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.
Set beside East Street Market, Robert Browning Primary School is a compact Southwark primary with a clear community purpose and an unusually explicit inclusion offer for a mainstream setting. It combines a Nursery and Reception intake with a resourced autism provision, known as Rainbow Class, that supports pupils from Reception through Year 6 while still enabling time in mainstream classes.
The most recent full inspection outcome is Good (28 September 2021), with Good judgements across all graded areas including early years.
Academically, the 2024 Key Stage 2 data sits below the England picture overall. 63% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%, while the school’s FindMySchool England rank places it in the lower performance band nationally.
For families, the practical reality is this: it is a state school with no tuition fees, but it can be competitive for places, and it will suit parents who value a strongly urban, genuinely mixed intake, and an inclusion model that is more specific than the usual “SEN support” headline.
Robert Browning’s identity is strongly tied to its setting. The school sits in Walworth, and official local heritage documentation describes the site as the late 19th century former King and Queen Street School, opened in 1883 for the London School Board, later associated with the Robert Browning name.
That heritage matters in a practical, not nostalgic, way. The school is working with an inherently compact urban footprint, so space is designed and used deliberately. A modern extension project describes an addition that responds to the older Victorian context and announces the school on a prominent corner by the market. Parents looking for a sprawling campus feel should recalibrate, this is a school that makes city density work.
Culture is framed through a simple motto, We All Shine, with five stated core values: Respect, Independence, Resilience, Creativity, and Kindness. The strongest schools do not treat values as posters; here, the supporting detail is that early years routines explicitly include parent partnership through weekly “stay and play” sessions, and structured settling-in via enrolment meetings, “stay and play”, and in some cases home visits. The implication is a school that expects adults and staff to work in concert, which tends to be a good fit for families who want consistent two-way communication.
Leadership is best understood through the federation model. The school is part of The Bridges Federation, and Southwark’s 2026 to 2027 admissions brochure lists Kate Wooder as Executive Headteacher, and Anna Mulhern and Maureen Chance as Co-Headteachers for Robert Browning. The government “official records” record lists Ms Katherine Wooder as headteacher or principal. For parents, the operational implication is that day-to-day leadership at the school is distributed, and you should expect federation-wide policies alongside school-specific routines.
Robert Browning is a primary school, so the most useful academic lens is Key Stage 2 outcomes. In 2024:
63% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, against an England average of 62%.
At the higher standard, 18.67% achieved greater depth across reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%.
Average scaled scores were 104 in reading and 104 in maths.
67% reached the expected standard in science.
These figures indicate a mixed profile: the combined expected standard is close to England overall, while the higher-standard figure is notably above the England comparison.
FindMySchool’s ranking data places Robert Browning at 10,363rd in England and 59th in Southwark for primary outcomes. This is a proprietary FindMySchool ranking based on official data, and it places the school in the lower performance band nationally. The implication is not that children cannot thrive here, but that parents prioritising consistently high headline attainment across the cohort should probe how the school supports pupils with different starting points, particularly in the upper juniors.
The 2021 inspection report provides some relevant context for how results are intended to improve over time. Inspectors noted a curriculum review in 2019, implementation starting in 2020, and an emphasis on revisiting key concepts so pupils secure understanding, with examples drawn from mathematics and physical education. This matters because strong schools typically make outcomes predictable by making curriculum progression explicit, not by relying on heroic teaching.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
63%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Teaching and curriculum are best explained through what the school says it does, and what formal review confirms it is trying to embed.
Early Years is highly structured. The EYFS welcome information sets out a clear daily pattern: gates open between 8.45 and 9.00am, with the formal day running 9.00am to 3.30pm for Nursery and Reception. It also details weekly “stay and play” sessions from 8.45 to 9.15am, and a blend of group carpet sessions, focus groups, and free-flow play, including daily outdoor learning. The implication for parents is that the school is placing high weight on communication and routine, and expects families to engage regularly, especially in the first term.
