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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Amble Links Primary School sits in a coastal corner of Amble where outdoor space is part of the offer, not an occasional treat. The school describes extensive grounds including a field, two playgrounds, a quiet garden or picnic area, an adventure playground and a school allotment, all of which supports an active, practical primary experience for pupils from Reception to Year 6.
A defining feature is the breadth of early years, which includes Nursery provision and a dedicated two year old setting called Little Pebbles. The most recent inspection paints a picture of children settling quickly, strong routines, and a start to reading that is deliberately sequenced from the earliest stages.
Parents thinking about wraparound will want to note that the school publishes breakfast club hours and a timetable of after school clubs, with sessions running beyond the core school day.
The tone, as captured in formal reporting, is unusually positive about pupil experience, behaviour, and how children treat one another. Pupils are described as feeling safe, trusting staff to handle issues, and showing respect across the school day. Behaviour is positioned as consistently strong in lessons and around school.
The school’s own language is clear about what it wants pupils to become. The stated vision is “Everyone Succeeds at Amble Links”, alongside a pupil ambition described as being “the best school in the world”. Under that sits a deliberate emphasis on kindness, positivity, and removing barriers to learning so that needs are identified early and addressed.
A distinctive piece of in-school vocabulary is the “3Rs”, Responsible, Respectful, Resilient, taught and reinforced using “3Rs Robots”. This is not framed as a poster-on-the-wall initiative, it is presented as day-to-day language that children learn quickly and use in conversation with staff.
For families who value community connection, the inspection narrative also references pupils meeting members of the community and talks about themed activities that celebrate difference, including “It’s OK” activities that normalise and value diversity.
Instead, the strongest current evidence is the most recent inspection judgement profile. The November 2024 Ofsted inspection graded Quality of Education as Good; Behaviour and Attitudes as Outstanding; Personal Development as Outstanding; Leadership and Management as Good; and Early Years as Outstanding.
Within the detail of the report, reading and mathematics are described as particular strengths. Phonics is presented as well matched to pupils’ reading books and writing activities, and pupils who are at risk of falling behind receive additional sessions to help them catch up. Mathematics is described as well sequenced, with regular opportunities to apply learning through problem solving.
Teaching and curriculum design appear to be approached as a whole-school craft, with attention to sequencing and staff collaboration. The inspection account describes leaders and governors checking and improving provision, drawing on external advice, and staff collaborating on curriculum improvements.
Early reading is the clearest example of this sequencing. The report describes children in Little Pebbles and Nursery enjoying stories, songs and rhymes, learning letter sounds by Reception, then moving into formal phonics with books aligned to the sounds being taught. The practical implication for families is that reading is likely to feel structured and systematic, with clear intervention for those who need extra practice.
The school also signposts curriculum information publicly, including a curriculum overview for 2025 to 26 and subject pages such as reading and computing, which is often a marker of a school that wants parents to understand not just what is taught, but why.
One area to watch is that the inspection notes a small number of foundation subjects are earlier in development, with gaps in pupils’ knowledge in those areas. The school’s stated response is review and staff training so that pupils know and remember the key concepts as securely as they do in stronger subjects.
Most pupils are described by the school as moving on to James Calvert Spence College for secondary education. For many families, that clarity matters because it frames friendships, transition work, and the likely Year 6 conversations.
A sensible next step for parents is to look at the admission arrangements for that secondary option early, even while choosing a primary, particularly if transport and travel time will shape daily life in Years 7 to 11.
Amble Links is a state primary, so there are no tuition fees. Entry is handled through the local authority process for primary places.
The school’s published admissions page directs families to the Northumberland County Council admissions route for Reception to Year 6 applications.
Demand indicators in the most recent admissions results show Reception entry running oversubscribed, with 34 applications for 21 offers, a ratio of 1.62 applications per place, which is enough to make proximity and criteria matter in practice. (No furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is available in the supplied admissions data for this school, so it is not possible here to quantify how close families needed to live.)
For families shortlisting, it is worth using FindMySchool’s Map Search to check the home-to-school distance you would be relying on, then comparing it against recent admissions patterns across Northumberland schools.
The early years picture is broader than many primaries. The school describes a 52 place nursery and a separate two year old provision.
