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.
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Care, Respect, Learn, Succeed, sits at the centre of daily life here, and it shows in how confidently young pupils talk about kindness, inclusion and learning routines.
This is a maintained infant and nursery school for ages 3 to 7, with two-form entry in Reception, Year 1 and Year 2, plus a 52-place nursery and a small specialist class for pupils with an Education, Health and Care Plan.
Mrs Joanne Thirkill became headteacher in September 2025, following a long-standing leadership period that included the March 2023 Ofsted inspection confirming that the school remained Outstanding.
A sense of belonging is a consistent theme in the school’s official reporting, with pupils describing the setting as family-like and adults responding quickly to worries. That matters in an infant school, where confidence and routines are the foundations for later learning, and where children need to feel secure before they can take academic risks.
The behaviour culture is described as calm and purposeful, with high expectations framed through the school’s values. Rather than relying on abstract slogans, the values appear in day-to-day language, with pupils expected to show genuine kindness and to take responsibility for how they learn and play.
Leadership is currently in a transition phase, which parents should understand in practical terms rather than as a risk signal. Mrs Thirkill joined in September 2025, and that timing means many families will experience new systems, refreshed priorities, and possibly changes to communication style as the new head establishes her approach. The governing body information is clear on her start date, which helps families anchor what is genuinely new and what is long-standing practice.
Because this is an infant school ending at Year 2, it does not sit neatly inside the headline primary performance measures that focus on Year 6 outcomes. That means parents should put less weight on league-table style comparisons and more weight on evidence about early reading, curriculum sequencing, inclusion, and how well pupils are prepared for Key Stage 2 settings.
The most recent published inspection evidence points to a curriculum that is broad and ambitious, designed deliberately from nursery through to Year 2 so that knowledge builds in a planned sequence. The report also notes that outcomes at the end of Year 2 have historically been high, with leaders taking specific steps to address learning gaps following the pandemic period, including regular revisiting of prior learning and quick identification of misconceptions.
If you are choosing between local infant options, the practical implication is this: look for signs that reading, language development, and early number are taught systematically, and that staff can explain how children move from play-based learning into more formal Key Stage 1 routines without a sudden jump. The inspection evidence describes that transition as a strength, with children in early years well prepared for Key Stage 1 and Year 2 pupils prepared for the move to junior school.
Early reading is treated as a core priority. Staff start the reading journey in nursery through stories, rhymes, songs and vocabulary, then move into letter-sound knowledge in Reception and closely matched reading books in Key Stage 1. The important detail for parents is the emphasis on keeping texts aligned to the sounds pupils are learning, plus early identification of any pupils who are behind, followed by timely support designed to help them catch up quickly.
Classroom talk and comprehension are supported through structured routines that encourage pupils to discuss books and ideas. One specific example cited is a “book hot seat” activity, which creates a predictable format for pupils to talk about what they have read in front of peers. For many children, especially quieter pupils, that kind of routine helps build confidence in speaking and listening without making it feel like a performance.
In mathematics and across the wider curriculum, the inspection evidence points to teachers revisiting prior learning so concepts stick, with adults quickly spotting misconceptions. That combination, retrieval plus fast correction, is often what separates a school where pupils can perform in-the-moment from one where they genuinely remember and apply knowledge later.
Nursery is structured around sessions that run for three hours in the morning or afternoon, with the school describing separate morning and afternoon classes. Most children join in September, with some able to start in January if spaces are available.
The admissions process for nursery is direct to the school rather than via the local authority. Families can register an expression of interest at any time, and the school typically contacts families at the start of February for children who will be three before the end of August, then issues an online form with a submission deadline. The practical implication is that you can plan early, but you should still expect a defined window and a deadline once you are invited to apply.
Nursery fee arrangements, including funded hours, vary by family eligibility and should be checked on the school’s official information pages. Government-funded hours are available for eligible families, and the school signposts families to funding information for early years.
A defining feature is the small specialist class (SSC), which offers eight places for children aged 4 to 7 with autistic spectrum condition and social communication difficulties, where pupils have an Education, Health and Care Plan.
The SSC description is unusually detailed for a mainstream infant school. The room is split into a play-based area with structured play zones (including home corner and book area) and a low-arousal area with individual workstations, plus an attached sensory room. Communication approaches include signing and pictures, with PECS and Boardmaker referenced, and pupils use visual timetables. For families, this indicates a specialist environment designed for children who need predictable structure, sensory support, and carefully planned integration into mainstream classes.
Integration is treated as the default, not an optional extra. Pupils have individual timetables for time in mainstream classes, reviewed regularly, and the inspection evidence supports that pupils with SEND learn alongside peers and access the same curriculum where appropriate, with individual plans used when needed. That matters because the goal for many families is not simply support, but inclusion with ambition.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families, the main transition point is Year 2 to Year 3. The school describes a direct link with Wellfield Junior School, with the majority of pupils moving on there. It also states that there is an automatic admission route to the junior school, meaning parents do not need to submit a fresh local authority application for that transfer.
Partnership work between the infant and junior schools is not presented as ceremonial. Planned activities include joint subject leader planning and opportunities such as older pupils reading to younger pupils around events like World Book Day, plus meetings involving the two schools’ school councils. The implication for children is familiarity, not just with buildings, but with routines and expectations, which often reduces anxiety for pupils who find change difficult.
