A two-form entry primary in Balham that combines ambitious academic expectations with unusually deliberate work on pupils’ character. Performance data puts it among the highest-performing primaries in England, and the culture is shaped by a clear set of values, including Ambition, Respect and Resilience.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Practicalities are a strength for working families, with breakfast club from 7:30am and wraparound care running to 6:15pm, plus a structured menu of enrichment clubs.
The headline for parents is simple: outcomes are exceptional, but demand is high. Recent Reception demand ran at 212 applications for 60 offers, which means a great school experience starts with a highly competitive admissions process. (Admissions figures are from the input dataset.)
The school’s identity is unusually explicit for a state primary. Its values are presented not as abstract statements but as a vocabulary pupils can use, Ambition, Reflection, Respect, Partnership, Enthusiasm, and Resilience. Each value is also linked to a visual cue (for example, Respect is represented by a penguin), which is a small detail but often makes values feel more “usable” for younger pupils.
That emphasis on character shows up in the language pupils are encouraged to use when things go wrong. Reflection is framed as a skill, not a sanction. The intent is to help pupils take responsibility for behaviour and attitudes within clear boundaries, which can be a particularly good fit for families who want firm expectations without a punitive feel.
Leadership is clearly signposted. The current headteacher is Mr Rob Farrell. The school does not consistently publish a start date for the headteacher on its official pages, so it is best to treat tenure as “current leadership” rather than attaching a year.
In governance terms, the school sits within Bellevue Place Education Trust (BPET), which provides a wider trust structure around training, policy frameworks, and school improvement. For parents, that matters most in the consistency of standards and the depth of central support when staffing or curriculum changes occur.
On the numbers, this is an exceptionally high-performing primary.
Ranked 149th in England and 1st in Wandsworth for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data), placing it among the highest-performing in England (top 2%). (Rank and percentile band are from the input dataset.)
At Key Stage 2, 93.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 50.67% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with the England average of 8%. (All figures are from the input dataset.)
The scaled scores reinforce the same story: reading 112, maths 111, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 111, all notably above typical national benchmarks. (All figures are from the input dataset.)
For parents comparing options locally, this is a good moment to use FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool to check how nearby schools perform on the same underlying measures, rather than relying on reputation alone.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
93.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The July 2022 Ofsted inspection graded the school Good overall, with Outstanding judgments for Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development.
Beyond the headline grades, curriculum depth is evidenced by the inspection’s subject “deep dives”, which included early reading, history, science, art and mathematics, a spread that suggests leaders have thought carefully beyond English and maths alone.
In the curriculum model described by the school, some subjects carry distinctive weight. Modern foreign languages, for example, are not a late Key Stage 2 add-on. Spanish is taught weekly from Reception to Year 6, with specialist teaching in the early years and Key Stage 1. The implication is breadth without sacrificing the basics, which tends to suit pupils who enjoy variety and families who value cultural literacy early.
Mathematics is described as a mastery-led approach that builds fluency, problem solving and reasoning into every lesson, supported by varied representations (concrete, pictorial, abstract). While many schools describe mastery in general terms, here it is presented as a deliberate spiral that revisits concepts to deepen understanding year on year.
A further differentiator is philosophy. The school received a SAPERE Silver Award for philosophy provision, linked to “community of enquiry” practice and an emphasis on oracy and structured discussion. For some pupils, this kind of explicit thinking-and-speaking curriculum can become a quiet strength that carries into secondary interviews and scholarship-style assessment tasks later on.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
As a primary, the key question is transition, both academically and practically.
The school treats secondary transfer as a staged process. From Year 3, pupils take annual CAT tests in verbal and non-verbal reasoning, and families are invited to discuss how results relate to secondary options, including the Wandsworth Test in Year 6. From Year 5, pupils receive discrete reasoning lessons, with small-group work supported by a specialist tutor, plus a Prep Club aimed at extending learning.
Year 6 interview practice sessions with the headteacher are available for pupils applying to schools that use more formal selection steps, and the school also hosts an annual secondary transfer fair with local state and independent schools represented.
The school publishes Year 6 leavers’ destinations annually on its transition pages, which is helpful for parents who want a realistic sense of typical routes, rather than relying on anecdote.
Reception admissions are managed through Wandsworth Council (or your home local authority if you live outside the borough). The school is explicit that the deadline is 15 January every year, and that families should apply one year before a child starts Reception.
The input dataset indicates strong demand: 212 applications for 60 offers, which equates to roughly 3.53 applications per place. That level of oversubscription typically means allocations can become sensitive to distance and priority categories, even when a school is not formally selective.
