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 high-performing, oversubscribed infant school serving local families in Hornchurch, with pupils aged 5 to 7 and a planned Reception intake of 90 for September 2026.
The most recent graded inspection (5 to 6 March 2024) judged the school Outstanding across every area, including early years provision. Safeguarding arrangements were also found to be effective.
Leadership is relatively new in formal terms, with the headteacher taking up post in September 2023, having previously led in the predecessor school. For parents, that combination often matters, it is a change of phase rather than a change of culture.
The school’s ethos is framed around clear, memorable learning habits. Its published values focus on developing pupils as resilient, resourceful, respectful, responsible and reflective learners, confident to take risks in learning and build strong relationships.
External evaluation presents a consistent picture of daily life: pupils behave exceptionally well, show very positive attitudes to learning, and speak enthusiastically about school. There are structured chances for pupils to contribute and lead in age-appropriate ways, including roles such as playleaders and school librarians.
Wellbeing support is also described in concrete terms. A designated calm space called the “nest” is used to help pupils regulate and feel ready to learn, supported by skilled adults. For families with children who can find transitions hard, that kind of practical inclusion feature can be as important as academic outcomes.
A quick note on history: the wider Ardleigh Green junior and infants provision on Ardleigh Green Road opened as a council school in 1933 to 1934, and the site has been serving local children for decades.
Because this is an infant school (up to age 7), it does not publish the same end of Key Stage 2 performance measures associated with Year 6. That means there is less standardised attainment data available for simple, like-for-like comparisons than there would be at a full primary.
What parents can rely on here is the strength of the school’s quality assurance picture. The latest inspection judged overall effectiveness Outstanding, and rated Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, Leadership and Management, and Early Years Provision as Outstanding.
Curriculum design is described as ambitious and meticulously sequenced, with careful attention to what pupils learn and the order in which knowledge is built from Reception through to Year 2. The practical implication is that learning is less likely to feel like a set of disconnected topics, and more like cumulative understanding.
Early reading is a clear priority. The inspection report highlights that phonics is delivered to a high standard, with assessment used to spot pupils at risk of falling behind and targeted practice helping them catch up quickly. The school also explains that it follows the Jolly Phonics scheme, using songs and actions to support recall of the core sounds needed for early decoding and spelling.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities is described as timely and accurate in identification, with provision designed to remove barriers while keeping pupils connected to the same ambitious learning where appropriate.
A distinctive feature on the school’s own site is its Forest School approach, positioned as regular outdoor learning sessions that build confidence, resilience, creativity and connection to nature, led by qualified Forest School leaders trained in outdoor education, first aid and risk assessment.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For an infant school, the key transition question is Year 3. In the local model, many pupils move on to a linked junior school, and parents should plan ahead for the infant-to-junior transfer application (this is a separate application process in many local authorities, including Havering).
Within the Empower Learning Academy Trust’s published arrangements, Ardleigh Green Junior School has a planned admission number of 90 for Year 3 entry in September 2026, and one oversubscription priority explicitly recognises children transferring from the infant school between Year 2 and Year 3. The practical takeaway is that progression is structured, but still governed by admissions rules rather than being a simple automatic roll-over.
Demand is strong. For the Reception entry route, the latest available demand snapshot shows 432 applications for 90 offers, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. This is consistent with the way places are allocated when applications exceed the planned admission number.
Oversubscription criteria for September 2026 Reception entry follow the standard pattern used by the trust: highest priority to looked-after and previously looked-after children, then siblings, then distance from home to school measured in a straight line, with random allocation if distances are exactly equal at the final place.
For 2026 entry timing, Havering’s published coordinated admissions timeline indicates offers are issued on 16 April 2026, with parents asked to accept or decline by 30 April 2026. Registration windows for primary applications commonly run from early September to mid-January for the following September start; families should treat exact dates on official pages as the final word for their cohort.
FindMySchool tip: if you are weighing up the realism of a place at a distance-prioritised school, use the FindMySchool Map Search to check your exact measurement from the school gates, then sense-check against recent offer patterns. Distances vary year to year, but precise measurement helps avoid false assumptions.
66.1%
1st preference success rate
82 of 124 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
90
Offers
90
Applications
432
The wellbeing model described externally centres on calm routines, strong staff knowledge of pupils, and explicit support for emotional regulation. The “nest” is the most tangible example, a defined calm space supported by skilled adults to help pupils reset and return to learning.
Pupils are also taught to articulate feelings and listen to others, and are introduced to wider personal development concepts such as equality and healthy lifestyles at an age-appropriate level.
Extracurricular offer is shaped partly by pupil voice. The inspection report notes clubs such as Spanish and science in response to pupil suggestions, alongside a broad set of opportunities that encourage participation and leadership.
The school also states that clubs run by staff are provided free of charge, while clubs run by external providers are subsidised but paid for by parents. For budgeting, that usually means there is a baseline offer that does not add cost, plus optional paid enhancements depending on the term.
Forest School stands out as a structured enrichment strand rather than a one-off event, framed as regular outdoor sessions with qualified leaders and clear safety training. For many pupils, the benefit is practical confidence, problem-solving and teamwork that complements classroom learning.
The school day timings are clearly published by year group. Reception arrival is 8:45 am with home time at 3:15 pm, while Year 1 and Year 2 run 8:45 am to 3:20 pm. Lunch runs 11:45 am to 1:00 pm for Reception, and 12:00 pm to 1:00 pm for Years 1 and 2.
Wraparound care is available via a provider-led arrangement: breakfast club from 7:30 am and after-school care until 6:00 pm, with provision stated as starting from 30 September 2024. The practical implication is that working families can build a consistent day, but should expect separate provider registration and terms.
High demand for places. With applications materially exceeding the planned intake, admissions can be stressful, and distance and sibling priority matter.
An infant-only setting. If you prefer a single school from Reception to Year 6, you will need a clear plan for the Year 3 transfer and how that fits your child.
Outcomes data looks different at infant phase. There is less end-of-primary published attainment data to compare than at a full primary, so your decision will lean more on curriculum clarity, culture, and external quality markers such as inspection.
A consistently impressive infant school, with a carefully sequenced curriculum, strong early reading, and a calm, purposeful culture that prioritises wellbeing alongside learning. It best suits families who want an academically ambitious start to primary, value clear routines and behaviour, and are ready to plan thoughtfully for the Year 3 transition. The limiting factor is usually admission rather than the quality of education once a place is secured.
The most recent inspection (5 to 6 March 2024) judged the school Outstanding overall and Outstanding across every graded area, including early years provision. The report also describes exemplary behaviour, very positive learning attitudes, and a well-planned curriculum.
Yes. Demand is high, and the school’s published admissions arrangements set out oversubscription criteria for September 2026 entry, including sibling priority and distance as a key tie-break after higher priority groups.
Reception typically runs from 8:45 am to 3:15 pm, and Years 1 and 2 from 8:45 am to 3:20 pm, with published break and lunch timings by year group.
Yes. The school states that breakfast provision runs from 7:30 am and after-school care runs until 6:00 pm, delivered through an external provider arrangement that began from 30 September 2024.
Many families plan for a Year 3 move to a junior school, and Havering provides a specific infant-to-junior transfer process for eligible cohorts. The trust’s admissions arrangements for September 2026 Year 3 entry also include a priority criterion for children transferring from the infant school.
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