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.
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St Joseph’s RC Infant School sits within the St Joseph’s Federation in Upper Norwood, serving children from age 3 to 7. Its story is unusually well documented for a small infant school, with the federation tracing its origins back to 1872, when St Joseph’s R.C. School opened on Crown Dale with a roll of 48. The most recent inspection in June 2024 confirmed the school continues to be Good, with a strong emphasis on calm classrooms, clear routines, and a broad range of experiences even for very young pupils.
Leadership is structured across the federation. Mrs Danielle Ashley is the headteacher, appointed in May 2022, and the infant school’s faith identity is not an add-on, it is woven into daily life through prayer, values language, and pupil leadership roles.
Because this is an infant school, there are no Key Stage 2 results to analyse here. The most meaningful “outcome” indicators for families tend to be the quality of early reading, early number foundations, behaviour and wellbeing culture, and how smoothly pupils transition into the linked junior phase.
This is a school where expectations are made explicit and repeated until they become habit. Classroom behaviour is described as calm, and pupils are taught routines they can follow independently. That matters in an infant setting, where the difference between “busy” and “orderly” is often the difference between children who thrive and children who feel overwhelmed.
The Catholic character shows up in pupil roles and daily language. Children take on responsibilities such as class monitor tasks, and there are specific leadership roles such as prayer leaders alongside the school council. That structure tends to suit pupils who like clarity and recognition, and it can also be reassuring for families who want an explicitly faith-informed ethos during the early years.
The federation’s history also gives the school a particular sense of continuity. Founding dates can feel like trivia, but for parents it often translates into something more practical, established governance, settled community ties, and routines that have had time to mature.
As an infant school (up to Year 2), St Joseph’s does not have GCSE, A-level, or Key Stage 2 performance data. The most relevant academic indicators are therefore qualitative rather than league-table driven: early reading and phonics delivery, curriculum sequencing, and how effectively pupils build foundations in number and language.
The latest inspection points to a school that prioritises reading, with phonics taught in a focused way and books matched carefully to pupils’ current decoding ability. Teachers check understanding regularly, and pupils get individual help when blending sounds is a barrier. That type of tight feedback loop is one of the strongest predictors of pupils becoming confident readers by the end of Key Stage 1.
Mathematical understanding is also described as being built deliberately across classes, with pupils questioned to probe understanding rather than simply completing worksheets. For families, the implication is straightforward: this is likely to feel structured and teacher-led in the early years, which many children benefit from.
The curriculum is described as being sequenced in small steps, with vocabulary and knowledge revisited so that pupils can recall and apply learning rather than simply encounter it once. In practice, that tends to look like short, frequent checks for understanding, clear modelling, and routines that allow pupils to work with increasing independence.
There is also evidence of deliberate curriculum breadth. Art, history, and science are not treated as optional extras. Examples include Key Stage 1 history links between the current monarchy and earlier historical figures, and practical art work such as clay creations in Year 2. For young pupils, that kind of hands-on work is not just “fun”; it is often how language and fine-motor control develop alongside knowledge.
A realistic note for parents: the inspection also indicates that some newer curriculum work in foundation subjects is not yet fully embedded. In a small school, curriculum changes can take time to become consistent across all classes, especially where subject leadership capacity is limited.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As an infant school, the main “next step” question is transition into Key Stage 2. St Joseph’s is part of a federation that includes the linked junior school, and families should expect a strong pathway from Year 2 into Year 3 within the federation structure.
For families considering alternatives at Year 3, it is worth understanding that the Year 2 to Year 3 move is a formal application step, rather than something to leave until late in Year 2. The federation’s admissions guidance for Year 3 makes clear that an application is required.
St Joseph’s is oversubscribed on the most recently provided Reception entry-route data, with 89 applications for 38 offers, which equates to 2.34 applications per place. For parents, the implication is that interest outstrips supply, and families should treat admissions as competitive rather than routine.
Reception applications follow the local authority coordinated route via the Common Application Form, alongside the school’s own supplementary information form. For Reception entry (2026 to 2027), the published closing date is 15 January 2026.
