childcare and leave planning well in advance.
For travel, the school’s location in East Finchley means many families will be combining walking, bus routes, and the Northern line corridor for commuting. Parking and drop-off can be a stress point in this part of Barnet, so families should pay attention to local restrictions and aim to trial the route at peak times.
Competition for places. The entry route shows 195 applications for 78 offers, which is 2.5 applications per place. This is not a school to assume you will “probably get”. Build a realistic preference list.
Nursery is not a back door. The school states that a place in Nursery does not guarantee a place in Reception. Families should plan on making a full Reception application through Barnet regardless of nursery attendance.
Big-school dynamics. With a published capacity of 696, children gain social breadth and lots of opportunities, but some will find a larger setting busy. For quieter pupils, it is worth asking how the school supports transitions, playground routines, and lunchtime spaces.
Curriculum expectations. The curriculum intent statement is explicit about high expectations and structured sequencing. That suits pupils who like clear routines and ambitious learning, but parents of children who need a slower pace should explore how interventions and in-class adaptations work in practice.
Martin Primary School combines scale with a defined identity. The rights respecting approach is not presented as an add-on, and it links to real community projects and day-to-day language that pupils can use. Outcomes on the primary measures here sit above England averages, and the most recent inspection picture supports a school that is orderly, safe, and strong in early years.
Who it suits: families who want a state primary with clear expectations, strong academic outcomes, substantial wraparound care, and a community-facing ethos. The main challenge is admission, not the education once a place is secured.
The most recent inspection (October 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding judgements for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision. Key Stage 2 outcomes are well above England averages, and the school’s ranking places it within the top quarter of primary schools in England on these measures.
Reception applications are made through Barnet’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, Barnet’s published timeline shows applications opened on 01 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No. The school states explicitly that a place in Nursery does not guarantee a place in Reception. Families should still apply for Reception through the Barnet admissions route.
Yes. The school’s FAQs describe provision from 07:30 to 18:00 from Nursery through Year 6, and the breakfast club information explains how provision is organised for different age groups, including a school-run breakfast option from 07:30.
The school provides a Year 5 secondary transfer pack and links to Barnet transfer guidance and local open evening schedules for the relevant cycle. Options commonly explored by East Finchley families include local comprehensive and faith schools, alongside selective routes where relevant, and open evenings typically cluster in early autumn.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.