In the main school, the most recent inspection report describes a planned curriculum matching the national curriculum, organised so pupils revisit important ideas. The same report highlights that leaders were attentive to knowledge gaps for Years 5 and 6 because some pupils had not experienced the current curriculum earlier in their school journey, with geography used as an example where younger pupils’ knowledge was more secure than older pupils’. In plain terms, this is an honest challenge many schools face after curriculum change, and it is worth asking how the current Year 5 and Year 6 cohorts are supported now that this work has had more time to bed in.
Home learning and communication systems in Early Years include Google Classroom for topic webs and resources, plus references to online learning platforms such as Reading Eggs, Teach Your Monster to Read, Purple Mash, and Mathletics. The implication is that the school is comfortable with structured home support, but families who prefer minimal screen-based home learning may want clarity on expectations.
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 a state primary, the key transition question is secondary transfer. The school’s own materials and the federation communications emphasise structured support around transition points, including parent meetings for moving into Year 1 in early July and secondary transfer meetings for Year 5 parents at specific points in the year.
For most families, next steps will be shaped by Southwark’s secondary admissions and the child’s profile, rather than a single feeder destination. In a borough with a wide mix of community schools, faith schools, and selective options across London more broadly, families should treat Year 5 as the planning year. Using FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you assess likely secondary options side-by-side, especially if you are weighing academic outcomes against travel time and pastoral priorities.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Southwark Council. For September 2026 entry, the published Southwark deadline is Thursday 15 January 2026 at 11.59pm, with offers released after 5pm on Thursday 16 April 2026. Parents should also note that Southwark automatically forwards accepted offers to the allocated school after 30 April 2026 unless the council is notified of alternative arrangements.
Demand indicators in the most recent admissions results suggest pressure on places. The school is marked oversubscribed, with 3.33 applications per place applications per place for the primary entry route provided. The practical implication is that families should approach admissions with a clear Plan A and Plan B.
Robert Browning also has distinctive admissions context because of the ASD resource base. Southwark’s 2026 to 2027 brochure notes a published admission number of 28, plus two additional places reserved for the ASD Base. These places are allocated through the council’s SEND team via panel, separately from the mainstream admissions round.
For in-year admissions, the federation’s admissions guidance states that in-year applications are arranged by the school, and families are invited to visit and complete an enrolment form, with regular tours available via a booking form.
If distance is a deciding factor for your shortlist, use FindMySchoolMap Search to check your precise distance to the school gates, then compare it with the latest locally published admissions data. This is particularly helpful in London, where small distance changes can have outsized admissions effects year to year.
100%
1st preference success rate
9 of 9 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
9
Offers
9
Applications
30
Pastoral support is clearest in Early Years documentation. Each child is assigned a key person, and the federation describes learning mentors working across the schools to support children and families with needs including behaviour, social skills, and emotional wellbeing, with staff trained as Mental Health First Aiders. The implication is a model that blends classroom support with additional adult capacity, rather than leaving class teachers to handle all pastoral needs alone.
Attendance and punctuality expectations are also explicit. A federation newsletter states that gates open at 8.45am and children are marked late after 9.00am. This kind of clarity can be reassuring for families who value consistent routines, and challenging for those with less predictable work or care arrangements.
For pupils with additional needs, the SEND information provides substantial detail. The federation describes mainstream classroom support first, escalating to inclusion team involvement, external agencies such as speech and language and educational psychology, and where appropriate, Education, Health and Care Plan processes. This provides a credible framework parents can test in conversation: ask what “graduated support” looks like week by week, not just what the policy states.
The strongest extracurricular picture here is not a generic list, but two specific strands that reflect the school’s community setting.
