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 lower school that stays deliberately small, serving children aged 4 to 9 from Eversholt and nearby villages. It is an academy within Central Bedfordshire, with capacity for 75 pupils, so most families will find it feels more like a tight-knit village school than a large town primary.
Local identity matters here. The school describes its origins as community funded, founded in 1850 by local subscription, and it still frames itself as a school built around village life rather than high volume intake.
For parents, the practical implication is simple, you are choosing a school that is likely to know your child well, but which also sits within a wider pyramid system, with most children transferring on at the end of Year 4 into middle school.
Eversholt Lower School’s public-facing information consistently emphasises belonging, confidence, and early foundations. It uses the phrase “Believe. Achieve. Succeed.” prominently, and that is reflected in curriculum documentation that references the same “golden thread” running through learning decisions.
Leadership is clearly signposted. The headteacher is Mrs Gaynor Miller, who also serves as Designated Safeguarding Lead, and the senior leader is Mrs Heidi Cavinder, who is also Deputy Safeguarding Lead. In a small school, that dual-role structure tends to mean families will quickly learn who to speak to and decisions can be made without layers of bureaucracy.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (14 November 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Good grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. For parents, this points to a consistent whole-school picture rather than one standout area masking weaknesses elsewhere.
This is a state-funded lower school (ages 4 to 9), and there are no published Key Stage 2 outcome measures available to present. That is not unusual for schools that do not take pupils through to the end of Year 6.
What can be said with confidence is that external evaluation is recent and confirms a broadly positive baseline across the core inspection categories. The 2023 inspection outcome gives parents a current reference point when comparing local options, especially within a pyramid where children will later move on to middle and upper school.
If you are trying to compare local schools on performance, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can still be useful for side-by-side context, but the most meaningful questions here are often about early reading, phonics, and how well a small school supports mixed-age peer groups.
The curriculum materials available on the school website point to deliberate intent, including clear statements of purpose by subject. The history curriculum, for example, frames learning around pupils’ curiosity, local understanding, and wider world knowledge, and it explicitly ties curriculum choices back to the school’s stated ethos.
A small lower school creates particular advantages and constraints. The advantage is that staff can track pupils closely and intervene early. The constraint is that staffing breadth is naturally smaller than in a large two-form entry primary, so the quality of teaching depends heavily on the consistency of the core team and on how effectively leaders use partnerships for sport, music, and wider enrichment.
On the evidence available, enrichment is supported through external programmes and structured activity partnerships, including OPAL and Real PE, alongside named local sports partnership provision.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school is a lower school, transition at the end of Year 4 is a major planning point for families. The school sits within the Parkfields pyramid, as defined by Central Bedfordshire, which includes Eversholt Lower and Parkfields Middle School in Toddington.
The school calendar also references Year 4 transfer activity, suggesting the transition process is treated as a structured event rather than an informal handover.
Practically, this means parents should think in “pyramid” terms. You are not only choosing Reception through Year 4, you are also choosing the most likely middle school pathway, and you should review middle school admissions and transition arrangements early if you are new to the area or planning a move.
Admissions for Reception are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire. For September 2026 entry, the school’s own admissions page states that children born between 1 September 2021 and 31 August 2022 should apply by 15 January 2026, with National Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
The local authority’s primary admissions pages confirm the same closing date (15 January 2026) and provide the wider timetable, including late application handling and offer dates.
Demand data indicates the school was oversubscribed on the relevant measure (23 applications for 13 offers), which is a reminder that even small village schools can be competitive in particular years. If you are relying on a move into the area, use FindMySchoolMap Search to sense-check proximity and realistic options, then confirm criteria on the local authority process.
100%
1st preference success rate
12 of 12 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
13
Offers
13
Applications
23
Safeguarding roles are clearly identified on the school website, with the headteacher as Designated Safeguarding Lead and the senior leader as deputy. That clarity is helpful for parents, particularly at early years and Key Stage 1, when communication and quick escalation matter most.
SEND leadership is also named (SENDCO listed as Mrs Tracy Lewis). In a small school, SEN coordination often works best when plans are simple, routines are consistent, and families feel they can discuss support without waiting weeks for appointments.
The school publishes regular newsletters that show a busy calendar of activities and events, including sports festivals, concerts, and class trips. Recent examples include a KS2 football festival, KS2 tag rugby, KS1 tennis festival, and an iRock concert for parents.
Outdoor learning appears to be part of pupil experience, with Forest School referenced directly in pupil feedback reported through the newsletter. For many children, this kind of practical learning supports confidence and language development, particularly when classroom stamina is still forming.
Sport provision also has specific named components, including OPAL and Real PE, alongside partnership support (for example, Redborne Sports Partnership) listed in the school’s sport premium documentation.
The school day is published in two sessions, 8.55am to 12.20pm, then 1.20pm to 3.20pm.
Wraparound care exists. The 2023 inspection report notes that the school operates its own breakfast and after-school club, which is important for working families in villages where commute patterns can be inflexible.
For travel, most families will be arriving by car or on foot from the local villages; your day-to-day experience will be shaped by rural road timings and parking practicality more than by rail links. If you are relocating, it is worth trialling the school-run at peak time before committing.
Lower school structure. The school ends at age 9, so you are committing to a Year 4 transfer later on. Families who want a single primary through Year 6 may prefer a different model.
Competition can fluctuate. indicates more applications than offers in the relevant year, so living locally does not automatically mean admission is guaranteed.
Small school dynamics. A close-knit setting can be a strength, but it also means friendship groups are smaller and year groups can feel very familiar. This suits many children; others prefer a larger peer group.
Rural practicalities. Wraparound care is available, but the feasibility of breakfast and after-school use depends on transport routines and distance between villages.
Eversholt Lower School will suit families who want a small, community-rooted lower school with clear leadership, structured transition planning, and a recent Good inspection profile across all areas. It is best suited to children who thrive with familiar adults, consistent routines, and enrichment that blends outdoor learning with partnership-led sport and events. The key decision is whether the lower-to-middle transfer model fits your long-term plan for Years 5 to 8.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (14 November 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Good grades across the main inspection areas including quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, and leadership and management.
Applications are coordinated by Central Bedfordshire, with the on-time deadline set at 15 January 2026 and National Offer Day on 16 April 2026 for September 2026 entry.
The school indicates it serves children aged 4 to 9 from Eversholt, Milton Bryan, and Steppingley, and it also encourages applications from outside the immediate area, subject to the local authority admissions process and availability.
The school is part of the Parkfields pyramid in Central Bedfordshire, and Year 4 transfer activity is referenced in school communications, reflecting a planned transition into middle school.
The published school day runs 8.55am to 12.20pm and 1.20pm to 3.20pm. The most recent inspection report notes that the school operates its own breakfast and after-school club.
Get in touch with the school directly
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