Nursery admissions are handled directly through the school’s own application process, rather than the local authority form. The published structure offers either a 15-hours pattern (5 mornings) or a 30-hours pattern (full day). As with all nursery provision, specific fee amounts can change and are best checked directly with the school.
100%
1st preference success rate
37 of 37 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
38
Offers
38
Applications
89
In infant settings, pastoral care is often best understood through routines and adult availability rather than formal “wellbeing programmes”. Here, pupils are taught the routines, adults are positioned as trusted points of contact, and pupils are encouraged to speak to an adult if worried.
There is also a developing focus on attendance, with leaders working with families to establish good attendance habits from the earliest point of entry. In practical terms, that often shows up in early follow-up when patterns emerge, and consistent messaging about why attendance matters even in Nursery and Reception.
The latest inspection confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective. That matters because infant schools are heavily dependent on safe handovers, accurate records, and staff vigilance, not just policies on paper.
The most compelling enrichment details here are specific rather than generic. Pupils have opportunities to visit an opera house, which is unusually ambitious for an infant phase and suggests the school uses London effectively as an extension of the curriculum. There are also nature-based visits, such as trips to Brockwell Gardens for mini-beast work, and hands-on science activities where pupils collaborate to investigate and build structures.
Sport is described in a way that goes beyond the usual infant staples. Activities referenced include archery and cricket. For families, this implies that physical education is treated as a meaningful part of the week, not only as “run around time”.
Pupil leadership is also a feature at this age, with roles such as prayer leaders, school council responsibilities, and class monitors. In an infant context, these roles usually work best for children who enjoy structure and who respond well to being trusted with small responsibilities.
Published timings are clear. Nursery runs on a 09:00 to 15:00 full-day pattern, with morning and afternoon sessions available. For Reception to Year 2, doors open at 08:40, school starts at 08:45, and the day ends at 15:10.
Wraparound care is established. Breakfast club opens at 07:45, and the after-school club runs from 15:00 to 18:00. Provision at this scale can be capacity-limited at peak points, so families relying on wraparound care should check availability early.
Uniform policy also signals a cost-aware approach, with an emphasis on limiting the number of branded items and allowing generic alternatives in school colours.
Admissions pressure. With 2.34 applications per place on the latest Reception entry-route figures, this is not a “turn up and you will get in” school. Families should plan early and follow the published steps carefully.
Curriculum change takes time. Some foundation subjects have been through recent curriculum adjustments that are not yet fully embedded, which can mean inconsistency while staff training and routines settle.
Faith identity is central. Catholic life is present in roles, routines, and daily language. Families who want a lighter-touch faith element should look closely at how this aligns with their preferences.
Infant-only structure. The school ends at Year 2. Families should be comfortable with the planned pathway into junior education and the need to engage with Year 3 transition planning.
St Joseph’s RC Infant School suits families who want a clearly Catholic infant setting, with calm routines, purposeful early reading work, and enrichment that does not underestimate what young pupils can take on. It is likely to work particularly well for children who respond to structure and who enjoy being given responsibility in small, age-appropriate ways. The limiting factor is admission, not the day-to-day experience.
The school is rated Good, with a recent inspection confirming calm behaviour in lessons, a strong focus on reading and phonics, and a curriculum that gives pupils broad experiences from an early age.
Reception entry uses the local authority coordinated application route, and the school also asks families to complete a supplementary information form. For 2026 to 2027 entry, the published closing date is 15 January 2026.
Yes. Nursery places are applied for directly through the school. Sessions are offered as either 15 hours across mornings or a 30-hour full-day pattern.
For Reception to Year 2, doors open at 08:40, school starts at 08:45, and the day ends at 15:10. Nursery sessions run between 09:00 and 15:00 depending on the pattern chosen.
Yes. Breakfast club opens at 07:45 and after-school club runs from 15:00 to 18:00. Availability can vary, so check early if you depend on it.
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