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, mixed primary with nursery provision, serving families around Upper Norwood in Croydon. With around 630 places, it has the scale to offer breadth, from Forest School sessions to structured pupil leadership roles, while still keeping the daily routine clear and well organised.
Academically, results are a standout feature. Key Stage 2 outcomes sit above England averages across the headline measures, and the school’s performance places it comfortably within the top 25% of primaries in England in the FindMySchool ranking. For families weighing up options locally, it reads as a school where expectations are high, early reading is prioritised, and enrichment is planned with purpose rather than added as an afterthought.
The day starts with clear routines. Gates open at 08.45, pupils head straight to class for early learning, and parents are not on site at drop-off, which keeps the morning calm and focused for children who like predictability. The same clarity appears at pick-up, with parents welcomed into the playground and staff available to talk, alongside a structured approach to late collection.
Leadership is stable. Ms Meghan Pugh is head teacher, and she has been in post since at least January 2019, when she was named as headteacher in an official inspection letter. This matters for parents because long-term work, such as curriculum sequencing, reading strategy, and behaviour culture, tends to show best when a leadership team has had time to embed it.
A defining thread is the language of values and responsibility. The school highlights a golden rule of respect alongside core values including trust, love, cooperation, diversity, resilience and responsibility, and those ideas are reinforced through concrete roles rather than posters alone. Junior Governors are elected from Years 2 to 5 and meet across the term to represent classmates’ views; older pupils lead the agenda and present in assemblies. Playground Leaders support lunchtime play and help younger pupils get involved.
Several school-specific features add colour. Joey the school dog is integrated into the life of the school as a shared point of responsibility, which can be reassuring for pupils who respond well to predictable routines and gentle companionship. Sustainability is not treated as a one-off week; it is organised through an Eco-committee, termly assemblies, and practical initiatives referenced across the school’s own communications.
Key Stage 2 outcomes are strong. In 2024, 85.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 26.33% achieved greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%. These are substantial gaps, and they suggest that the curriculum and teaching routines are working for both the middle and the higher-attaining groups.
Attainment is supported by solid scaled scores, with reading at 107, mathematics at 107, and grammar, punctuation and spelling at 109. In practical terms, families can expect a school that is likely to push strong readers and mathematicians while also keeping a high proportion of pupils secure at the expected standard by the end of Year 6.
Rankings help contextualise that picture. Ranked 2310th in England and 22nd in Croydon for primary outcomes, this places the school above England average and within the top 25% of primaries in England (FindMySchool ranking based on official data).
It is also worth translating what that feels like day-to-day. Results at this level often come with clear lesson structures, regular assessment, and an emphasis on practising core skills. That can be a very good fit for pupils who respond well to routine and explicit teaching, and for families who want a school that takes academic fundamentals seriously.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
85.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Early reading is a cornerstone. Daily phonics lessons are used for younger pupils, reading books are closely matched to pupils’ phonics knowledge, and checks identify pupils who need additional support. That is a disciplined model: teach, practise, assess, then intervene quickly if a pupil is falling behind.
Once pupils move beyond the early stages, reading remains structured rather than drifting into occasional comprehension work. The school describes a continuing reading journey for older pupils that uses carefully chosen texts and multiple routes into reading for pleasure. Practical examples referenced in external review include reading ambassadors, a reading shed, reading buddies, and themed sessions that pause the timetable for sustained reading.
Curriculum breadth is supported through enrichment that is planned in advance. The school’s motto, Live It to Learn It, is used as a framing device for trips, experiences and opportunities that connect classroom learning to the wider world. Examples referenced in official review include visits to art galleries and places of worship, community involvement with a local care home, and participation in a music video with a local music artist. The implication for families is that enrichment is not dependent on a single enthusiastic teacher; it is built into how the school plans learning.
Inclusion is a stated priority, and pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities are described as being fully included in lessons. The key nuance is consistency. External review highlights that adaptations are not always as effective as they should be, and that staff training is being embedded to reduce variability, especially for pupils with SEND and the weakest readers. Parents of children who need highly tailored classroom adaptations should ask detailed questions about what “effective adaptations” look like in practice, how plans are reviewed, and how support is tracked across the year.
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 a Croydon primary, the main transition question is Year 6 to Year 7, and what range of secondary options families tend to consider. The school signposts secondary application guidance as part of its parent information, which is useful in a borough where families often weigh a mix of local comprehensive options and selective routes depending on the child.
A sensible way to approach this, especially in a large primary, is to treat Year 5 and early Year 6 as the time to map out likely travel patterns, open events, and admissions criteria for the secondaries on your list. If you are comparing several schools in the area, FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison view can help you check primary performance side-by-side before you move on to secondary shortlists, so you are clear on whether your child is likely to be well prepared for a more academic secondary curriculum.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Croydon Council rather than directly by the school, which is typical for a community primary. For entry in September 2026, the published deadline is 15 January 2026, and the outcome date is 16 April 2026. The admission number for Reception is 90.
When a school is popular, the tie-breakers matter. The published criteria sequence starts with children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, then looked-after and previously looked-after children, then siblings, then medical priority, followed by the remaining criteria. Parents considering a move should read the borough’s admissions guidance carefully and, where distance is a factor, use a precise measurement tool rather than relying on map estimates.
Demand indicators suggest competition. In the most recent admissions snapshot available, there were 253 applications for 90 offers, which is around 2.81 applications per place. About 1.15 first-preference applications were recorded per first-preference offer, suggesting that many families place the school high on their list rather than as a fallback. The practical implication is that families should treat it as an oversubscribed option and plan a broader set of preferences.