First, Gardening Club. The school describes a weekly programme supported by Friends of Nursery Row, with specialist-led sessions in a local park. Examples include making seed bombs, building a worm hotel or wormery, wreath and Christmas card making using collected leaves for rubbings, and learning pruning and plant care. Parents are invited into practical sessions, and there is also usually an after-school gardening club, with visible results around the school grounds. This is a particularly strong example of learning that connects science, responsibility, and local environment, and it suits children who learn best through hands-on activity.
Second, Cooking Club. The school describes a weekly community-room session where parents and children attend together to cook, share recipes, and build friendships. This is a clear indicator that Robert Browning treats “community” as something you do, not just something you say, and it can be a meaningful inclusion lever for families new to the area.
Within Rainbow Class, extracurricular-like programmes are part of the planned provision, including Legotherapy, Cooking, Swimming, Writedance, and “Out and About In the Community”. For pupils in the base, the implication is that enrichment is integrated into the weekly timetable, not bolted on.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
For Early Years, the published school day runs from 9.00am to 3.30pm, with gates opening between 8.45 and 9.00am. Weekly “stay and play” sessions run 8.45 to 9.15am in Nursery and Reception. A federation newsletter also confirms gates open at 8.45am and lateness is recorded after 9.00am.
The latest inspection report confirms the school runs breakfast and after-school clubs, but the specific hours and pricing are not consistently accessible in the currently available public pages, so families should confirm times directly before relying on wraparound provision.
Transport-wise, the school’s setting beside East Street Market indicates that walking and public transport will be the dominant modes for many families, with local roads often busy at peak times. If you plan to drive, it is worth checking the immediate drop-off constraints at the start and end of day, as market activity can affect traffic flow.
Academic profile is mixed across the cohort. In 2024, 63% met the combined expected standard, close to England overall, while the FindMySchool England rank places the school in the lower performance band. Families focused on consistently high attainment across the whole cohort should ask how upper-junior knowledge gaps are addressed in practice.
Admissions pressure is real. The school is marked oversubscribed in the most recent, at 3.33 applications per place on the primary entry route. Have a realistic Plan B when naming preferences.
Urban site realities. The school’s compact, city setting is a strength for community-connected learning, but it is not the same experience as a large suburban primary. Parents who want extensive on-site green space should check whether the environment matches their child’s needs.
Specialist provision is a big draw, but it is not a general offer. Rainbow Class places are allocated through SEND processes and are designed for specific needs. Families should clarify whether their child’s profile fits the resource base model, or whether mainstream support is the appropriate route.
Robert Browning Primary School is a genuinely urban Southwark primary with a clear values framework, strong family engagement in Early Years, and an unusually detailed mainstream inclusion model through Rainbow Class. The latest inspection outcome is Good, and the school’s curriculum intent is to build knowledge through planned revisiting and progression.
Best suited to families who want a community-rooted primary, value inclusion as a lived practice rather than a slogan, and are comfortable with a setting where city density shapes the day-to-day experience. Entry remains the primary hurdle, particularly for Reception, so admissions planning needs to be practical and early.
The most recent full inspection outcome is Good (28 September 2021), with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. Academic outcomes at Key Stage 2 in 2024 were close to England overall for the expected standard combined measure, but the wider profile is mixed, so it suits families who value inclusion and community as well as results.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Southwark Council. For September 2026 entry, the closing date for on-time applications is Thursday 15 January 2026 at 11.59pm, and offers are released after 5pm on Thursday 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school offers Nursery places and the Early Years information describes Nursery places as part time in the welcome pack, alongside a full-time Reception intake. Nursery start and finish times are published for the setting, but Nursery fee details should be checked directly with the school.
Rainbow Class is the federation’s resourced provision for pupils with autism, supporting children from Reception through Year 6, with dedicated rooms, its own playground, and structured communication approaches. Places are allocated through Southwark’s SEND processes via panel and are separate from the mainstream admissions round.
The school describes a specialist-supported Gardening Club that includes weekly park sessions with activities such as seed bombs, wormeries, and plant care. It also runs a Cooking Club in a community-room format where parents and children attend together.
Get in touch with the school directly
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