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 calm, purposeful tone runs through daily life here, with behaviour and personal development standing out as clear strengths. The most recent Ofsted inspection (26 November 2024) judged Quality of education and Leadership and management as Good, and Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development as Outstanding.
Academically, the picture is reassuringly consistent. In 2024, 80.33% of Year 6 pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 44.33% achieved greater depth, far above the England average of 8%.
The setting is also unusually distinctive for a state primary. A Grade II listed dining and assembly hall, built in 1961 to 1962 and designed by James Stirling and James Gowan, gives the school a piece of architectural heritage that doubles as a practical everyday space.
Brunswick Park is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still expect the typical associated costs, such as uniform, trips, and optional wraparound care.
This is a school that takes relationships seriously, and makes them visible in routines rather than slogans. Staff aim to know families well, and day to day expectations are clear. Pupils are expected to contribute, not just comply. Leadership responsibilities start early, with younger children taking on small jobs, and older pupils stepping into more formal roles such as council positions.
Community minded work is woven into the pupil experience in a practical way. Examples include Year 1 visiting a care home regularly, Year 3 acting as community gardeners, and Year 4 learning to cook using vegetables grown by Year 3. These are not bolt on extras, they are structured experiences that teach service, confidence, and social awareness.
The school’s own language around values centres on support and challenge, with an emphasis on resilience and being willing to make mistakes while learning. For parents, the implication is a culture where ambition is normalised, but pupils are also expected to look after one another.
A final point that makes Brunswick Park feel distinctive is the physical environment. The Grade II listed dining and assembly hall is described as a bold and imaginative building, and its original design intent was to support practical school life, including shared meals and gathering. In a primary context, that matters, because shared spaces often shape behaviour norms, social confidence, and how easily the school can run whole school events.
Brunswick Park’s Year 6 outcomes (2024) sit comfortably above England averages in the measures most parents care about.
80.33%, versus an England average of 62%.
44.33%, versus an England average of 8%.
Reading 107; Maths 107; Grammar, punctuation and spelling 108.
80% met the expected standard, slightly below the England average of 82%.
For context, this performance also maps onto the school’s comparative position. Ranked 2,795th in England and 19th in Southwark for primary outcomes, Brunswick Park sits above the England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England (FindMySchool ranking based on official data).
An important nuance is the balance between headline outcomes and breadth. The current external picture highlights a broad curriculum that prioritises all subjects, with English, reading and mathematics particularly well established. At the same time, there is an ongoing focus on tightening consistency in how learning is checked and adapted in some cases, which is normal improvement work in a large, inclusive primary.
If you are comparing multiple Southwark primaries, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub and the Comparison Tool to view these results side by side, especially when the differences between nearby schools can look small until you put them in one place.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
80.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A helpful way to think about teaching here is “structured and cumulative”. Reading is treated as a core driver of success across the curriculum. Pupils get repeated opportunities to practise new sounds and revisit prior learning, and the books pupils take home are selected to reinforce what is being taught in school. This supports fluency and confidence for most children, and it is also a practical approach for families who want to understand how to help at home without second guessing the school’s method.
In lessons, teachers explain new content clearly and usually check understanding before moving on to more complex ideas. The school’s next step work is largely about consistency: making sure those checks reliably identify gaps, and that teaching is adjusted quickly when they appear. For parents, that is an important distinction. It is not a critique of ambition, it is about ensuring the ambition lands for every pupil, including those who are quieter, new to English, or who need extra scaffolding.
Learning is also supported by regular educational visits that build knowledge in real contexts. Examples referenced in official material include Reception visits to local areas and parks as part of early curriculum work, and Year 5 visits to a science museum to learn about the solar system in depth. In practice, this kind of rhythm tends to suit children who learn best when ideas are revisited in different settings, not only in written tasks.
As a Southwark community primary, Year 6 families move into the borough’s coordinated secondary admissions process. The school provides guidance to parents and carers during the application period, including practical support around understanding options and completing the online process.
For September 2026 secondary transfer, the published deadline for applications was 31 October 2025, with national offer day on 01 March 2026. The wider implication is that the school treats transition as a structured project rather than an afterthought, which tends to reduce anxiety for families, particularly those applying for the first time or navigating the process in a second language.
Because the school does not publicly publish a breakdown of which secondary schools pupils attend, it is best to treat destinations as family specific. The practical advice is to start with commute reality and admissions rules, then refine based on your child’s needs and interests.
Admission is the main constraint for many families. The numbers indicate strong demand. For the primary entry route, the school made 56 offers from 131 applications, a ratio of 2.34 applications per place, and is recorded as oversubscribed.
Reception applications are coordinated through the local authority rather than directly through the school. For families applying for a Reception place for September 2026, Southwark Council set the closing date as 15 January 2026 at 11:59pm. Offer information for on time applicants is communicated later in the spring.
Nursery entry works differently. The school offers nursery provision for children aged 3 to 4, including 15 and 30 hour places, and the published model makes clear that a nursery place does not automatically convert into a Reception place. Parents still need to apply through the coordinated admissions route for Reception.