Little Pebbles opened in September 2018 and is described as offering 15 places for two year olds, aligned to 15 funded hours, based in the Family Hub space with its own facilities and outdoor area. It is staffed by experienced teaching assistants, with an emphasis on a safe, engaging and stimulating setting that develops social skills and confidence before children move on to Nursery.
Applications
34
Total received
Places Offered
21
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Apps per place
Pastoral support is described as active and practical rather than reactive. The inspection report describes strong systems to support pupils and families, with staff quick to identify barriers to learning and parents able to access advice easily.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities is presented as a strength. The report describes early identification, use of specialist staff and external expertise, and practical classroom adaptations such as visual “now and next” timetables and distraction screens, with the stated outcome that pupils with SEND learn well and take part fully in school life.
Personal development is a standout theme. The “3Rs” language is reinforced through responsibility roles such as play leaders, corridor monitors, library monitors and lunchtime helpers, alongside a PSHE programme described as thorough, with an “ask it basket” approach for private questions. Online safety knowledge is described as exceptionally strong.
Safeguarding is recorded as effective in the latest report, which matters because it anchors the broader wellbeing picture in formal oversight.
Amble Links publishes a specific, named after school programme which gives a clearer picture than the usual generic “lots of clubs” line.
Examples include KS1 Football Club and KS2 Football Club (both listed with a named coach), Gardening Club, Karaoke Club, Lego Club, Knitting Club, Athletics Club, and Art Club. Sessions are listed as running 3.15pm to 4.15pm on weekdays, with places limited and waiting lists possible for some activities.
For pupils who thrive on practical, hands-on learning, the school’s grounds and allotment are also notable, and likely to be used for enrichment as well as play.
The school publishes core day structure. Breakfast club is listed as running from 7.30am to 8.40am. The school day opens to pupils at 8.30am for Key Stage 2, or 8.40am for early years and Key Stage 1, and closes at 3.15pm, stated as typically amounting to 32.5 hours per week.
For wraparound, the school also publishes that it offers “wraparound childcare” alongside clubs, and signposts that Tax-Free Childcare or Universal Credit Childcare may be used by eligible families.
Breakfast club pricing is also published: £1.50 per session for children arriving before 8.00am, and free for Reception to Year 6 arrivals after 8.00am, with last admission at 8.20am.
Transport and travel will be shaped by where families live in and around Amble, and by any local authority transport eligibility, which is best checked against current council guidance because it varies by age and distance.
Primary performance data is limited here. The available academic metrics fields do not include Key Stage 2 percentages or scaled scores, so parents cannot use this review to make a precise, numbers-based comparison with England averages. Inspection evidence gives useful direction, but it is a different kind of evidence.
Some foundation subjects are still bedding in. The latest inspection describes a few foundation subjects as earlier in development, with resulting gaps in pupils’ knowledge. Families who care strongly about breadth should ask how subject leaders are tightening sequencing and recall beyond reading and maths.
Reception places are competitive. Recent admissions data indicates oversubscription at Reception entry. It is wise to treat admission as criteria-led rather than assumed, and to check how your address sits against local patterns.
Wraparound logistics matter. The school publishes breakfast club and after-school options, but places for some clubs are limited. For working families, it is worth confirming availability and booking routines early.
Amble Links Primary School suits families who want a community-rooted primary with strong early years, a clear behaviour and personal development culture, and practical outdoor space that can genuinely shape the week. Reading, phonics, and mathematics appear particularly well structured, and the personal development offer has unusually sharp edges through the 3Rs language and responsibility roles.
Who it suits: pupils who respond well to clear routines, consistent expectations, and a broad primary experience that includes early years continuity and a defined enrichment programme.
The most recent inspection profile is positive, with Outstanding judgements for Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, and Early Years, alongside Good for Quality of Education and Leadership and Management (inspection dates 12 and 13 November 2024).
As a state primary, places are allocated through the local authority admissions process, using published criteria and, where relevant, distance and priority categories. The school’s admissions page directs families to Northumberland’s coordinated admissions route.
Yes. The school publishes a breakfast club running from 7.30am, plus a schedule of after-school clubs and wraparound childcare arrangements. Availability and booking expectations are worth checking directly with the school.
Yes. The school describes Little Pebbles as a two year old provision that opened in September 2018, offering 15 places aligned to 15 funded hours, before children move on to Nursery.
The school states that most pupils move on to James Calvert Spence College for secondary education.
Get in touch with the school directly
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