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.
For families who value a truly small-school feel, this is the kind of place where pupils are known, noticed, and given responsibility early. The roll is small relative to its 56-place capacity, which shapes everything from friendships across year groups to the breadth of leadership roles children can try. Nursery provision starts from the term after a child’s third birthday, which can make the early transition into school life feel smoother for local families.
The latest Ofsted inspection (15 and 16 July 2025) judged Quality of education, Behaviour and attitudes, Leadership and management, and Early years provision as Good, with Personal development rated Outstanding.
Because the community is small, social life tends to be mixed-age by default. The inspection evidence points to pupils feeling safe, friendships forming across year groups, and breaktimes running calmly with older pupils supporting younger ones. That matters in a rural setting where a school can be a social anchor for families as much as an education provider.
Expect a culture that leans into responsibility rather than leaving it to the oldest year group. The school uses pupil roles such as school council membership, library monitors, and “shopkeepers” to build independence and teamwork, not as a token gesture but as part of how children learn to contribute.
Leadership is clearly identified on the school’s own staffing information, with Mr Mark Redhead as headteacher and designated safeguarding lead.
This is a primary school, so the key outcome lens for many parents is Key Stage 2, combined reading, writing and mathematics, plus the wider picture of readiness for secondary. In very small cohorts, results can swing year to year, so it is sensible to read published data alongside what the curriculum and teaching approach look like day to day.
What can be said with confidence from the most recent official evaluation is that expectations are high, staff know pupils well, and the curriculum has been revised carefully in most subjects so that teaching builds knowledge over time. Where the school is still refining, it is in a small number of subjects where knowledge is not sequenced clearly enough, and in ensuring staff have the information they need to support pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) consistently across lessons.
Parents comparing local options may find it helpful to use FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool to line up nearby primary performance and context side by side, then use that shortlist to focus visits and questions.
Early reading is treated as a priority. Phonics starts in Reception, and by the end of Year 2 most pupils have secured the sound and letter knowledge needed to read confidently, with additional help used for pupils who need it so they can keep pace.
Curriculum design is a notable theme in the school’s current direction. The inspection evidence highlights that most subjects are mapped carefully so staff are clear what to teach and when, and that teachers check what pupils remember over time rather than simply covering content once. The practical implication for families is that lessons should feel structured, and pupils should revisit key ideas, which is especially important in a small school where mixed-age groupings and small classes can be common.
For Nursery and early years, the emphasis includes communication and social development, supported by considered adult interactions and regular story time. Children are encouraged to choose books for themselves from Nursery onwards, which is a strong foundation for both language development and habit formation.
As a village primary serving ages 3 to 11, transition is the key “destination” moment. The inspection evidence points to pupils being prepared for the next stage through strong routines, leadership opportunities, and opportunities to mix with other schools through matches and competitions, which can make secondary transition less daunting.
Families should still do the practical homework early: check which secondary schools usually serve the area around Millom, how travel works, and what the admissions rules look like for each option, as these vary across Cumberland Council. (If you are weighing more than one secondary route, FindMySchool’s Map Search is a good way to sanity-check distance assumptions before you commit to a house move.)
There are two relevant entry points for most families: Nursery and Reception.
Children can join the nursery from the term after their third birthday. Admissions at this age are handled directly with the school, and places can be available across early years, Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2 depending on cohort size.
Reception applications are coordinated through the local authority. For September 2026 entry, the application window opens on 3 September 2025 and closes on 15 January 2026; National Offer Day is 16 April 2026.
A critical reality check for parents is that nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place. That is a general local authority rule families sometimes miss, and it is worth planning around if you are relying on a school place to support childcare.
Demand here is not on the scale of larger town primaries, but it can still be competitive. Recent admissions data shows 8 applications for 5 offers for the main entry route, which indicates more applicants than places overall. (Where distance is a deciding factor, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to compare your home-to-school distance against patterns in your area.)
Applications
8
Total received
Places Offered
5
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Apps per place
A small school lives or dies by culture. The evidence points to pupils feeling supported and safe, with calm routines that make breaktimes cooperative and classrooms typically orderly.
Personal development is a standout strength in the latest evaluation. It is not just about assemblies and posters; it shows up in responsibility roles, trips that broaden horizons, and structured opportunities to meet pupils from other schools through sport and competition, all of which build confidence and social ease.
Ofsted also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For a small primary, the range described is unusually specific. Popular clubs include art, “taskmaster”, dance, and dodgeball, and pupils talk about clubs with real enthusiasm rather than seeing them as add-ons.
Trips are not treated as occasional rewards; they are used to deepen curriculum learning. The school links science and geography to real places through visits to forests, rivers and beaches, and older pupils have had residential experiences including a trip to London. There are also visits that support understanding of different faiths, including trips to a mosque and a Buddhist temple, which strengthens the personal development story in a practical, memorable way.
Wraparound provision is also clearly set out. Morning Club runs from 8:00am, and the after-school option, Stop and Play, runs until 5:30pm. Published pricing is £2 for Morning Club (with breakfast available for an additional £1) and £5 for Stop and Play.
The school day starts with learning from 8:45am, with arrivals after 9:00am marked late. The day finishes at 3:30pm.
Term dates align with the local authority calendar rather than a separate school-specific term-date pattern, which makes planning simpler if you have children across multiple local settings.
A small-school trade-off. The close-knit feel can be a major positive, but it can also mean fewer same-age peers than in a larger primary. For some children that is reassuring; for others it can feel limiting.
SEND consistency is a current improvement focus. The school has identified needs, but there is work to do to ensure staff consistently understand pupils’ specific needs and adapt learning activities effectively. This is worth asking about if your child needs adjustments or targeted support.
Curriculum sequencing is not fully consistent across every subject. Most subjects are well mapped, but a small number still need clearer sequencing of key knowledge so learning always builds logically. Ask which subjects are being refined and what that looks like in practice.
Reception is not automatic from nursery. Nursery is a helpful pathway into school life, but Reception allocation still follows the local authority admissions process and dates.
This is a genuinely small rural primary where pupils get responsibility early, clubs and trips are used to build confidence, and personal development is a defining strength. Best suited to families who want a village-school feel, value mixed-age friendships, and like the idea of their child being known well by staff. The main consideration is making sure the school’s current improvement work around SEND support and curriculum sequencing matches your child’s needs and learning style.
The most recent inspection evidence (July 2025) points to a positive picture: strong personal development, calm routines, and a curriculum that has been carefully redesigned in most subjects. It is a small setting, so outcomes and experience can be shaped heavily by cohort needs, making a visit and a close look at how learning is adapted particularly important.
Reception places are allocated through the local authority coordinated process, and distance can be used as a tie-break where schools are oversubscribed. The best approach is to check the current admissions booklet for the relevant year and confirm your distance using a mapping tool before relying on any single factor.
Yes. Morning Club starts at 8:00am, and an after-school option, Stop and Play, runs until 5:30pm, with published charges on the school website.
For September 2026 entry, the local authority application window opens on 3 September 2025 and closes on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. Apply through the local authority coordinated system, even if your child attends the nursery.
Nursery entry is from the term after a child’s third birthday. Places are arranged directly with the school, and availability can vary by cohort.
Get in touch with the school directly
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