Open events and tours tend to follow a predictable rhythm. For Reception, the school has previously published tours running across late autumn into early January, with booking required via the school office. For parents looking beyond the current cycle, the sensible assumption is that tours typically sit in November to January, but exact dates should be checked on the school’s admissions page.
If catchment and distance are key to your decision, use the FindMySchool Map Search to measure your exact distance consistently. Admissions patterns vary year to year, so treating any single year as guaranteed is a common mistake.
100%
1st preference success rate
43 of 43 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
56
Offers
56
Applications
131
The strongest signals here sit in routines and pupil behaviour. Lunchtime norms are deliberately social. Pupils eat together, talk, and help with serving and clearing, which tends to reinforce respectful habits and confidence in shared spaces.
Wellbeing is also handled as a taught curriculum, not only as reactive support. Pupils receive guidance on physical health, mental wellbeing, and online safety, and talk confidently about how to keep themselves safe online. This matters because it suggests a school that anticipates modern risks and teaches children the language to describe concerns.
Inclusion is not presented as a specialist side programme. Brunswick Park operates resourced provision for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, and the aim is participation alongside peers where appropriate, including in lessons, outings, and social time. Staff build close relationships with pupils in the provision and work to ensure pupils can access the same ambitious curriculum as others. For parents of children with additional needs, the key implication is that support is integrated into mainstream life rather than separating children away from it.
The inspection record states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular life is active and varied, and it is linked to curriculum identity rather than existing purely as childcare. Pupils take part in clubs such as gymnastics, arts and crafts, and dance. The school’s news and updates also show a pattern of themed clubs that support wider interests, for example Maths Club activities, and creative sessions such as Wool Craft Club.
Music appears to be a consistent expectation rather than a niche. All pupils sing or play an instrument in concerts each year, suggesting that performance and participation are considered part of a normal education, not only something for the confident few. For children who benefit from structured rehearsal and shared goals, this can be a meaningful confidence builder.
Trips and enrichment are also used to broaden horizons. There is evidence of regular educational visits across the year, with examples ranging from local area learning in early years to a science focused museum visit in Year 5. Art is treated with similar seriousness. Pupils visit different galleries over time and work with a professional artist in residence as part of the art curriculum.
The leadership strand also sits in this broader education. Roles such as eco council representatives, school council positions, and smaller class based responsibilities build the habit of contribution. That tends to suit children who like having a job to do, and it can help quieter pupils find a structured way into social life.
The published school opening hours run from 08:45 to 15:30, with pupils expected to arrive by 08:50 and be in classrooms by 08:55 for registration.
Wraparound is available, including breakfast and after school provision, and there are also nursery specific session patterns, including part time and full time options. Charges apply for optional wraparound, and families should confirm current pricing directly via the school’s published information rather than relying on older newsletters.
For travel, the local context supports walking and cycling. Burgess Park is within a short walk, Camberwell Library is around 10 minutes on foot via Elmington Road, and there are cycle routes nearby, including one passing the school via Benhill Road.
Competition for places. With 131 applications for 56 offers in the most recent available admissions data, entry is competitive. Families should treat a place as uncertain until confirmed, and plan alternatives early.
Nursery does not equal Reception. Nursery provision is a genuine entry point for some families, but it does not remove the need to apply for Reception through the coordinated process.
Consistency of adaptation is a focus area. Teaching is usually well checked and clearly explained, but there is an ongoing priority around identifying gaps reliably and adapting teaching when needed. This matters most for children who need prompt, specific support rather than generic repetition.
Expect a school culture that values contribution. Leadership roles, community projects, and shared routines are a core part of how the school works. This suits many pupils, but families who prefer a lower structured approach to responsibility may want to explore how this feels in practice during a visit.
Brunswick Park Primary School is a strong, inclusive Southwark primary with above average Year 6 outcomes and a particularly positive picture around behaviour and personal development. The school pairs high expectations with practical support, and its approach to responsibility and enrichment gives pupils many structured ways to build confidence.
Best suited to families who want a state primary with clear academic standards, strong routines, and a culture that expects pupils to contribute to the life of the school. The main challenge is securing a place in an oversubscribed setting.
For many families, yes. Year 6 outcomes are above England averages, and the most recent inspection grades highlight strong behaviour and personal development alongside a good quality of education. The school’s culture places emphasis on respectful routines, leadership responsibilities, and broad curriculum experiences.
Reception applications go through the local authority’s coordinated admissions system rather than directly to the school. In Southwark, the published closing date for submitting an online application for September 2026 entry was 15 January 2026 at 11:59pm. Families who missed the deadline should check the local authority process for late applications and in year moves.
No. The school offers nursery places, including funded hour options, but children do not automatically move from nursery into Reception. Parents still need to apply for Reception through the coordinated admissions route.
In 2024, 80.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 44.33% achieved greater depth, compared with 8% across England. Reading and maths scaled scores were both 107.
Yes. The published information confirms wraparound options, including breakfast and after school provision, with the school day running 08:45 to 15:30. Availability and current pricing can change by year, so families should confirm details via the school’s current published information.
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