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.
Small schools can feel like a gamble, especially if you are weighing breadth of provision against the benefits of being known well. Here, the headline is scale: the school is for ages 4 to 11 and has a published capacity of 42 pupils, with around 30 on roll at the time of the most recent inspection listing.
The most recent published inspection report (inspection date 16 July 2024, published 26 September 2024) kept the overall judgement at Good, but flagged that standards could be lower if a graded inspection took place at that point. That context matters, because it explains why the school has been working through change, rather than simply maintaining steady-state practice.
Leadership is also a key part of the current story. The government school register lists Mrs Anne-Marie Willis as headteacher, appointed 01 January 2023, while the school’s staff page also lists an interim headteacher, Mr Mark Harrison. In practice, families should expect leadership responsibilities to be shared across a very small team, with roles that can change quickly.
A defining feature is the village identity and Church of England foundation. Pupils are closely involved with the local church, including regular attendance at services, and this is presented as part of everyday life rather than an occasional add-on.
The culture described in formal reporting is warm and relational, with pupils described as happy, polite, and focused in lessons. Safeguarding is explicitly confirmed as effective, which is a baseline expectation but still important to see stated clearly for any small school where staffing capacity is tight.
The school’s long arc is unusually well documented for a small primary. Its own Church page traces the foundation back to 1492, linked to a local bequest supporting the teaching of village children. This historic continuity often shows up in how families talk about schools like this, namely as multi-generational and community anchored rather than transactional.
Published key stage performance measures are not presented here, so the most reliable, current window is the detail inside the latest inspection narrative. It describes a period of change since the appointment of the headteacher, including higher expectations and a move towards a more ambitious curriculum that pupils, including children in the early years, are beginning to benefit from.
The same report is clear that the quality of curriculum implementation is uneven across subjects. Some areas are well ordered and taught effectively, with accurate use of assessment information; other subjects are earlier in development, with curriculum content described as too vague for staff to implement consistently. The practical implication for parents is that classroom experience may feel stronger in some subjects than others, depending on how far along each curriculum area is in the school’s improvement work.
Reading has been raised in prominence, including a wider selection of higher-quality texts linked to the curriculum. Support for early reading is described as generally well matched, but phonics checking is noted as not yet precise enough for all pupils who need it, which can slow progress in reading fluency.
The curriculum story is best understood as intentional redesign with variable execution. Where the school has mapped small steps of knowledge clearly, teaching is described as coherent and cumulative, and staff use assessment strategies to build on what pupils already know.
In earlier-stage subjects, the report points to a common risk in small settings: when subject leadership capacity is limited, curriculum specificity and assessment routines can slip, even when overall intent is sound. That does not automatically mean weak teaching day to day; it means the system for making teaching consistent across subjects is still being built.
For early reading in particular, it is worth asking on a visit how phonics knowledge is checked and how quickly gaps are picked up, because the report identifies this as an area where practice needs to tighten.
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 village primary, most pupils will move on to secondary schools through local authority coordinated admissions. The school’s own SEND and local offer documentation describes structured transition work, including additional visits where needed and sharing information with the receiving setting’s SENCO to support continuity, which is especially useful in a small school where individual pupils can have a larger proportionate impact on class dynamics.
For families planning ahead, Cheshire East’s timetable for September 2026 secondary transfer is clear: applications close 31 October 2025 and offers are made 02 March 2026. Even if your child is not yet in Year 6, these dates help you map when open events and decision points usually fall.
This is a voluntary aided Church of England primary, so admissions combine local authority coordination with faith-related oversubscription criteria set by governors.
For Reception entry, the planned admission number is six. When applications exceed places, priority is ordered broadly as follows: looked-after and previously looked-after children; children living in the parish; siblings; children whose parent is a faithful worshipper at St Christopher’s Church, Pott Shrigley, evidenced by a supplementary form; then worshippers at other Christian churches affiliated to Churches Together in Britain and Ireland, again with a supplementary form; finally distance, measured in a straight line using official address point mapping.
For September 2026 entry, Cheshire East publishes a clear timetable: applications open 01 September 2025; the primary closing date is 15 January 2026; supporting documents are due 16 February 2026; offers are made 16 April 2026; and acceptances are due by 30 April 2026.
