Morning routines here are structured and calm, with clear expectations from the start of the day and an evident emphasis on pupils feeling safe, known, and ready to learn. The latest Ofsted inspection (27 and 28 September 2023) judged the school Good across every graded area, and confirmed safeguarding as effective.
Academically, the published Key Stage 2 picture is notably strong. In 2024, 87% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics, well above the England average of 62%. A quarter of pupils achieved the higher standard across reading, writing and maths (25.67%), compared with an England average of 8%. This is the sort of profile that often appeals to families who want a school to stretch the highest attainers while still keeping expectations clear for everyone.
It is a Catholic voluntary aided primary under the trusteeship of the Archdiocese of Liverpool, with admissions decisions made by the governing body and coordination handled via Wigan Council. For September 2026, the published admission number is 30.
The tone is shaped by Catholic life, but not in a narrow way. The school’s mission is anchored in the Gospel line “I have come that they may have life and have it to the full” (John 10:10), and the wider intent is framed as helping children learn and grow “in God’s light”. In practice, this tends to show up as a values-first approach, where behaviour, respect, and service are treated as daily habits rather than occasional themes.
Pupils are expected to contribute, not just comply. The school describes several formal pupil roles that give children a visible voice in day-to-day life, including the School Council, a Pupil Leadership Team, and Wellbeing Ambassadors. For parents, that matters because leadership opportunities at primary age often correlate with confidence, speaking skills, and a stronger sense of belonging, especially for children who do not naturally push themselves to the front.
There is also a practical, security-minded feel to routines. The school day guidance references controlled access after the gates close, including a video intercom system for entry later in the morning. This sort of operational clarity is rarely the headline when parents tour, but it is often what makes mornings feel manageable for children.
Leadership is currently under Mr G Doherty, who is named on the school’s own headteacher welcome and wider governance information. The tone of communication is positioned as open and relationship-based, with the prospectus describing regular informal contact points alongside more formal parents’ evenings and reports.
The published figures suggest a school where outcomes are not a one-off spike, but part of a stable pattern of strong attainment.
Reading, writing and mathematics (combined expected standard): 87%, compared with an England average of 62%.
Higher standard across reading, writing and mathematics: 25.67%, compared with an England average of 8%.
Those are meaningful gaps. For families, the implication is that teaching is likely pitched with enough precision to move a large majority securely through the core curriculum, while still creating space for a sizeable top group to go further.
Reading: 108
Mathematics: 106
Grammar, punctuation and spelling: 108
Scaled scores are a useful companion to the headline combined measure because they are less sensitive to cohort quirks. Scores in the mid to high 100s typically signal confident mastery rather than borderline performance.
Ranked 2,640th in England and 50th in the local area (Manchester) for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This places performance comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England.
The key point for parents is not the number itself, but what it implies day to day. In a school operating at this level, lessons usually move at a purposeful pace. Children who thrive here often like clear routines, direct feedback, and a sense that learning is taken seriously.
If you are comparing several nearby primaries, the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool can help you weigh attainment and ranking context side by side, rather than trying to hold multiple sets of figures in your head.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
87%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is presented as broad and balanced, with a clear statement that it is aligned to the National Curriculum while being adapted to the school’s own priorities. A strong school can still feel generic if it lacks detail, but here there are a few specific signals worth noticing.
External review evidence points to reading as a clear strength, with phonics introduced as soon as children begin in Reception and staff trained to deliver the programme consistently. The practical implication is that children who need structure and repetition in early literacy are likely to get it. For confident early readers, the follow-through matters just as much, access to high-quality texts and consistent comprehension expectations across year groups tends to be what separates “good readers” from children who can truly learn independently.
The prospectus describes religious education as the core subject in a Catholic school, with the school referencing the programme To Know You More Clearly. That does not mean every child must be Catholic, applications from families of other faiths and none are explicitly considered within the admissions framework, but it does mean prayer, liturgy, and faith language are part of daily culture rather than bolt-ons.
A school can have very strong test outcomes while still needing to refine how it checks learning outside the tested areas. The current improvement focus includes strengthening assessment systems in a small number of subjects so that misconceptions and gaps are identified quickly. For parents, the takeaway is balanced: core attainment is already strong, and leadership appears focused on ensuring the wider curriculum has the same level of precision.
