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.
A small-childhood setting that puts inclusion at the centre, then builds the day around practical learning and calm routines. Coteford Infant School serves Nursery to Year 2 (ages 3 to 7) and describes itself as two-form entry with a nursery on site.
The physical environment is part of the story. The school moved into an adapted building in 1983 to enable children with physical disabilities to learn alongside peers, and it continues to run a Special Resource Provision (SRP) for physical disability, supported by level access and a physio room.
Demand is the practical reality for many families. For the most recent Reception admissions cycle provided, there were 138 applications for 47 offers, around 2.94 applications per place, with the school classed as oversubscribed. (Admissions outcomes vary year to year and are shaped by cohort size and local demographics.)
The school’s self-description leans heavily into community and inclusion, and the website foregrounds that message from the first page. Expectations are framed as aspirational but age-appropriate, and the language used for children emphasises independence and learning through trial, error, and perseverance.
A distinctive feature is how the environment is set up for early years and Key Stage 1 children. The site is designed on one level and the playground is described in unusually specific terms for an infant school, with named areas such as the Magical Theatre, the Butterfly Garden and a conservation area, plus a track and a games court. This matters because space and layout shape how young pupils move between play, phonics, story time, and structured tasks, particularly for children who need physical access adaptations or calmer transitions.
Leadership information is clear and easy to verify. The headteacher is Mrs Louise Crook, and the school lists a defined senior leadership team including a deputy headteacher and phase leaders.
One cultural clue sits in the school’s stated motto: We do our best to be our best! Used well, a motto at infant level becomes a shared language for effort and kindness, rather than a pressure lever for attainment.
This is an infant school, so the usual headline Key Stage 2 measures (the Year 6 tests that often dominate primary comparisons) are not the most relevant lens for parents. What matters more here is how effectively the school teaches early reading, language, number sense, and learning habits in Nursery, Reception, and Key Stage 1, then prepares pupils for the junior phase.
The latest Ofsted inspection (27 April 2022, published 17 June 2022) judged the school to be Good.
Beyond the grade itself, the 2022 inspection report emphasises high expectations and positive learning behaviour, as well as pupils having access to a library and well-maintained outdoor areas that staff use to support learning. For parents, the implication is that academic progress is likely to be built on routines and consistent classroom conduct, which is often what helps young children gain confidence with phonics, writing stamina, and early maths fluency.
Parents comparing schools locally can use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to line up infant and primary options side by side, especially where schools feed into different junior schools or have different admissions boundaries.
The curriculum intent is written in unusually explicit, child-development language. The school positions early education as a transition into the education system that should build resilience and independence, with learning that starts from practical experience and develops vocabulary through talk and repeated practice.
Early Years provision follows the Early Years Foundation Stage framework and describes learning as active and exploratory indoors and outdoors. The school also states it uses Read Write Inc. to support reading and writing in the early years. The practical implication is a structured approach to early reading alongside play-based learning, a combination that tends to suit many children, including those who need clear routines.
Adaptation is built into how planning is described. Year teams plan collectively, then class teachers adjust to meet the needs of pupils in each class, using memorable experiences and retrieval practice so knowledge moves into long-term memory. For parents, this points to teaching that aims to make learning stick through revisiting and applying, rather than racing through topics.
Nursery is part of the school, but it has its own self-contained space and a dedicated outdoor area with a large covered section. The school describes a part-time model with sessions that typically run morning or afternoon, and it indicates staffing at a minimum of three adults per session, with higher levels when children’s needs require it.
Places and timings for nursery entry are outlined in practical terms. Offers are described as being made in April or May for children due to start Reception the following September, with an additional intake mentioned for January when places remain available.
Nursery fee details are best taken from the school’s official information, and eligible families can also check government-funded early education entitlements.
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 key transition point is into Year 3. In this area, the most straightforward route is into the linked junior phase. Coteford Junior School states that pupils from Coteford Infant School who apply through Hillingdon admissions are guaranteed a Year 3 place.
That guarantee matters for family planning. It reduces uncertainty at age 7, and it means parents can focus on the immediate fit for Nursery to Year 2, knowing there is a defined pathway into junior schooling if they follow the published application route.
Reception entry is coordinated through the local authority. For September 2026 entry, Harrow’s published primary application timeline shows applications opening on 01 September 2025, closing on 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026.
For Nursery, the school administers its own nursery admissions arrangements, and it is explicit that a Nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place. That distinction is easy to miss, but it is important, particularly in a school where demand can vary between nursery and Reception.
