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.
Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
“Let your light shine” sits at the centre of school life here, and it is more than a slogan. The school’s Church of England character shapes expectations around care, conduct, and service, while the academic picture remains strong for a small, village setting. In the 2024-25 outcomes, 80% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The higher standard rate was 30%.
The school has expanded since its original opening in 1969, and now operates as a single-form entry primary with nursery provision. Mrs Leanne Lowndes has been headteacher since January 2022.
This is the kind of primary where good manners are not left to chance. Expectations around conduct are explicit and consistently applied, which matters in a mixed-age community of nursery pupils through to Year 6. Official evaluation describes pupils as kind and considerate, with behaviour that protects learning time and helps lessons move at pace. Bullying incidents are described as rare, and pupils’ sense of safety appears to be a stable feature rather than a short-term initiative.
The Church of England foundation is visible in the language the school uses about purpose. Its stated vision is rooted in Matthew 5:14-16, with an emphasis on helping children flourish and use their talents well. In practice, this translates into a values-led culture that prioritises empathy, service, and responsibility, without assuming that every family shares the same level of religious observance. The school also frames worship as a daily habit that supports moral, social, spiritual and cultural development, delivered at whole-school, key stage, or class level.
Leadership stability is an asset. Mrs Leanne Lowndes was appointed in January 2022, and official sources present a school on an upward trajectory, with curriculum development, governance involvement, and pastoral routines working together rather than in parallel.
The numbers in Key Stage 2 remain strong. In the 2024-25 outcomes, 80% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. At the higher standard, 30% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics. Science outcomes were 80% at the expected standard.
FindMySchool’s rankings place the school well above the typical national range. Ranked 2,444th in England and 2nd in Newcastle-Under-Lyme for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data), it sits within the top 20% bracket for England performance overall. Parents comparing nearby options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub page to review these results side by side via the Comparison Tool, particularly helpful where local choices include a mix of village and town primaries.
Demand data points to steady competition. For the primary entry route, there were 42 applications for 30 offers, a ratio of 1.4 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
77%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum story is about sequencing and memory, not just coverage. Official review highlights a well-organised curriculum designed so pupils revisit key knowledge over time, supported by teachers with secure subject knowledge. That matters for a primary because it reduces gaps between year groups and makes transition points smoother, especially for pupils who need extra scaffolding.
Reading is treated as a school-wide priority. Pupils are encouraged to talk about authors and genres, staff read aloud daily, and phonics starts immediately in Reception with a consistent approach and additional support for children who need it. This combination, systematic early decoding plus daily story exposure, tends to benefit both confident readers and those who require structured catch-up.
The Early Years approach is clearly articulated. Nursery and Reception combine child-led exploration with purposeful adult-led teaching, with continuous provision indoors and outdoors and regular enhancements linked to curriculum themes. Phonics is delivered through Essential Letters and Sounds, positioned as a daily routine rather than an occasional intervention. For many families, this will feel like a good balance between play, language development, and early numeracy.
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 state primary, the key “destination” decision is secondary transfer at Year 7 rather than an internal progression route. Staffordshire operates a coordinated admissions process for secondary entry, and families typically start planning well before Year 6 to align with transport, friendship groups, and the child’s learning profile.
Transition work is easiest where children have built secure routines and confidence. The school’s emphasis on behaviour, responsibility, and pupil leadership opportunities, such as school councillor and house captain roles, supports that readiness. Educational visits and (where offered) residential experiences are framed as part of a planned wider development journey rather than add-ons.
For Reception entry, Staffordshire’s timeline gives 15 January 2027 as the application deadline for September 2027 entry, with offers issued on 16 April 2027. The opening date is not stated in the Staffordshire timetable, so families should check the local authority portal for the exact opening window.
The school itself publishes Reception application guidance aligned to the local authority process. Demand indicators suggest competition can be real but not extreme by urban standards, so families should still treat the process as deadline-driven and keep realistic alternatives in mind.
