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.
In a quiet pocket of Golders Green, this community primary serves pupils from age 2 through to Year 6, with nursery provision built into the school’s structure and routines. It is a mixed, mainstream school, and the published capacity is 390, giving it headroom to run multiple classes while still keeping the feel of a local school.
The most important recent context is inspection. The latest Ofsted inspection (June 2025) graded quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management as Good, with early years provision graded Outstanding, under the post September 2024 report-card approach rather than a single overall grade.
On results, the school’s Key Stage 2 outcomes (Year 6) look strong. In 2024, 78.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 23.67% reached greater depth compared with 8% across England. The FindMySchool ranking places it above England average, within the top 25% of primaries in England.
The school describes itself as a place where every individual is valued and encouraged to grow into confident, independent learners, with an emphasis on taking on challenge and developing motivation for learning. That framing matters because it lines up with what families typically want from a primary that is both ambitious and emotionally steady.
Leadership is stable. The headteacher is Mr Alexander Banks, and governance documents show his headteacher term starting on 28 June 2017. A stable headship often translates into consistent routines and clearer priorities for staff, which in turn helps pupils settle quickly and keep momentum through the junior years.
Early years is a distinctive strength in the most recent inspection profile, and the school’s structure reinforces this, with dedicated provision for pre-nursery and nursery alongside Reception. Year pages indicate separate classes for 2 to 3 year olds and 3 to 4 year olds, then transition into Reception, which can help families who want continuity before school becomes more formal.
For a state primary, the most meaningful academic signal is Key Stage 2 performance at the end of Year 6.
Expected standard (reading, writing and maths combined): 78.67% (England average: 62%).
Higher standard (greater depth in reading, writing and maths): 23.67% (England average: 8%).
Scaled scores: reading 106, maths 107, grammar, punctuation and spelling 111 (with a combined total score of 324).
Science expected standard: 91% (England average: 82%).
Those figures suggest a school where many pupils leave Year 6 not just meeting the expected standard, but a meaningful minority reaching the higher standard as well, which tends to show up in confidence with reading comprehension and multi-step maths.
Rankings add useful context when used carefully. Ranked 2026th in England and 33rd in Barnet for primary outcomes, this places the school above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England, using the FindMySchool proprietary ranking based on official data. (This is not an Ofsted measure and should be read as a comparative indicator rather than a guarantee for any individual child.)
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
78.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school’s published curriculum intent focuses on securing core skills in speaking, listening, reading, writing and mathematics, then applying those across a broad set of subjects. There is explicit attention to creative and expressive arts, the natural environment, and practical safety, including online safety.
Breadth is visible in how the curriculum is structured on the school site, with discrete subject areas including English, maths, science, history, geography, design and technology, art and design, music, computing, physical education, PSHE, and modern foreign languages.
What helps this feel less abstract is the detail the school shares for year groups. For example, Year 6 English includes work on “The Story of the Blue Planet” (Andri Snær Magnason), using reading, writing and drama to explore themes like responsibility and the environment. The implication for families is that literacy is treated as more than spelling and comprehension, it is also a tool for discussion, empathy, and structured expression.
As a Barnet primary, secondary transfer is coordinated through the local authority, and families often consider a mix of schools across Barnet and neighbouring areas depending on travel routes, faith criteria (where relevant), and whether they are considering selective pathways. The key practical point is that Year 6 transition tends to be smoother when pupils have been taught solid routines for independent work, reading stamina, and mathematical fluency, which is where the school’s KS2 outcomes are most relevant.
If your shortlist includes multiple local primaries, the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools can help you set the KS2 picture side-by-side, so you can see whether strength is broad (expected standard) or more concentrated at the top end (higher standard).
Demand looks real but not extreme by inner London standards. Recent admissions data shows 34 applications for 21 offers, which is about 1.62 applications per place, and the entry route is marked oversubscribed. This is the sort of ratio where outcomes can change year to year, so families should treat it as a signal of competitiveness rather than a fixed barrier.
For Reception entry (September 2026), applications run through Barnet’s coordinated process rather than directly through the school. Key dates published by Barnet Council include: application process opens 1 September 2025; on-time deadline 15 January 2026; offers on 16 April 2026; and offer acceptance deadline 30 April 2026.
