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.
Elmwood Infant School sits in Waddon with an age range from 3 to 7, so it covers Nursery through to Year 2 before most pupils transfer on for Key Stage 2. The tone set on the school website is strongly early years focused, with a clear emphasis on language development, early reading, and structured routines that help very young children feel secure while they learn. The school also positions itself as a Gold Rights Respecting School, which signals that children’s rights and respectful relationships are intended to be more than a poster in the corridor.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. For families weighing up practicalities, wraparound care is explicitly described, with breakfast club and an after school club running every weekday in term time (spaces are capped).
The most recent Ofsted inspection in July 2024 judged the school to be Good.
Elmwood’s public-facing messaging is consistently about stability and belonging. The headteacher’s welcome describes an inclusive community where every child is valued, supported, and encouraged to thrive, and it frames the staff team as experienced and long-serving, which matters in an infant setting where predictable adults and routines reduce anxiety for many pupils.
The Gold Rights Respecting School statement on the website is also a meaningful clue about day-to-day culture. In practice, schools that take rights-respecting work seriously tend to foreground listening, fairness, and consistent adult behaviour, because the model works poorly if expectations shift from classroom to classroom. For parents, the implication is that behaviour and relationships are likely to be handled through shared language and predictable boundaries, which is often what younger children need when they are learning how to be in school.
Leadership is also in transition. The school has published a headteacher welcome letter dated 10 November 2025 introducing Helen Hayes as the new headteacher, while other official listings have referred to Esther Payne as interim headteacher. For parents, what matters is that the school is being explicit about who is leading now, and that it has communicated that change directly to families.
For an infants school, the usual headline measures parents see for junior primaries (Key Stage 2 reading, writing, and maths percentages) are not the right fit, because pupils move on at the end of Year 2. Elmwood’s published narrative instead focuses on the building blocks that typically predict later outcomes, particularly early language, vocabulary, phonics foundations, and structured early maths.
It is also worth reading the Ofsted judgement as a broad signal about quality and consistency rather than a proxy for exam performance. A Good grade indicates that the school is meeting expected standards in its overall education and safeguarding culture, which is often what parents want most at this age.
For parents comparing local options, the useful question is less about league-table style data and more about the school’s approach to early reading, routines, and inclusion. Elmwood’s own emphasis on vocabulary and structured learning points to a setting that takes those basics seriously.
Elmwood’s curriculum description centres on the essentials for ages 3 to 7: learning to read and write, developing early maths skills, and building language so pupils can express themselves confidently with adults and peers. That focus is appropriate for an infant school, because the biggest gains at this stage often come from systematic work on phonics, talk, and early number sense, with plenty of purposeful play and exploration alongside.
The nursery page adds useful detail about how this looks in practice. It describes a balance of child-led play and adult-guided learning, daily use of an outdoor area across seasons, and a key person approach, all of which are typical markers of a nursery that aims to help children settle quickly and form secure attachments with staff. The implication for families is that the nursery is positioned to support both confidence and readiness for Reception, particularly for children who benefit from gradual familiarisation with school routines.
Digital learning is signposted in the navigation, as are reading and phonics and a “super skills” area, which suggests the school is trying to make its curriculum intent visible to parents. Even without exhaustive detail on every subject page, the overall framing is clear: start with strong foundations and teach them consistently.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because Elmwood finishes at the end of Year 2, the main transition question is Year 3 placement. In Croydon, many families move from infant to a linked junior school or another primary option for Key Stage 2, and it is sensible to treat this as part of the original decision rather than an afterthought.
Elmwood Junior School is at the same postcode on Ofsted’s listing, which usually indicates a close local relationship. Practically, families should review Year 3 transfer arrangements early, including how siblings and continuity are handled locally, so the move from Year 2 to Year 3 feels like a planned step rather than a scramble.
For parents who are already thinking ahead, FindMySchool’s Map Search can help you sanity-check travel distances for both the infant stage and the likely junior destination, particularly if you are balancing work routes and wraparound care.
Elmwood is a Croydon community school, and the school website sets out Reception admissions for the 2026 to 2027 school year for children born between 1 September 2021 and 31 August 2022. It states an intake of 120 pupils for Reception and gives a form return deadline of 15 January 2026.
Demand is a defining feature in the most recent available Reception admissions data for this review: 260 applications for 91 offers, which equates to 2.86 applications per offer and is recorded as oversubscribed. The implication is straightforward, families should treat Elmwood as competitive and plan backups within a sensible travel radius. If you are shortlisting, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison to view other nearby infants and primaries side by side using consistent data points.
