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.
Kenmore Park Infant and Nursery School in Harrow serves children aged 3 to 7, with nursery provision and an infant phase through Year 2, before families move on to junior school. It is a community school and has a published capacity of 322 pupils. The most recent full inspection (22 to 23 November 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development graded Outstanding.
For parents, the headline is a school that puts early reading, learning behaviours, and day-to-day routines at the centre, while keeping admissions practical and local authority led for Reception. The other headline is competition, in the most recent admissions data available here there were 139 applications for 69 offers at the main entry point, roughly 2.01 applications per place.
The school’s public-facing language places learning habits front and centre. In the school’s own materials, pupils are explicitly taught dispositions for learning, using the four characters Tough Tortoise, Sensible Squirrel, Team Ant, and Wise Owl. This matters because it is not just branding, it is a shared vocabulary that teachers can reference in class and that parents can reinforce at home, especially useful in the infant phase when many children are still learning how to be learners.
Formal review evidence also points in the same direction. Children are described as happy and keen to come to school, and the school frames safety through a clear message about “trusted adults” and consistent routines. For families, that typically translates into calmer transitions at drop-off and pick-up, fewer surprises around behaviour expectations, and a school day that feels predictable in the best sense.
There is also a strong inclusion thread running through the school’s published approach. The inspection report notes effective processes for identifying pupils with special educational needs and disabilities and working with external agencies, including family information sessions around areas such as receptive and expressive language. That sort of parent-facing support is particularly valuable in Nursery and Reception, where early speech, language, and communication needs can become clearer.
As an infant and nursery school (ending at Year 2), there is no Key Stage 2 results set to report here, and this profile does not include KS2 performance measures or rankings.
What can be stated with confidence is how the school’s quality is evidenced in the most recent inspection outcomes. The 22 to 23 November 2023 inspection graded Quality of education as Good and Early years provision as Good, alongside the Outstanding grades for Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development.
For parents, the implication is straightforward. If you are choosing an infant school, you are choosing the foundations, early literacy, early number sense, learning routines, and confidence in school. Strong judgements in behaviour and personal development usually indicate that pupils are being taught explicitly how to learn together, how to regulate, and how to participate positively, which in turn makes academic learning easier to sustain day-to-day.
If you want to compare infant schools, the most meaningful comparison is rarely a headline test score. It is the quality and consistency of early reading, the clarity of routines, and the precision of support for children who are new to English or new to the school mid-year.
Reading is positioned as a strategic priority. The inspection report describes a phonics programme that begins as soon as children start Reception, with staff trained to deliver it accurately and with reading books matched to the sounds children have learned. Pupils who need targeted support are identified quickly and helped to catch up.
The important detail is sequencing. The report gives a clear example of curriculum building over time, early years children learn about joining materials through junk modelling, then pupils later draw on this knowledge to make more complex structures such as windmills in Year 1 and chairs for teddies in Year 2. That is a good marker for curriculum coherence in an infant school, children are not just doing activities, they are building reusable knowledge and skills.
In the school’s own published policy language, teaching is framed as “Challenge for All” and the Building Learning Power approach is used to develop dispositions such as resourcefulness and resilience. The practical implication for families is that learning behaviours are taught as deliberately as content. In an infant school, this tends to show up in how children are supported to keep going with a task, collaborate, and reflect, even when they get stuck.
One area to watch, and to ask about directly, relates to children who arrive mid-year or who are new to learning English. The inspection report notes that in some subjects these pupils do not consistently secure key knowledge because the most important concepts are not reinforced or checked well enough, which can make it harder to access more complex ideas later. A useful visit question is what “check and reinforce” looks like in practice for new starters, especially in foundation subjects.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school serves Nursery through Year 2, the main transition is into Year 3 at junior school. In London Borough of Harrow, this is a known pattern, and the local authority’s own guidance states that children in Year 2 at an infant school must apply for a junior transfer for Year 3, with Kenmore Park described as the only separate junior school in Harrow.
That has two implications for families.
First, it is not an automatic roll-over in administrative terms. Even if a linked junior route is typical, you still complete the junior transfer process in Year 2, using the local authority timetable and application system.
Second, transition planning matters. The more closely the infant and junior schools align on curriculum and expectations, the smoother Year 3 often feels. The local authority guide indicates infant school children have high priority for the linked junior school. When you visit, ask what the transition programme looks like, for example shared events, staff liaison, or induction days.
Reception admissions are coordinated by the local authority. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 01 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026. Offers are issued on 16 April 2026, with acceptance due by 30 April 2026.
Demand is real. In the most recent admissions snapshot provided here, there were 139 applications for 69 offers at the main entry point, so families should assume competition and apply on time with realistic preference choices.
If you are trying to sense-check your likelihood, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to measure your distance precisely and stress-test it against past allocation patterns. Even without a published “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure here, distance remains a core tie-break in most community school arrangements once higher priority criteria have been applied.
Nursery admissions can be less standardised because some boroughs treat nursery classes differently from Reception, and schools may ask for school-level forms in addition to borough forms. The school’s own admissions page indicates that pre-school age (Nursery age) applications are made directly to the school, with the school notifying parents about places by the end of March.
The borough also publishes a main-round nursery timetable for September 2026, with a closing date of 15 January 2026 and outcomes issued on 16 March 2026 for on-time applications.