Oversubscription criteria are set out in a clear order, starting with children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, then looked-after children, then medical and sibling criteria, and finally distance-based criteria. The school also states a distance priority radius of 750m, and that distance is measured in a straight line using a computerised mapping system.
Because distance rules can be decisive, families should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check their exact home-to-school distance against the priority radius and to sanity-check how close they are likely to be relative to other applicants.
100%
1st preference success rate
43 of 43 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
47
Offers
47
Applications
138
Pastoral support in infant settings is often about predictable routines, calm starts, and rapid response to concerns. The school’s own description of breakfast club stresses a structured, calm start, with priority criteria aimed at supporting working parents and children the school identifies as vulnerable.
A second strand is inclusion support. The school’s SRP for physical disability, together with accessibility features such as level access and a physio room, suggests that wellbeing and access needs are addressed through environment as well as adult support.
The 2022 inspection report indicates that bullying is rare and that staff deal with it promptly. For parents, the implication is that behaviour expectations and adult follow-through are treated as foundational, which is particularly relevant for young children learning social rules for the first time.
An infant school’s enrichment is only valuable if it is practical and age-appropriate, and Coteford provides unusually specific examples.
Clubs are described as termly, with high demand and a turn-taking approach so different children get access across the year. Specific activities named include:
Football on Tuesdays for Years 1 and 2, gymnastics on Wednesdays for Year 1, and multisports on Thursdays for Year 2, delivered by an external coach.
Choir on Friday after school, open to Reception through Year 2, led by the nursery manager, with the choir also singing at events and local residential homes.
Tennis as a lunchtime club for Years 1 and 2.
Gardening club, planned to start later in the year.
A further distinctive element is Canine Assisted Learning. The school describes weekly visits from a school dog (Rashy) and a handler, with targeted support discussed with parents before it is put in place. For some children, this kind of programme can support confidence, communication, and emotional regulation, particularly in early years where wellbeing strongly influences readiness to learn.
School timings are published in a drop-off and collection document. Nursery drop-off is listed at 8.35am, with an afternoon drop-off at 12.20pm, and a 3.20pm collection for the afternoon session. Reception to Year 2 has a soft start with arrival between 8.35am and 8.45am, and collection is shown as 3.15pm.
Wraparound care is clearly described. Breakfast club starts at 7.45am, and the on-site after-school club runs until 5.45pm for Reception to Year 2.
For travel, Eastcote Underground Station is served by the Metropolitan and Piccadilly lines, which is useful for families commuting across North West London.
Lunch arrangements are straightforward for this age range. The school states that all infant school children are entitled to a free school lunch, with ordering handled through the catering provider.
Reception demand. The intake is oversubscribed in the most recent admissions data (138 applications for 47 offers), so families should approach it as competitive and plan backup preferences.
Nursery does not guarantee Reception. Nursery is part of the school, but the admissions information explicitly states that a nursery place does not guarantee a full-time school place.
Distance rules can decide outcomes. The published admissions information references a 750m distance priority radius and straight-line measurement, so borderline addresses should check distance carefully and not assume a place based on informal local patterns.
Wraparound costs change over time. The school notes that breakfast club payments are revised annually, so families should confirm current charges before relying on the service for weekly budgeting.
Coteford Infant School suits families who want an inclusive, structured early-years setting with a clearly described environment and support for physical disability needs, plus practical wraparound care that fits working patterns. The curriculum narrative emphasises practical learning, vocabulary, and building independence, and enrichment is unusually specific for this age phase, from choir and tennis to a canine-assisted programme. The main challenge is admission pressure for Reception, so it works best for families who can meet the published criteria and keep a realistic shortlist alongside it.
The school was graded Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection, with the published report highlighting high expectations and positive learning behaviour. For many families, the strongest fit will be where inclusion, structured routines, and early reading foundations matter most.
Reception applications follow the local authority timeline. For September 2026 entry, Harrow’s published dates include applications opening on 01 September 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No. The school’s admissions information states that a nursery place does not guarantee a full-time school place in Reception. Families should treat Nursery and Reception as linked stages in experience, but separate in admissions.
Yes. Breakfast club starts at 7.45am and the on-site after-school club runs until 5.45pm for Reception to Year 2. Availability can vary, so regular users should check booking arrangements early.
A common route is Coteford Junior School for Year 3. That school states that Coteford Infant School pupils who apply through Hillingdon admissions are guaranteed a Year 3 place.
Get in touch with the school directly
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