Nursery admissions are handled differently. The school states that children are admitted to nursery in the term after their third birthday, with main intakes in September, January and April. Nursery sessions run Monday to Friday, 8:45am to 11:45am.
Open events are described more as headteacher tours by arrangement rather than fixed open days. If you are planning for a September 2026 start, aim to look in early autumn, then confirm exact timings with the school as tours can fill up.
100%
1st preference success rate
15 of 15 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
21
Offers
21
Applications
34
The latest inspection report-card profile aligns with a school that has tightened routines and expectations while keeping early years as a standout area. With early years graded Outstanding, it is reasonable to expect strong attention to settling-in, communication with families, and consistent day-to-day practice for the youngest children.
Beyond the formal inspection picture, some practical wellbeing indicators are baked into the school day structure. A clear start and finish pattern supports predictable transitions, which can matter a lot for pupils who find busy mornings hard. Breakfast and after-school provision also helps many families reduce pressure around commuting and work schedules.
Wraparound care and clubs are a meaningful part of how this school fits family life.
runs 8:00am to 8:40am and includes breakfast; the published cost is 70p per day (so £0.70).
runs 3:30pm to 6:00pm.
For extracurricular breadth, the site explicitly references a set of pupil activities and roles that go beyond generic sports lists. Named examples include Eco Committee, Gardening Club, School Council, and Wellbeing ambassadors, plus clubs such as Athletics club, Cooking club, and Creative club.
The implication for parents is twofold. First, pupils who need a structured outlet after lessons have clear options. Second, leadership and participation roles (school council and wellbeing ambassadors) can suit children who respond well to responsibility and purpose, rather than simply more academic work.
The school publishes detailed session times by phase:
8:45am to 11:45am
8:50am to 11:45am, then 1:15pm to 3:30pm
8:50am to 12:00pm, then 1:15pm to 3:30pm
Breakfast club begins before the formal start, and the after-school club extends care to 6:00pm, which can make a significant difference if you commute.
For travel, the location in Golders Green means many families will use local bus routes and nearby Underground links. Practical feasibility often comes down to the school run, so it is worth testing the route at the time you would actually travel, not just in the middle of the day.
inspection report has changed: The school’s older headline label in some places still reads Requires Improvement, but the latest inspection (June 2025) uses graded judgements without a single overall grade, and the report-card outcomes were Good across key areas with Outstanding in early years. Families should read the most recent report itself rather than relying on older summaries.
Nursery timings may not suit every working pattern: Nursery sessions are published as morning-only (8:45am to 11:45am). Wraparound care helps for Reception upwards, but families needing full-day nursery should check what is currently offered and what is not.
Competition exists: Admissions data indicates oversubscription, with more applications than offers in the published figures. That does not necessarily mean a very tight distance outcome every year, but it does mean you should have realistic backup preferences.
Wessex Gardens Primary School looks like a school on a clear upward trajectory, with a recent inspection profile that points to consistent practice and especially strong early years. Outcomes at the end of Year 6 are above England averages, suggesting that pupils typically leave with a secure academic foundation.
Who it suits: families in Golders Green and wider Barnet who want a state primary with strong KS2 results, a structured school day, and practical wraparound options. The main challenge is admission planning in an oversubscribed context, so it rewards families who engage early with the local authority timeline and keep a sensible set of preferences.
On recent evidence, it has many strong indicators. Year 6 outcomes are above England averages for the combined expected standard, and the latest inspection report-card shows Good judgements across the main areas, with early years graded Outstanding (June 2025).
Reception admissions are handled through Barnet’s coordinated process. Key dates include the on-time deadline of 15 January 2026 and offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school states that nursery admission starts in the term after a child’s third birthday, with main intakes in September, January and April. Published nursery sessions run 8:45am to 11:45am on weekdays.
The school publishes a breakfast club (8:00am to 8:40am) and an after-school club (3:30pm to 6:00pm). These are separate from the formal school day session times.
The school lists a range of clubs and responsibility roles, including Eco Committee, Gardening Club, School Council, and Wellbeing ambassadors, alongside clubs such as cooking, athletics, and creative activities.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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