A practical way to handle this as a parent is to follow the borough’s published nursery round for deadlines and outcome timing, while also checking the school’s Nursery Admissions instructions to ensure you have completed any school-specific steps.
If you are already in Year 2 at an infant school, the junior transfer to Year 3 has its own application route. For September 2026 junior entry, the published dates again run from 01 September 2025 opening to 15 January 2026 closing, with outcomes on 16 April 2026.
100%
1st preference success rate
54 of 54 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
69
Offers
69
Applications
139
The school’s pastoral and welfare approach is described in practical terms. The website states that welfare assistants qualified in first aid support children who are sick, injured, or distressed, and that the school works with community health services and local safeguarding procedures, including liaison with children’s services or police in exceptional circumstances.
Safeguarding is also treated as an operational discipline, not a slogan. The published approach emphasises clear processes and appropriate escalation routes, which is what parents should want to see in early years and Key Stage 1.
A final strength is how wellbeing and learning behaviour link up. When a school explicitly teaches routines and learning dispositions, it typically reduces low-level anxiety for younger children, because children know what success looks like and what support looks like. The best question to ask on a visit is how the school supports children who struggle with regulation, for example through structured approaches such as zones of regulation resources and staff consistency.
For an infant school, extracurricular quality is less about breadth and more about offering activities that build confidence, movement, rhythm, and social skills.
The school publishes a weekly pattern of after-school provision, including Key Stage 1 Football Club led by Super Start Sports, Key Stage 1 Basketball Club led by Non-Stop Action, a Singing Club, a seasonal Christmas Art and Craft Club, and Dance provision by Dance Stables.
There are also in-school enrichment examples that give a clearer sense of the school’s “wider development” offer. The 2023 inspection report references experiences such as Bollywood Dance, yoga, gymnastics, and a cooking club as part of the school day. This is helpful because it signals a deliberate approach to personal development in an age-appropriate format, movement, rhythm, and practical life skills, not just academic extension.
Music is structured too. The school’s published music development planning describes whole-class African drumming for Year 2 delivered by expert teachers through Harrow Music Service, culminating in a performance for parents. Plans also reference ambitions such as participation in events like London Philharmonic Orchestra Bright Sparks at the Royal Festival Hall, subject to availability and successful application.
The implication for families is that enrichment is not left to chance. Children who thrive on performance, music, and structured clubs often do well in schools where these opportunities are built into the rhythm of the year, not dependent on ad hoc initiatives.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the normal incidentals, uniform, optional clubs that carry charges, trips, and any paid music tuition where offered.
The school publishes detailed timings with staggered starts and collections. For Reception, Year 1 and Year 2, morning arrival runs from 8.30am to 8.50am depending on class, and afternoon collection runs from 3.00pm to 3.20pm depending on class. Nursery sessions are published as 8.30am to 11.30am and 12.30pm to 3.30pm. This level of specificity is useful if you are coordinating siblings or travel.
Entry and exit arrangements are also clearly split by gate, Nursery and Reception use the Warneford Road gate, while Year 1 and Year 2 use the Moorhouse Road gate, with a one-way system referenced from September 2024. That practical layout detail matters for day-to-day logistics.
For travel planning, most families will want to trial the route at drop-off time at least once, and to factor in the staggered collection windows if they have multiple children.
Competition for places. With 139 applications for 69 offers in the latest available snapshot, demand outstrips supply. Families should apply on time and use realistic preferences.
Infant-to-junior transfer. The Year 3 move requires a separate junior transfer application in Year 2, with borough deadlines that mirror the main admissions timetable.
New starters and new-to-English support. The inspection report flags that, in some subjects, key concepts are not always reinforced enough for pupils who are new to the school or new to learning English. Ask how staff check understanding and revisit core knowledge for new starters.
Staggered drop-off and pick-up logistics. The timings are detailed and class-specific, which can be helpful, but families should plan how this works with work schedules and siblings.
Kenmore Park Infant and Nursery School is a strong local option for early years and Key Stage 1, with a Good overall judgement and particularly strong signals around behaviour and personal development. It suits families who want clear routines, explicit learning dispositions, and a curriculum where early reading is treated as a core priority. The main constraint is admission pressure at key entry points, and the practical reality that families must plan ahead for the separate Year 3 junior transfer process.
The most recent full inspection (22 to 23 November 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development graded Outstanding. For parents, that combination often points to calm routines, explicit behaviour teaching, and a culture where younger pupils can settle quickly and learn consistently.
Reception applications for September 2026 are coordinated by the London Borough of Harrow via the standard primary admissions process. The published timetable lists 01 September 2025 as the opening date, 15 January 2026 as the closing date, and 16 April 2026 as offer day.
The borough publishes a main-round nursery process for September 2026 with a closing date of 15 January 2026 and outcomes issued on 16 March 2026 for on-time applications. The school also indicates that Nursery-age applications may require direct steps with the school, so families should check and follow the school’s Nursery Admissions instructions alongside the borough timetable.
The school publishes staggered starts between 8.30am and 8.50am and staggered collections between 3.00pm and 3.20pm for Reception to Year 2, plus Nursery session times. This can help families plan transport and childcare, but it is worth mapping your child’s class time specifically.
Published examples include Key Stage 1 Football Club (Super Start Sports), Key Stage 1 Basketball Club (Non-Stop Action), Singing Club, a seasonal Christmas Art and Craft Club, and Dance provision (Dance Stables). Availability can vary by term, so check each term’s club offer.
Get in touch with the school directly
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