Families who intend to move to a different junior school should treat that as a separate decision pathway. Automatic progression is helpful, but it can also make it easy to drift into a default choice. If you are weighing alternatives, focus on how well your preferred Year 3 setting matches your child’s learning profile and social needs.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Trafford Council. For September 2026 entry, the local authority set 15 January 2026 as the closing date, with offers issued on 16 April 2026. Applications were open from the beginning of the 2025 autumn term.
In practical terms, this is a school where demand exceeds places. Recent local admissions data indicates 126 applications for 43 offers for the main entry route, which is roughly 2.93 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. Competition is the limiting factor, not a lack of willingness to welcome new families.
Nursery admissions are different. They are managed by the school, not the local authority, with an expression-of-interest route and a later formal application stage, typically prompted in early February for the September intake.
For pupils in the small specialist class, admissions sit outside the mainstream process and are handled via local authority SEND routes, with an Education, Health and Care Plan as the gateway and decisions made through the relevant panel arrangements.
Parents comparing options should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense-check travel practicality and daily routines, particularly if you are relying on wraparound care or juggling multiple drop-offs.
100%
1st preference success rate
43 of 43 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
43
Offers
43
Applications
126
Pupil wellbeing is described as a leadership priority, not a side programme. Published inspection evidence states that pupils feel safe, that adults deal with worries promptly, and that leaders act swiftly and sensitively if bullying occurs.
The personal development offer includes explicit attention to physical and emotional health, with examples such as yoga being used to help pupils feel calm. For families, the implication is that regulation and emotional vocabulary are woven into school life, which is particularly helpful for children who find transitions, noise, or social complexity challenging.
Safeguarding is treated as a strong relationship-based system, with staff knowing pupils and families well and working with external agencies where required.
Extra opportunities are not presented as optional add-ons, but as part of building confidence at a young age. Music and performance feature strongly in the published material, including pupils learning instruments, singing, and taking part in performance experiences that celebrate interests and talents.
Clubs are specific and age-appropriate. Current examples include Drama Club, Cricket Club, a Year 2 and Junior Choir (run jointly with the junior school), and Rock Steady music lessons. The implication is that children can try structured activities in small doses, which is often ideal at infant age where attention span and fatigue vary day by day.
The Eco Warriors group is another distinctive element. It is described as having representatives from each class from Reception to Year Two, with pupils encouraged to take action on topics such as waste and school grounds, and working towards the Eco-Schools Green Flag. For many children, this kind of structured responsibility is an early step into leadership without the formality that can feel intimidating.
Wraparound provision is well developed and, importantly, clearly explained. The school states that wraparound care is delivered by Beyond the Physical, with a booking system in place, and it gives practical timings and pricing: Breakfast Club from 7:30am at £7.00, and After-School Club closing at 6:00pm at £15.00. It also describes a balance of sports-led sessions, creative activities, quiet reading spaces, and outdoor play, which helps families anticipate what children are actually doing rather than assuming it is just supervision.
School hours are clearly set out. Nursery runs 8:55am to 11:55am for morning sessions and 12:20pm to 3:20pm for afternoon sessions, with full days listed as 8:55am to 3:20pm. Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 run 8:55am to 3:25pm, with doors aiming to open from 8:45am.
Wraparound care operates beyond those hours, with breakfast provision from 7:30am and after-school care until 6:00pm, booked through the provider’s system.
For travel, local bus services operate along Church Lane and nearby roads, and Metrolink access is available via the Sale stop on the tram network.
Oversubscription pressure. Demand is higher than places for the main entry route, with recent local data indicating 126 applications for 43 offers. If you are applying, treat timing and paperwork accuracy as non-negotiable, and build a realistic shortlist.
Leadership change. A new headteacher started in September 2025. Many families will welcome fresh energy, but any leadership change can come with updated expectations, revised communication habits, or changes to routines.
Short age range, early transition. The school ends at Year 2, and most pupils progress to Wellfield Junior School via an automatic route. This can be reassuring, but it also means you should think ahead early about whether the linked junior school fits your child for Key Stage 2.
Specialist provision has clear entry rules. The small specialist class is designed for pupils with an Education, Health and Care Plan and specific profiles of need. Families who are still exploring assessment or support pathways should start those conversations early, as specialist places depend on statutory processes.
This is a high-performing infant setting with a strong culture of kindness, purposeful learning and early reading. The combination of Outstanding inspection evidence, a clearly structured curriculum from nursery to Year 2, and a thoughtfully described specialist SEND environment makes it particularly compelling for families who value both ambition and inclusion.
Best suited to families who want a structured start to schooling, with strong early literacy, clear routines, and a well-defined pathway into the linked junior school, and to families who may benefit from the SSC’s specialist approach where an Education, Health and Care Plan is in place.
The latest Ofsted inspection in March 2023 confirmed the school remained Outstanding, highlighting strong behaviour expectations, a well-designed curriculum, and pupils who feel safe and supported.
Reception places are allocated through Trafford’s coordinated admissions process, and demand is high. Families should check Trafford’s published admissions arrangements and use precise home-to-school details when applying.
Nursery places are managed directly by the school. Families can submit an expression of interest at any time, with a typical formal application stage prompted early in the year for the September intake.
Yes. The school runs a small specialist class with eight places for pupils aged 4 to 7 with autistic spectrum condition and social communication difficulties who have an Education, Health and Care Plan, alongside integration opportunities into mainstream classes.
Wraparound care runs before and after the school day through an external provider arrangement, with breakfast and after-school sessions available and a structured programme of activities.
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