The school describes structured processes for identifying needs, creating plans, reviewing targets, and involving outside professionals when appropriate. The detail matters because it suggests a school that expects SEND support to be systematic rather than ad hoc. At the same time, an identified development area is ensuring staff knowledge and systems are consistently strong for pupils with more complex needs. Families of children with significant or unusual profiles should explore this carefully at visit, asking what training looks like across the staff team and how information about needs is shared between teachers.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
This is a primary school, so the “destination” question is really about transition quality and the likely next step at Year 6.
The school’s SEND documentation describes proactive transition activity, including liaison with secondary schools and attendance at Year 6 open evenings where appropriate. Even for children without additional needs, this is a useful indicator: schools that treat transition as a process (not a single “moving up” day) tend to produce calmer Year 7 starters.
For families staying within Wigan local authority routes, the secondary admissions information for 2026 to 2027 entry lists several Catholic high schools available through the standard process, including St Mary’s Catholic High School (Astley), alongside other Catholic options within the borough. The best next step depends on where you live, how oversubscription criteria operate in a given year, and whether faith-based criteria apply, so parents usually benefit from looking at both the school’s transition support and the local authority’s admissions details.
If you are trying to shortlist realistically, it can help to use FindMySchoolMap Search to estimate travel practicality and to sanity-check what “local” really means for your household.
The school is oversubscribed on the Reception entry route in the current dataset, which is the first practical thing to note.
Applications: 85
Offers: 30
That equates to 2.83 applications per place.
First preference pressure is also evident, with a 1.41 ratio of first preferences to first-preference offers.
In plain terms, this is not a school where families should assume a place will be available by default.
As a voluntary aided Catholic school, the governing body is the admissions authority, while Wigan Council coordinates the overall process for the area.
Where applications exceed places, the published oversubscription criteria begin with looked after and previously looked after children, then move through faith-based categories (including baptised Catholic children with siblings, baptised Catholic children resident in the named parish area, and other baptised Catholic children), then siblings, other Christian denominations (with evidence), other faiths (with evidence), and finally other children.
The practical implication is straightforward: if you want your application considered under faith criteria, you should expect to complete the supplementary form in addition to the normal local authority preference process. Families applying without faith evidence can still be considered, but their priority category will differ.
Wigan Council’s Reception admissions booklet for 2026 to 2027 entry states:
Applications opened: 30 September 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
National offer day: 16 April 2026
Appeals lodged by: 15 May 2026
Given today’s date (27 January 2026), the main application deadline has passed for September 2026 entry. Families moving into the area, or changing plans, should look at in-year arrangements and waiting list processes via the local authority and the school’s published admissions information.
The school advertised an “Open Week” for Reception intake 2026 running in November 2025, with tours booked in advance. For future cohorts, the safest assumption is that open events often run in the autumn term; dates can shift year to year, so it is sensible to check the school’s current announcements before planning visits.
Applications
85
Total received
Places Offered
30
Subscription Rate
2.8x
Apps per place
A strong pastoral culture at primary age is usually visible in three places: how behaviour is described, how adults respond when pupils struggle, and whether pupils have a genuine role in shaping school life.
Behaviour expectations are clearly set, and the external review picture suggests pupils typically behave well and stay focused in lessons. The benefit for families is not only academic; calm classrooms tend to reduce low-level anxiety, especially for children who are sensitive to noise and unpredictability.
Wellbeing work is also framed explicitly through pupil roles and personal development priorities. The school describes opportunities for pupils to contribute through the Wellbeing Ambassadors and leadership structures, and the inspection narrative points to pupils understanding themes like mental wellbeing, physical fitness, and safe relationships in an age-appropriate way.
For pupils with additional needs, the school sets out staged support, structured planning, and referral routes to external specialists where necessary. Parents should still ask practical questions during visits, for example: how interventions are scheduled so children do not miss the same lesson repeatedly, how targets are reviewed, and how the school supports children whose needs present more complexly across multiple domains.
