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 small school can still feel busy in the best sense, with multiple drop off points, clear routines, and lots of small transitions that build independence quickly. The Alderton Infant School and Nursery serves children from Nursery through to Year 2, with published Reception intake of 60 places per year.
The tone is purposeful but warm. Expectations for behaviour are clear and pupils respond well, which matters in an infant setting where learning time can disappear fast if routines are shaky. The curriculum is deliberately planned rather than improvised, with reading and language development placed near the centre of daily learning.
Families should also view this school as part of a wider local cluster. It sits alongside The Alderton Junior School and has an established Year 2 to Year 3 transition link, which can simplify planning for the next stage.
The school’s identity is built around predictable routines and calm movement. The day starts with a structured arrival, with staff supporting children into independence as quickly as is appropriate for their age. That practical focus continues through the day, with tightly run playtimes and a consistent approach to behaviour that prioritises learning time.
Pupils are given responsibility in age appropriate ways. Formal observation notes show children taking on small roles such as library monitors, and contributing through groups such as an eco club. The overall implication for families is that confidence is developed through repeated, manageable responsibility, rather than occasional big leadership moments.
The site also benefits from separation by age. Playtimes are organised so Early Years and Key Stage 1 have distinct outdoor areas, which usually makes for calmer lunchtimes and fewer conflicts between very different age groups. For younger pupils, this typically supports better regulation and more purposeful play.
This is not a Key Stage 2 results school, so the most useful lens is curriculum quality and the way progress is engineered from Nursery to Year 2.
The curriculum is described in official observation as broad, ambitious, and well sequenced, with deliberate links across subjects so children build knowledge that connects rather than sits in isolated topics. A practical example is the use of selected books as a cross curriculum anchor, which helps very young children retain vocabulary and concepts across subjects.
Reading is a stated priority. Phonics begins from the start of Reception, and support is put in place for pupils who fall behind. The implication is a school that expects early gaps to be addressed quickly, before they become long term barriers to wider learning.
In early years, attention is placed on communication, with adults modelling full sentences and encouraging children to do the same. This matters because strong spoken language usually supports smoother writing development later in Key Stage 1, and makes classroom talk more productive.
Teaching is framed around checking what pupils know, revisiting key learning, and adapting lessons to close gaps. In infant settings, this tends to show up as frequent recap, lots of practice, and careful sequencing so children are not asked to do tasks that rely on knowledge they have not yet secured.
The approach to personal development is also worth noting as part of teaching, not a bolt on. Pupils are explicitly taught to recognise and manage emotions, and to develop respect for different beliefs and cultures. For many families, that translates into fewer low level behaviour issues and more settled classrooms, which indirectly supports academic progress.
Provision for pupils with additional needs aims for inclusion within the main curriculum. Pupils with SEND access the same curriculum as their peers, with additional targets and support plans where needed. This is a sensible inclusion stance for an infant school, but the precision and measurability of targets matters to ensure support is consistently actionable for staff.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families, the most relevant next step is Year 3. The school sits alongside The Alderton Junior School and the transition process is explicitly planned. Year 2 parents are offered junior school tours, and pupils benefit from continuity work that supports a smoother handover.
Practically, this reduces the uncertainty that can come with moving from infants to juniors. When children already know the neighbouring setting, and staff have established information sharing routines, pupils often settle more quickly in Year 3 and the first term tends to be more academically productive.
Reception entry is coordinated through Essex admissions. For September 2026 entry, the application window runs from 10 November 2025 to 15 January 2026, with Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
Demand is meaningful. The school’s own results shows 142 applications for 60 offers for the relevant entry route, indicating oversubscription at roughly 2.37 applications per place.
The school also runs Reception tours around late autumn and early January for the 2026 cohort. If you are using tours to decide, treat the listed dates as evidence of timing patterns and check current availability through the school office.
For Nursery, the school asks families to register interest for September 2026 and publishes session structure rather than fees.
Parents comparing options should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense check travel time and practical convenience, especially if you are juggling wraparound care and work schedules.
Applications
142
Total received
Places Offered
60
Subscription Rate
2.4x
Apps per place
Behaviour is a clear strength. Routines are understood and lessons are rarely disrupted, which is particularly important for younger pupils who need consistent structure to feel secure.
Safeguarding systems are also described as effective, with regular training and appropriate recruitment checks. Pupils are taught how to stay safe, including online safety in an age appropriate way.
Pastoral practice also shows up through the personal development programme. Teaching children how to name emotions and manage feelings is not just a wellbeing benefit, it typically reduces classroom conflict and supports concentration.
Extra opportunities are used to broaden learning rather than distract from it. Formal observation notes reference trips and visitors as part of the wider programme. For infant pupils, carefully chosen experiences can do a lot of work, giving children shared vocabulary and context that improves comprehension back in class.
Clubs are structured to share access fairly. The school describes after school clubs for Year 1 and Year 2, plus a breakfast football club for Reception, with a system that initially limits each child to one club to maximise participation.
For a sense of current flavour, the school diary includes items such as dance, gymnastics, football, multi skills, and an art after school club. That mix usually suits children who learn best through movement and practical making, not only desk based tasks.
A note on Forest School: the school references Forest School in navigation, but detailed public information is limited, so families who prioritise outdoor learning should ask directly how frequently it runs and which year groups take part.
The school day runs from 8:35am to 3:05pm. Lunchtime is split by phase, with Reception earlier and Key Stage 1 slightly later, and playtime structures include separate outdoor areas for younger and older pupils.
Wraparound care is linked to Junior Adventures Group, referenced as the school’s breakfast and after school club provider. Families should confirm timings, costs, and availability directly with the provider, especially if you need regular late pickups.
Oversubscription is real. Data for the main entry route shows 142 applications for 60 offers. If you are set on this option, apply on time and keep a realistic Plan B.
Early reading book match needs close attention. Formal observation notes highlight that reading books do not always closely match some pupils’ phonics knowledge, which can slow fluency if not corrected quickly.
SEND plans may need sharper targets for some pupils. Pupils with SEND are identified and included in the core curriculum, but some targets were noted as not precise enough, which can make support less consistent across staff.
If Forest School is a priority, ask for specifics. Public detail is limited, so confirm frequency, staffing, and which year groups participate before relying on it.
The Alderton Infant School and Nursery is a strong option for families who value calm routines, clear expectations, and an ambitious early curriculum that puts reading and language development at the centre. It suits children who respond well to predictable structure and parents who want a well organised start to school life, with a straightforward pathway into the neighbouring junior stage. The main constraint is admission, not the day to day experience once a place is secured.
The most recent inspection outcome rates the school Good, with strengths noted in behaviour, curriculum planning, and safeguarding. For parents, the practical take away is a settled environment with consistent routines and a reading first approach across the early years.
Reception applications are coordinated through Essex. For September 2026 entry, you can apply between 10 November 2025 and 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school invites families to register interest for September 2026 and publishes morning and afternoon sessions. Nursery fee information is not published as a single price figure, so families should confirm costs and funding arrangements directly.
Wraparound care is linked to Junior Adventures Group, referenced as the breakfast and after school club provider. Availability and timings can vary, so it is sensible to confirm options early if you need regular childcare beyond the school day.
The school explicitly supports transition into The Alderton Junior School at Year 3, including opportunities for Year 2 families to tour the junior setting. For many pupils, that local continuity can make the Year 3 move feel straightforward.
Get in touch with the school directly
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