Nursery admissions run separately and include multiple intakes across the year, subject to availability. For 2026, the school describes January, April, and September intakes. Children entering nursery do not automatically receive a Reception place; parents still need to apply through the borough process for Reception admission.
Open mornings for the 2026 cycle are handled with a mix of scheduled events and direct contact when dates are not live. The school’s Reception page lists open days in Autumn 2025 as to be confirmed, and the Open Morning Tours page notes that events have ended for now while inviting families interested in Reception 2026 or in-year entry to contact the school office.
86.6%
1st preference success rate
71 of 82 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
90
Offers
90
Applications
253
A strong pastoral model is visible in day-to-day practice rather than only in policies. Pupils are described as having trusted adults they can speak with, and online safety education is explicitly referenced as part of safeguarding culture.
Behaviour is supported through clear expectations. Pupils are expected to stay focused in lessons, and structured activities at break times help pupils play well and keep disputes small. A restorative approach to behaviour is also referenced, which typically means staff focus on repairing relationships and helping pupils understand the impact of their actions, rather than relying only on sanctions.
Pupil leadership roles contribute to wellbeing as much as they do to school improvement. Junior Governors, Playground Leaders, and sustainability roles give pupils legitimate responsibility and help quieter children find a defined place within the school’s social structure. For some pupils, that sense of role and contribution is the difference between “going to school” and feeling genuinely part of it.
The latest Ofsted inspection judged the school to remain Good following an inspection on 12 and 13 June 2024, published on 12 July 2024. Ofsted also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular life is organised with a mix of staff-led clubs and external providers, and the named options give a clearer sense of flavour than the usual generic list. Current examples referenced by the school include Mini Makes and Bakes, Lego Legends, Yoga and Breathe, and Palace for Life. The implication is that activities are not limited to competitive sport or performance; there are structured options for hands-on making, wellbeing, and creativity.
Music has visible touchpoints. Choir is drawn from Key Stage 2 pupils and rehearses weekly, with community-facing performances described as part of the programme, including seasonal singing at a local care home and events such as the school’s winter fair. For pupils who enjoy singing but do not want the pressure of solo performance, a choir model often provides an accessible route into music.
Forest School is not an occasional enrichment day; it is described as incorporated into the curriculum through regular sessions, using play, exploration, and supported risk-taking to build confidence and self-esteem in an outdoor setting. For parents, the key question is frequency and staffing: how often sessions run for each year group, what training staff hold, and how risk assessment is handled. Asking those questions helps you understand whether the programme is central or supplemental.
Sustainability appears as both curriculum content and pupil-led activity. The Eco-committee is positioned as an active group, linked to assemblies, competitions, recycling routines, and wider climate-related projects. For pupils who care deeply about the environment, having a structured channel for that interest can be motivating and can develop speaking, organising, and teamwork skills alongside the moral purpose.
The school day runs from 08.45 to 15.15, with nursery sessions aligned to the same start and finish times for morning and afternoon provision. Breakfast Club runs from 07.45 to 08.45 and After School Club runs from 15.15 to 18.00 on weekdays in term time, excluding inset days and bank holidays.
For families who drive, it is important to note the School Streets restrictions referenced for Biggin Way and Marston Way during term time mornings and afternoons, which can affect drop-off and pick-up planning. There is also a published late collection charge of £5 per 15 minutes, which reinforces the expectation that pick-up plans should be reliable, or that parents should arrange after-school club where needed.
Competition for places. The available admissions snapshot shows materially more applications than Reception offers, which can make it hard to rely on this as a single-choice plan. Families should build a realistic preference list and understand tie-breakers early.
SEND consistency questions. Inclusion is clearly prioritised, but official review notes variability in how curriculum adaptations are implemented. Parents of children needing consistent classroom adjustments should ask for practical examples, not just policy language.
Tour and open-event timing. Open mornings for the 2026 cycle are not always published as fixed dates in advance, and the school has indicated that current open morning events have ended for now. If you need a visit to make a decision, plan early and be proactive about requesting a tour.
Drop-off logistics. Parents are not on site at morning drop-off, and School Streets restrictions may affect driving routes. That structure suits many families, but it is worth considering if you prefer a more informal morning handover.
Downsview Primary and Nursery School combines academic strength with an unusually structured approach to pupil responsibility, sustainability, and purposeful enrichment. Results suggest children are well prepared in the core subjects by the end of Year 6, and reading is treated as a whole-school priority rather than a departmental initiative.
Who it suits: families in the Croydon area looking for a high-performing state primary with nursery provision, strong routines, and an emphasis on values expressed through real roles and projects. The main challenge is admission, and families should treat the process as competitive and plan their preferences accordingly.
The evidence points to a strong option locally. Key Stage 2 outcomes are well above England averages, and the latest inspection confirmed the school remains Good. Families who value clear routines, strong early reading, and structured opportunities for pupil leadership are likely to find it a good fit.
Reception entry is coordinated by Croydon’s admissions process, rather than applying directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, the deadline is 15 January 2026, with outcomes available from 16 April 2026.
No. Nursery and Reception are separate admissions routes. Even if your child attends the nursery, you still need to submit a Reception application through the borough process for a school place in Reception.
The school day runs 08.45 to 15.15. Breakfast Club is available from 07.45 and After School Club runs until 18.00 on weekdays in term time, with published conditions around closures and inset days.
Clubs include named options such as Lego Legends, Mini Makes and Bakes, Yoga and Breathe, and Palace for Life, alongside activities like choir. Forest School is also described as incorporated into the curriculum through regular sessions, which will appeal to families who value outdoor learning and supported risk-taking as part of children’s development.
Get in touch with the school directly
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