Primary schools vary widely in how seriously they treat “extra” experiences. Here, there are several strands worth pulling together, even where the school does not publish a simple club list.
The School Council is positioned as a genuine mechanism for pupil voice, not a token group, with elections based on pupil votes and a wider set of leadership roles (Head Boy, Head Girl, Pupil Leadership Team, Wellbeing Ambassadors). The implication for pupils is practical: they learn how to speak up, listen, and represent others, and those skills often transfer into more confident classroom participation.
The school references sustained participation in physical activity, including structured play and sport experiences, alongside an emphasis on outdoor learning and active opportunities. For many pupils, this is what makes school feel enjoyable, especially for children who regulate better when they move often through the day.
Collective worship, liturgy, and assemblies are presented as recurring features, with families invited to some events across the year. For Catholic families, this offers continuity with parish life; for other families, it is worth recognising that worship is a normal part of school rhythm and should be approached with openness and respect for the school’s ethos.
The prospectus describes a Parent Teacher Association that raises funds for items that benefit pupils, citing the example of an outdoor classroom supported through fundraising. This is a small detail that can matter: when a PTA is active, it often broadens what a school can provide beyond the essentials, without those opportunities depending on one-off grants.
School day and hours
The compulsory school day is stated as 9.00am to 3.30pm, totalling 32.5 hours per week.
Wraparound care
Breakfast Club operates from 7.30am to 8.50am, with booking required and a stated daily cost of £5.00. The school also employs an After School Club Manager within its staffing structure, which indicates an extended provision offer beyond mornings, although the published detail on sessions and pricing varies by year and should be confirmed directly.
Drop-off and parking
Operational guidance notes use of the school car park for drop-off before 8.30am, and permission to use the Church car park after that point. For parents, this is useful because it signals a planned approach to traffic flow rather than leaving families to improvise.
(Practical note: this review does not repeat contact details, as they are normally displayed alongside the listing.)
Faith expectations are real. The admissions criteria and daily culture are explicitly Catholic. Families who want a school where worship is optional or absent may find this a mismatch, even if their child would otherwise thrive.
Competition for Reception places. With 85 applications for 30 offers demand is clearly above supply. If you are relying on this option, treat the application as high priority and plan a realistic backup.
SEND consistency for complex profiles. The school has clear processes for identifying and supporting needs, but an improvement focus is ensuring staff knowledge and information-sharing are consistently strong for pupils with more complex SEND. This is worth discussing openly if it applies to your child.
Assessment strength varies by subject. Core outcomes are strong, but there is ongoing work to ensure assessment systems in a small number of subjects consistently pick up misconceptions early. For most children this will be invisible; for very high attainers, it can affect how sharply learning is extended beyond the main core.
This is a Catholic primary where academic outcomes, particularly at Key Stage 2, sit comfortably above England averages, and where routines and expectations are clear. The school’s strongest fit is for families who actively welcome Catholic life in the day-to-day culture and who value structured teaching, strong reading foundations, and meaningful pupil leadership opportunities. Admission is the obstacle; families who want this option should plan early, understand how faith criteria operate, and keep a credible second preference in mind.
The latest Ofsted inspection (September 2023) graded the school Good in every area, including early years, and confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective. Academic outcomes are also strong, with 87% of pupils meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in 2024, above the England average of 62%.
Reception applications are coordinated through Wigan Council, and the 2026 entry closing date was 15 January 2026. As a voluntary aided Catholic school, the governing body is the admissions authority, and families seeking consideration under faith criteria should also complete the supplementary form referenced in the school’s admissions arrangements.
If the school is oversubscribed, the published order of priority begins with looked after and previously looked after children, then moves through Catholic faith categories (including baptised Catholic children with siblings and baptised Catholic children in the named parish area), followed by other categories including other Christian denominations (with evidence), other faiths (with evidence), and then other children.
The compulsory day is stated as 9.00am to 3.30pm. Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am to 8.50am with booking required and a published daily cost of £5.00.
In 2024, 87% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined (England average 62%). Higher standard performance is also strong, with 25.67% achieving the higher standard across reading, writing and maths (England average 8%). Reading, maths and grammar scaled scores are in the mid to high 100s.
Get in touch with the school directly
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