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.
This is a small Church of England primary with nursery provision on site, serving families around Chirbury and the surrounding rural area. The age range runs from 2 to 11, which matters in practice because Busy Bees Nursery and Reception sit together at the start of the journey, then pupils move through mixed age classes in a small school setting.
The most recent graded inspection outcome is Good (December 2019). A later ungraded inspection on 4 March 2025 signalled that some aspects may not be as strong as at the previous inspection, and the next inspection is expected to be graded. Safeguarding was found to be effective in that 2025 visit.
For families, the day to day appeal is straightforward, a tight knit school where staff can get to know pupils and parents well, with practical wraparound options and a clear transition from nursery into the rest of the school.
Chirbury’s identity is rooted in being small and local, with the nursery as a front door for many families. Class 1 combines nursery and Reception, and the model is designed to make transition feel gradual rather than abrupt. Reception children mix with the wider school at break and lunchtime to ease them into Key Stage 1 routines, while nursery children keep the security of familiar adults and a consistent environment.
The school sits within the Shropshire Hills Federation, which also includes Norbury and Stiperstones. That federation structure shapes leadership and staffing, with one leadership team working across more than one site. The federation headteacher named on the school website is Mrs Claire Morris, and the school’s governance record also lists her as headteacher.
As a Church of England school, the ethos is intended to be welcoming rather than exclusive. Shropshire’s published admissions policy for 2026 notes that children of all faiths and none are equally welcome.
A brief historical note is part of the local story too, Chirbury’s school is commonly described as having been founded in 1675 by Reverend Edward Lewis, a detail that points to a long standing educational presence in the village.
Published Key Stage 2 performance figures are not provided you supplied, so this review does not make claims about attainment, scaled scores, or England ranking positions for outcomes.
What can be said, based on official inspection evidence, is that the curriculum has been designed to set out knowledge in a logical sequence from early years through to Year 6, with particular focus placed on strengthening early reading. The main improvement priority highlighted is consistency and impact, especially around supporting pupils who are behind in phonics, and ensuring teachers check learning in lessons well enough to spot misconceptions and extend those ready for more challenge.
For parents, the practical implication is to ask direct questions about reading, how phonics catch up is delivered, how progress is checked across subjects, and what has changed since March 2025.
Teaching is organised around a planned curriculum that runs from nursery age through to Year 6, which is especially important in a small school where mixed age groupings can make progression feel less obvious if it is not carefully mapped. The 2025 ungraded inspection indicates the intent is in place, but the challenge is ensuring the checks on learning are sharp enough across subjects to identify gaps and move pupils on at the right pace.
In the early years and Reception setting, the structure blends adult led focus activities with child initiated learning time. The stated approach is that adults guide learning through targeted support, for example with small group phonics or mathematics activities, then extend learning during independent play.
A practical point for families is how reading is handled when a child needs extra help. The 2025 inspection makes it clear that catch up for pupils behind in phonics and reading fluency is an area to probe.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a small rural primary, most pupils will move on to state secondary provision within reasonable travelling distance, with choices shaped by Shropshire’s secondary footprint and transport patterns. The school’s rural context often means transition planning is as much about practicalities as it is about academic fit.
If you are shortlisting secondaries alongside this primary, it is worth asking the school which destinations are most common in recent years and how transition support is structured for Year 6 pupils, particularly for those who may find change challenging.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Shropshire Council. The published policy for the September 2026 intake states that applications should be submitted by 15 January prior to the academic year in which the child is due to start school.
The results you supplied shows small cohort demand, with 13 applications and 11 offers recorded for the primary entry route, which is consistent with a small school where year group sizes can fluctuate. It is listed as oversubscribed for that cycle, with about 1.18 applications per place.
For in year admissions, the federation website states that Shropshire Council coordinates and allocates requests for places (from 1 September 2024).
FindMySchool tip: if you are comparing several local primaries, the Local Hub comparison tools are useful for keeping admissions demand and inspection timelines side by side, especially when published attainment data is limited.
Applications
13
Total received
Places Offered
11
Subscription Rate
1.2x
Apps per place
Pastoral culture in a small primary is often defined by relationships and consistency, and the inspection evidence supports a generally positive experience for pupils. Safeguarding arrangements were judged effective at the March 2025 inspection, which is a baseline families should expect.
There is also an emphasis on personal development and enrichment, including clubs and opportunities that help pupils build interests and confidence alongside classroom learning.
Extracurricular life is unusually specific for a small primary, because the after school programme is structured and published, and pupils can opt into activities that go beyond the usual generic mix.
Wraparound is a clear practical strength. Breakfast Club runs 7:45am to 8:45am on weekdays, and After School Club runs 3:20pm to 4:20pm on weekdays.
The clubs themselves include named activities across the week such as Props and Scenery, Outdoor Play and Games, Storytime, Saxophone, Athletics, and Cricket.
From an EEI lens:
Example, music is not just a one off enrichment add on.
Evidence, saxophone is listed as an after school option, and the inspection report also references the chance to learn an instrument and be part of a school rock band.
Implication, pupils who connect with music early can build confidence and commitment in a small school environment, which can carry into secondary transition.
Uniform is simple and practical, with a navy blue sweatshirt or cardigan and light blue top listed for Chirbury.
Wraparound care is published clearly (Breakfast Club and After School Club times as above).
Transport and travel are a real consideration here because families may be travelling from a wider rural area. Ask about parking at drop off and pick up, walking routes for local families, and any transport support that is commonly used.
Inspection trajectory. The most recent graded outcome is Good (December 2019), but the March 2025 ungraded inspection indicated some aspects may not be as strong as previously, with reading catch up and in lesson checking identified as key priorities.
Small cohort variability. With 13 applications and 11 offers in the entry cycle shown here, year group sizes are likely to fluctuate. That can be excellent for attention and community feel, but it can also affect peer group breadth in some year groups.
Rural practicalities. Travel time and logistics can shape the daily experience as much as the curriculum does. Families should sanity check drop off and pick up routines, wraparound use, and how tiredness plays out for younger children.
Faith context. The school is Church of England, but the 2026 policy states children of all faiths and none are welcome. Families who want a strongly confessional environment, or families who want none at all, should ask how collective worship and church links work in practice.
Chirbury CofE VC Primary School and Busy Bees Nursery suits families who want a small, community rooted primary with an on site early years route from age 2, and clear wraparound options that make rural logistics easier. The strengths to look for are the quality of relationships, enrichment, and how consistently teaching checks and builds learning, especially in early reading. The main question for 2026 is momentum, how effectively the school has addressed the priorities highlighted in March 2025, and whether the next graded inspection reflects a stronger picture.
The most recent graded Ofsted judgement is Good (December 2019). A later ungraded inspection on 4 March 2025 indicated some aspects may not be as strong as at the previous inspection, and the next inspection is expected to be graded. Safeguarding was found to be effective in March 2025.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Shropshire Council. The published admissions policy for the September 2026 intake states that applications should be made by 15 January prior to the academic year the child is due to start school.
Yes. The federation website lists Breakfast Club (7:45am to 8:45am) and After School Club (3:20pm to 4:20pm) on weekdays.
The after school programme lists named activities across the week such as Props and Scenery, Outdoor Play and Games, Storytime, Saxophone, Athletics, and Cricket. The most recent inspection evidence also references opportunities to learn an instrument and take part in a school rock band.
Busy Bees Nursery and Reception are taught together in a mixed setting, with routines designed to support gradual transition, for example Reception children mixing with the rest of the school at breaks and lunchtimes.
Get in touch with the school directly
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