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.
Parkhill Infants' School is a large infant and nursery school in Clayhall, serving children from age 3 through to Year 2 (age 7). The school’s stated values, Be Kind, Be Respectful, Be Resilient, Be Curious, Be Proud, shape daily expectations and give the place a clear moral centre.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (19 October 2023, published 30 November 2023) graded the school Good overall, with Outstanding for personal development.
For families, the key headline is demand. Reception entry is oversubscribed, with 178 applications for 98 offers in the latest admissions data, so timing, preferences, and realistic alternatives matter.
This is a school that talks openly about expectations, not in a punitive way, but as shared language. The values are presented simply and repeatedly, and that kind of consistency tends to be what parents notice first over time, children know what matters, and staff can refer back to a common standard.
The school also leans into pupil responsibility in an age appropriate way. Roles such as school council members, Unicef ambassadors, and friendship heroes give younger pupils a structured route to contribution and confidence, which is one reason the 2023 inspection outcome for personal development stands out.
Site and setting are part of the picture too. The school describes lots of green, open space and outdoor learning, which usually translates into strong provision for play, regulation, and early years exploration, especially valuable for Nursery and Reception children.
As an infant school, Parkhill does not publish headline end of Key Stage 2 results (those sit with junior or primary schools covering Years 3 to 6). That shifts the focus away from league table style comparisons and towards early reading, foundations in maths, and learning habits that travel well into Key Stage 2.
The 2023 inspection report highlights a curriculum built around whole school themes, and a strong emphasis on early reading through a structured phonics approach, including close matching of reading books to phonics knowledge and extra support for pupils who find reading harder.
For parents weighing up “how academic is it”, the most useful proxy is often how systematically reading and number are taught, and whether gaps are picked up quickly. The same inspection also notes that, in some subjects, tasks do not always focus precisely enough on the intended knowledge and skills, and checks for understanding are not always consistent, so depth of learning can be uneven in pockets.
The curriculum is presented as carefully sequenced from early years upward, with thematic work used to make learning memorable and joined up. That approach can suit many children at infant age, particularly those who learn best when vocabulary and knowledge connect across stories, art, and practical activity.
Early reading is clearly a pillar. A structured phonics programme from the start of Reception, accurate book matching, and targeted additional time for pupils who need it are all described as routine practice. For families, the practical implication is that reading development is treated as a core entitlement rather than an optional extra.
For children with additional needs, the school’s inclusion staffing structure is unusually transparent for a website. The leadership team list includes a deputy headteacher who is also SENDCO and Inclusion Manager, plus named Emotional Literacy Support Assistants, suggesting a deliberate blend of learning support and emotional regulation support.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Most pupils will move on at the end of Year 2, commonly to the neighbouring Parkhill Junior School which the infant school shares a site with. That continuity can make transition easier for many children, as routines, travel, and local peer groups are already established.
Because junior transfer is a separate process in many local authorities, families should plan ahead and treat Year 2 as a decision point, not an automatic progression. The most reliable route is to follow Redbridge’s published admissions process and timelines each year.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the London Borough of Redbridge, rather than handled directly by the school. The school’s own admissions page is explicit that parents should apply via the council for Reception to Year 2 places.
Demand is meaningfully above supply in the most recent data: 178 applications for 98 offers, a ratio of 1.82 applications per offer, and the entry route was oversubscribed. For families living locally, that means it is sensible to shortlist multiple realistic options and to use tools like FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity check travel distance and day to day feasibility, not just preference order.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Redbridge, the council notes that the on time application deadline has passed (15 January), and late applications go onto waiting lists after on time offers have been made.
Redbridge’s published co-ordinated primary admissions scheme for 2026 to 2027 includes key steps such as offer emails and acceptance deadlines in spring 2026, which matters if you are juggling multiple boroughs or considering a house move.
100%
1st preference success rate
86 of 86 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
98
Offers
98
Applications
178
Personal development is the school’s standout inspection area, and the underlying mechanisms are visible: structured pupil roles, explicit values language, and an approach that builds social responsibility early.
Attendance and safeguarding are treated as operational priorities. The inspection report describes close monitoring of attendance, work with families where barriers exist, and confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Clubs and enrichment at infant age only work when they are concrete and accessible, and the inspection report gives helpful specificity. Examples referenced include sports clubs such as football, basketball and multi sports, and creative clubs including Lego, art and science. The point for parents is not the exact list in one year, but the signal that enrichment is planned to broaden interests rather than simply fill time.
The school also positions itself as a Rights Respecting School, and links this directly to children learning about rights in ways that are taught and practised, not just displayed. For many families, that translates into a culture where pupils are encouraged to articulate feelings, take turns, and understand fairness early, which tends to reduce low level conflict in classrooms.
Start and finish times are clearly published and vary by phase. Nursery sessions run 8.30am to 11.30am (morning), 12.30pm to 3.30pm (afternoon), or 8.30am to 3.30pm (all day). Reception drop off is via gates opening at 8.55am and closing at 9.10am, with collection at 3.05pm; Year 1 and Year 2 run 9.10am to 3.15pm.
Wraparound care is provided via an external childcare company. Breakfast club starts at 7.30am and after school provision runs from the end of the school day to 6pm, with registration required in advance rather than drop in.
Induction arrangements include staggered Stay and Play sessions for Nursery and Reception, and the school notes that Reception children stay for a full day from day one unless a transition plan is agreed.
Oversubscription at Reception. With 178 applications for 98 offers in the latest available admissions data, many families who put the school as a first preference will not receive an offer. Build a realistic preference list and plan a back up route.
Infant school structure. The school only goes up to age 7, so every child will transition after Year 2. For some families that is a positive reset point; others may prefer an all through primary where change comes later.
Task precision across subjects. External review notes that, in some subjects, activities do not always focus precisely enough on the intended knowledge and skills, and checks on understanding are not always consistent. It is worth asking how subject leadership and staff training are tightening this in the current year.
Parkhill Infants' School offers a clear, values driven early years and infant education, with structured early reading, visible inclusion leadership, and unusually strong personal development for this age group. It suits families who want a large, community anchored infant and nursery school where expectations are explicit and children take on small responsibilities early. The limiting factor is admission competition, so the most successful applicants tend to be those who plan early, understand Redbridge timelines, and keep practical alternatives in view.
The school was graded Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection (19 October 2023, published 30 November 2023), with Outstanding for personal development. For many families, that combination signals a school that is doing the essentials well while also investing in pupils’ confidence, behaviour, and social development.
Applications for Reception places are made through the London Borough of Redbridge’s co-ordinated primary admissions process, not directly to the school. The school directs parents to apply via Redbridge Council for Reception to Year 2 places.
Redbridge states that the on time primary application deadline for children starting school in September 2026 was 15 January, and late applications are still possible but are considered after on time offers and typically sit on waiting lists.
Yes. The school takes children from age 3 and publishes Nursery session times, including morning, afternoon, and all day options. Induction includes Stay and Play sessions for Nursery starters.
Nursery sessions run from 8.30am, Reception drop off is 8.55am to 9.10am with collection at 3.05pm, and Year 1 and Year 2 run 9.10am to 3.15pm. Breakfast club starts at 7.30am and after school provision runs until 6pm via an external provider, with registration required.
Get in touch with the school directly
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