Nursery admissions are a separate pathway and do not remove the need to apply for Reception through the local authority route. The Croydon primary admissions guidance makes the general point that attendance in a nursery class does not create an automatic Reception place, which is an important expectation to set early.
100%
1st preference success rate
83 of 83 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
91
Offers
91
Applications
260
At infant stage, pastoral strength often shows up as calm routines, predictable adult responses, and a shared approach to behaviour and relationships. Elmwood’s rights-respecting framing, alongside its emphasis on children feeling safe and ready to learn, points towards a pastoral model that prioritises listening, respect, and consistency.
The nursery description reinforces this by highlighting wellbeing, confidence-building, and a key person approach, which is one of the more practical early years mechanisms for supporting children emotionally. Where this works well, parents typically experience smoother drop-offs, quicker settling after holidays, and fewer confidence wobbles when routines change.
Inclusion is also referenced directly in the nursery FAQ section, with a statement that the school works with families and external professionals to support additional needs, and it encourages parents to discuss a child’s profile with the SENDCo. For parents of children with emerging needs, the implication is that early conversation is welcomed, which is usually a positive signal at this age.
Elmwood’s clubs page is unusually specific for an infant setting, naming examples rather than relying on vague claims. The list includes Friendship Club, Choir, Cooking, Art, and Recorders. For younger pupils, these kinds of clubs often matter less as “skills development” and more as confidence builders, they widen a child’s friendship group beyond the classroom and help children practise listening, taking turns, and persevering with something new.
The same page also references Family Learning and the HENRY programme, which points to activity designed to involve parents and carers, not just children. Where schools do this well, it can strengthen home routines around reading, communication, and behaviour, which tends to have the biggest long-term payoff in early years.
Elmwood publishes a clear school-day structure. Gates open between 08:30 and 08:50, with classroom drop-off from 08:40 to 08:50, and collection is expected promptly at 15:10, with a sign-out process after 15:20. Nursery sessions are also listed with AM and PM times, which helps working families plan realistically.
Wraparound care is described in more detail on the dedicated page. Breakfast club runs 07:30 to 08:40 and after school club runs 15:10 to 17:55 on weekdays in term time; both require advance booking and have limited capacity. Costs are stated as £5.50 per day for breakfast club and £12.50 per day for after school club.
For transport, the practical reality is that this is a local Croydon school serving families in and around Waddon. Parents should factor in the short, high-pressure windows at drop-off and pick-up, and plan alternative authorised collectors where needed, because the school is explicit that infant-aged children must be accompanied.
Oversubscription pressure. The latest available Reception admissions data shows demand exceeding supply, so families should plan backups early and avoid assuming a nursery place will translate into Reception without a separate application.
Infant-only structure. Because the school ends at Year 2, Year 3 planning matters. Make sure the junior-stage option you want is realistic for your address and family logistics.
Wraparound capacity. Breakfast club and after school club are offered, but places are limited, so do not assume availability if you have inflexible work patterns.
Leadership transition. The school has communicated a new headteacher introduction in November 2025, which is not a negative in itself, but families may want to ask how priorities and routines are being maintained during the handover.
Elmwood Infant School reads as a deliberately early-years focused setting, with a clear emphasis on language, early reading foundations, and a rights-respecting ethos that aims to shape day-to-day relationships. It suits families who want a structured start to schooling, value wraparound options, and are comfortable planning the Year 3 transfer early. The limiting factor is admission, demand is high, so the strongest applications are those paired with realistic alternatives.
The most recent Ofsted inspection in July 2024 graded the school Good. For an infant school, that is a solid signal of consistent education and a positive safeguarding culture, alongside a curriculum that supports early learning foundations.
As a Croydon community school, Reception admission is handled through the local authority process using published criteria. Families should read Croydon’s primary admissions guidance for 2026 to 2027 entry and check how distance and any priority groups apply to their address.
Yes, the school has a nursery and the nursery information describes both 15-hour part-time patterns and full-time places for families eligible for 30 hours of funded childcare. For the latest operational details, check the nursery information and discuss eligibility directly with the school.
The school’s admissions page describes Reception entry for the 2026 to 2027 school year and states that completed forms must be returned by 15 January 2026, with applications routed through Croydon’s admissions system.
Breakfast club and an after school club are offered every weekday in term time, with published opening hours and per-day costs, and places are limited. Booking is required in advance.
Get in touch with the school directly
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