The school also flags two points that matter in practice. First, siblings do not remove the need to apply; families must still submit an application through coordinated admissions. Second, requests for education outside chronological year group should be discussed after an offer is made.
Parents worried about borderline proximity should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check precise distance, then compare it with recent allocation patterns. Even in stable neighbourhoods, small shifts in applicant distribution can change outcomes year to year.
Applications
212
Total received
Places Offered
60
Subscription Rate
3.5x
Apps per place
Pastoral care here is closely tied to behaviour culture and the language of values. Respect and partnership are not presented as optional extras; they sit alongside clear behavioural boundaries, with an emphasis on pupils taking responsibility for their choices.
Safeguarding is treated as a core operational strength. The July 2022 Ofsted report stated that safeguarding was effective.
Inclusion is also positioned as a priority. The school frames SEND support around removing barriers to learning, and identifies SEN coordination within the senior leadership structure. For families considering mainstream with additional needs, it is sensible to review the published SEND information and discuss day-to-day adjustments during a tour, especially around classroom support and transitions between key stages.
This is a school that uses enrichment strategically, not just as a bolt-on.
A major practical advantage is the breadth of extended school options. The school’s own examples include ballet, street dance, cookery, coding, football and French. For pupils, this kind of variety matters because it makes school feel larger than lessons, while still staying within a familiar environment. For parents, it can reduce reliance on external clubs and travel.
The wraparound model is structured rather than informal. Breakfast club runs 7:30am to 8:20am, with wraparound care split into two paid blocks after school, ending at 6:15pm. That split (rather than a single long session) can suit families who need flexibility on some days but not others.
Facilities and resourcing also show targeted investment. A notable recent example is the creation of a dedicated ICT room, funded through school community fundraising. Paired with the broader computing curriculum intent, this suggests a seriousness about digital literacy beyond “using tablets”, which is increasingly relevant as pupils move into secondary settings with more formal computing expectations.
The school day is clearly defined. Breakfast club begins at 7:30am; registration is at 8:30am; the day ends at 3:10pm for Reception and 3:15pm for Years 1 to 6. After-school care runs until 6:15pm.
Transport links are unusually straightforward for a London primary. The school states it is around a 7-minute walk from Balham Underground station (Northern line), with a nearby 155 bus route from the station area. On-site parking is not available, so drop-off plans matter.
Oversubscription pressure. With 212 applications for 60 places in the input dataset, the main difficulty is not evaluating the quality of education but securing admission in the first place.
A strong “values” culture. Families who prefer a looser behavioural framework may find the emphasis on boundaries, responsibility, and shared language more structured than they expect.
Primary ends at Year 6. The school invests heavily in secondary transfer preparation, which is a plus, but families still need a clear plan for Year 7 options early.
No on-site parking. If you rely on a car for drop-off and pick-up, you will need a realistic routine that works with local streets and public transport alternatives.
Rutherford House School stands out for two reasons: exceptionally strong academic outcomes and a clear, consistent approach to character education. The July 2022 inspection profile, Good overall with Outstanding elements, aligns with the sense of an orderly, purposeful primary that expects pupils to take both learning and behaviour seriously.
Best suited to families who want high academic expectations, structured values, and strong wraparound provision, and who are prepared to engage early with admissions planning in a competitive local market. Entry remains the primary hurdle.
The performance data is exceptionally strong, with primary outcomes placing it among the highest-performing schools in England (top 2% by the input dataset’s percentile band). Ofsted graded the school Good overall in July 2022, with Outstanding judgments for Behaviour and attitudes and Personal development.
Applications are made through coordinated admissions (via Wandsworth Council if you live in-borough, or your home local authority if you live elsewhere). The school states the deadline is 15 January every year, and families apply one year before a child starts Reception.
Yes. The school publishes a clear daily structure: breakfast club from 7:30am, after-school clubs typically finishing at 4:15pm, and after-school care running until 6:15pm, with wraparound care available in paid blocks.
Preparation starts early. Pupils take annual CAT tests from Year 3, receive discrete reasoning lessons from Year 5, and can access a Prep Club and small-group work with a specialist tutor. The school also offers Year 6 interview practice sessions and hosts an annual secondary transfer fair.
Weekly Spanish teaching runs from Reception through Year 6, and the school has been recognised with a SAPERE Silver Award for philosophy provision, reflecting a focus on oracy and structured discussion alongside core subjects.
Get in touch with the school directly
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