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 very small first school serving the Timberscombe area, with provision from age 2 through to age 9. Its scale is a defining feature, and it shapes everything from relationships to enrichment. The school is part of the Moorland Federation, sharing an executive head across the group, which helps a small setting access wider expertise and opportunities.
Leadership is structured with an Executive Headteacher, Mrs Naomi Philp, and a Head of School, Mrs Angela Hall, who also leads special educational needs coordination.
The latest inspection outcome is Good overall, with personal development judged Outstanding, a combination that often signals a school where pupils’ wider experiences and character education are a particular strength alongside solid classroom practice.
This is a Church of England school that foregrounds its Christian aims and values, but does so in a way that reads as practical rather than abstract, with a clear emphasis on respect, community life, and dignity for each child. The school’s published ethos centres on “We Love, Live and Learn Together”, and the day includes a short period of collective worship.
The inspection evidence points to a calm, friendly culture typical of well-run small schools, with pupils describing inclusive play and staff setting clear routines. External evaluation also highlights that pupils feel safe and that staff know children well enough to spot concerns early.
Because the age range starts at 2, early years culture matters. The early years judgement is Good, and the report describes strong relationships with staff and a focus on early language and turn-taking, which is especially important in mixed-age, small-cohort settings.
Published headline attainment figures are not available for this school, so the clearest current benchmark comes from the most recent inspection.
The latest Ofsted inspection (7 and 8 June 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding for personal development.
Academic quality is described as purposeful and ambitious for a very small school. Curriculum breadth is a notable feature, including language learning in Key Stage 1, where pupils learn Spanish and can hold basic conversations, and early reading that is prioritised from pre-school and Reception onwards.
A key improvement point is precision in presenting new learning, in particular ensuring explanations and practice activities are consistently clear so pupils build knowledge as securely as possible. That is a useful signal for families of pupils who need especially explicit instruction, or who can pick up misconceptions quickly if teaching is not tightly structured.
Teaching is framed around strong foundations, with early reading treated as a core priority. The inspection narrative describes systematic matching of books to pupils’ known sounds, and quick identification of pupils who are falling behind so they receive additional help.
For a first school, curriculum ambition shows up in the “extras that still feel like learning”, particularly Spanish in Key Stage 1 and a broad programme designed across the federation.
Support for pupils with special educational needs is described as early and proactive, with staff adapting the curriculum and seeking external advice where needed. In a small school, this can be a real advantage, as staff can coordinate quickly and keep provision joined up across the day.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a first school (to age 9), transition is typically to a junior school or primary with Key Stage 2 provision, depending on local arrangements and family preference. The inspection report notes pupils are prepared to continue their learning successfully when they move on.
Families comparing local options can use the FindMySchool local hub and comparison tools to shortlist likely next-step schools and check practicalities like travel time and transport patterns.
Admissions for starting school are coordinated through Somerset local authority. For the September 2026 intake, the published closing date was 15 January 2026, with outcomes issued on 16 April 2026 for on-time applications.
Demand indicators suggest oversubscription at the main entry route, with 10 applications for 5 offers, which implies competition even at small scale. This is the kind of setting where places can be limited simply because cohorts are small.)
For families using distance as part of their planning, FindMySchool’s map tools are useful for checking practical routes and comparing nearby alternatives, but the decisive rule will be the local authority’s published admissions policy and the school’s own criteria where applicable.
Applications
10
Total received
Places Offered
5
Subscription Rate
2.0x
Apps per place
Personal development is the headline strength, formally recognised as Outstanding in the latest graded inspection.
That “personal development” label is supported by concrete examples. The report highlights trips that broaden experience, enrichment that includes unusual activities for a first school, and deliberate inclusion so that disadvantaged pupils and pupils with special educational needs can access the same wider opportunities from pre-school onwards.
Wellbeing support is described in practical terms, including help for pupils with anxiety and explicit teaching of strategies to manage feelings and protect mental health, linked sensibly to online safety and physical health.
For a small school, enrichment looks structured rather than sprawling, and it is anchored in named programmes and a consistent weekly rhythm.
A clear example is Generation Exmoor, an outdoor learning initiative developed with Exford and Cutcombe first schools and the Exmoor National Park Authority. The programme takes Key Stage 2 pupils into Exmoor National Park every fortnight, using the landscape as an “outdoor classroom” while integrating curriculum areas such as geography, history, and physical education. For pupils, the implication is that learning is regularly reinforced through real contexts, not only through worksheets.
After-school clubs are explicitly listed and scheduled. Current provision includes Sports Club (with No.1 West Somerset) on Mondays and Thursdays, Art Club on Tuesdays, and Community Choir on Wednesdays, all typically running from 3:20pm to 4:20pm. Wraparound care is available by arrangement in advance from Monday to Thursday, and the school notes there is a cost for this provision.
Trips are also part of the enrichment picture, including visits beyond the local area, which matters in a rural context where broadening horizons can require deliberate planning.
The school day runs 8:50am to 3:20pm, with the site open from 8:40am. Morning break is 10:30am to 10:55am, and lunch is 12:15pm to 1:15pm.
Wraparound care is described as available by arrangement in advance on Monday to Thursday, linked to the after-school provision.
As a rural village school, transport patterns will be highly household-specific. Families should sanity-check journeys at real drop-off times, particularly if coordinating younger children across different settings, and confirm any local authority transport eligibility directly.
Very small cohorts. A small school can mean close relationships and personalised attention; it can also mean fewer same-age peers and less flexibility if friendship dynamics become complicated.
Good overall, with one clear improvement priority. The inspection highlights the need for consistently precise explanation of new learning, which matters most for pupils who need highly explicit instruction and carefully sequenced practice.
Oversubscription can bite quickly. With limited places, even modest numbers of applicants can create competition, so families should treat admissions planning as time-sensitive.
Wraparound care is not a “drop-in”. Provision exists, but it is by arrangement in advance, which may not suit families needing ad hoc cover.
Timberscombe Church of England First School suits families who want a small, values-led village setting where relationships, wellbeing, and wider experiences are prioritised alongside a solid curriculum. The strongest fit is for children who thrive in close-knit environments and benefit from consistent adult attention across the day. The main constraint is capacity, admission is where the difficulty lies.
The latest graded inspection found the school to be Good overall, with personal development judged Outstanding. This points to a strong wider-curriculum and wellbeing offer alongside secure teaching.
Admissions are coordinated by Somerset local authority, and the decisive rules are the published oversubscription criteria for the relevant intake. If you are relying on proximity, check the criteria carefully each year, as outcomes can change with the applicant pool.
After-school clubs run on set weekdays, and wraparound care is available by arrangement in advance from Monday to Thursday, with a cost noted by the school. Families who need flexible, last-minute cover should confirm how arrangements work in practice.
The formal school day is 8:50am to 3:20pm, with the site open from 8:40am.
Somerset’s published timeline for the September 2026 intake shows a closing date of 15 January 2026, with outcomes issued on 16 April 2026 for on-time applications. For late applications, Somerset sets out additional processing dates on its admissions pages.
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