If you are trying to judge how realistic admission is from a particular address, it helps to treat distance criteria as the final tie-break rather than the whole story, because the earlier criteria (parish, siblings, and worship evidence) can decide most outcomes in a small intake of six. Parents can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check travel practicality, but should read the school’s oversubscription criteria closely before relying on proximity alone.
100%
1st preference success rate
2 of 2 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
2
Offers
2
Applications
5
The inspection narrative points to a strong baseline: pupils’ wellbeing and safety are treated as priorities, relationships are positive, and behaviour is described as good. Safeguarding arrangements are confirmed as effective.
The key pastoral risk flagged is attendance. The report states that too many pupils do not attend regularly enough; while strategies have been established to improve this, leaders have not yet evaluated impact closely enough to be confident the approach is working. For parents, this is not just an administrative point. In very small classes, persistent absence can affect both learning continuity and the social fabric of a year group.
Support for pupils with SEND is described as improving, including quicker identification and more consistent meeting of needs compared with the past.
Because the school is small, enrichment tends to work best when it is integrated into normal routines and when clubs are accessible without heavy cost. The school describes a daily breakfast club and states that it offers fully funded after-school clubs at least twice a week.
Specific examples in the public record include an eco club with practical local projects such as tree planting in partnership with the village cricket club, which is a good fit for a rural context and gives pupils a tangible role in community life.
School communications also reference a pattern of enrichment clubs that have included Lego club, dance, gymnastics, and multi-sports, plus swimming for older year groups, alongside opportunities to learn an instrument and attend live music events such as a local orchestra visit. The detail that matters here is not the sheer number of clubs, it is that small schools can still offer variety if they timetable it carefully and use local links well.
The school day is published as starting at 8.50am and finishing at 3.20pm. Breakfast club is offered daily, and after-school clubs are described as running at least twice a week.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Costs families should still budget for typically include uniform, trips, and optional extras such as peripatetic music lessons if taken up.
The setting is rural, in the Pott Shrigley area near Macclesfield, so travel tends to be car dependent for many families, even when children live relatively nearby.
A very small intake. With a planned Reception admission number of six, peer groups are tiny. That can suit children who like calm social settings; it can feel limiting for children who need a larger friendship pool.
Curriculum consistency is still being built. Some subjects are well planned and taught; others are earlier in development, with staff still tightening what should be taught and how learning is checked.
Attendance is an explicit improvement focus. The report flags persistent absence as too high and notes that the impact of strategies has not been evaluated closely enough yet. Families should ask what has changed since 2024 and how attendance is supported.
Faith criteria can matter more than distance. Parish, siblings, and worship evidence sit ahead of distance in the oversubscription order, which can surprise families who assume rural schools always allocate mainly by proximity.
This is the kind of small Church primary where community links and individual attention can be real strengths, provided leadership capacity is stable and improvement work is sustained. The July 2024 inspection account paints a school in active transition: expectations and reading culture are being raised, but curriculum implementation and assessment practice are not yet consistent across all subjects, and attendance remains a stubborn issue.
Who it suits: families who want a small, faith-rooted primary, are comfortable engaging with church-linked admissions criteria where relevant, and value close relationships over scale. The main decision point is whether you are comfortable with the current improvement trajectory. If this is on your shortlist, use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to track open events and deadlines, and compare nearby alternatives via the Local Hub comparison tools before you commit to a move.
It is currently rated Good, with the most recent inspection dated 16 July 2024 and published on 26 September 2024. The report highlights positive relationships, pupil wellbeing, and effective safeguarding, alongside improvement work that is still ongoing in curriculum consistency and attendance.
Applications for Reception are made through Cheshire East’s coordinated admissions process, not directly to the school. The school’s policy sets a planned intake of six and uses faith and parish criteria alongside siblings and distance when oversubscribed, with supplementary forms required for worship-based criteria.
For Cheshire East primary admissions, applications open on 01 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026. Offers are made on 16 April 2026, with acceptances due by 30 April 2026.
The school publishes that it offers a daily breakfast club and runs fully funded after-school clubs at least twice a week. Families should check current session times and availability, as small schools can adjust provision term by term.
The school has an established relationship with St Christopher’s Church and pupils are involved in church services as part of community life. For oversubscribed years, the admissions policy also includes worship-based criteria supported by supplementary forms.
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