Nursery entry is handled differently and is separate from Reception admission in Staffordshire. Families considering nursery should confirm the current age window and application process directly with the school, and should still approach Reception as a separate, deadline-driven application.
For parents thinking for catchment and travel planning, FindMySchool’s Map Search can help you understand practical journey distance and alternative options nearby. Even where a school is close, admissions criteria and year-to-year demand patterns still matter.
Applications
42
Total received
Places Offered
30
Subscription Rate
1.4x
Applications per place
Pastoral strength here is closely tied to consistency. Official review describes harmonious break times, strong routines in early years, and pupils who can resolve minor disagreements with support where needed. Safeguarding is reported as effective, with regular staff training and close work with external agencies when families need help.
The school provides structured wraparound care through BUZZ Club. Breakfast provision runs from 7:45am to 8:50am, and after-school care runs from 3:30pm to 5:30pm during term time. The school notes that after-school care does not run on the final day of the Autumn and Summer terms, while breakfast provision continues. For working families, this is a practical advantage, particularly in a village setting where childcare alternatives can be limited.
Enrichment is framed as curriculum extension rather than a long generic list. Clubs specifically referenced by the school include Cookery Club, Choir, Drama Club, Sports Club (run by Bee Active), and Create Club. The examples are useful because they point to a programme that mixes creativity, performance, and physical activity, with at least one club explicitly linking learning to practical application.
The most distinctive feature in recent official commentary is the response to pupil voice around swimming. Leaders arranged a full-size portable swimming pool on the playground so that all pupils from nursery to Year 6 could complete an intensive swimming course. This kind of decision tells parents something important: enrichment is not only offered, it is used as a lever to build confidence and capability in areas that matter for safety and life skills.
Pupil leadership also plays a role in the wider offer. Opportunities such as being a school councillor or house captain are presented as meaningful responsibilities rather than symbolic titles, and they support the school’s wider emphasis on service and contribution.
The school day is clearly structured. Gates and classrooms open at 8:45am, with morning registration at 8:55am. The school day ends at 3:30pm, with gates opening at 3:25pm. Any child not collected by 3:35pm is placed into after-school club arrangements.
Wraparound care is available through BUZZ Club (see Pastoral Care & Wellbeing). Nursery and Reception routines reflect an Early Years model that combines continuous provision with small-group adult-led sessions, and this is helpful for families weighing full-time versus part-time early years patterns.
Oversubscription pressures. Demand data indicates more applicants than offers for the primary entry route. This is manageable but still requires disciplined planning and realistic back-up preferences.
Nursery is not a back door to Reception. Attendance in nursery does not confer priority for Reception admission under Staffordshire’s coordinated system, so families should avoid assuming continuity is guaranteed.
Faith element is genuine. Daily collective worship and a Christian vision are integral to the school’s identity. Many families value this; others may prefer a more secular tone.
High performance can bring high expectations. With results well above England averages, pupils who need a gentler pace may require careful discussion about support strategies and classroom fit.
Baldwins Gate CofE(VC) Primary School combines strong outcomes with a clear Church of England ethos and a practical, family-facing approach to wraparound care. Academic performance is a headline strength, and the culture described in official review suggests calm routines, positive behaviour, and high expectations that pupils generally meet.
Who it suits: families seeking a state-funded village primary with very strong Key Stage 2 results, structured early reading, and a values-led environment shaped by Christian worship and service. The main decision point is admissions planning, since competition for places is real and nursery attendance does not guarantee Reception entry.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (September 2022) confirmed that the school continues to be rated Good. Key Stage 2 outcomes are also strong, with 80% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics in the 2024-25 outcomes.
Reception applications for September 2027 are made through Staffordshire’s coordinated admissions process. Applications close on 15 January 2027, with offers issued on 16 April 2027. Check the local authority portal for the exact opening window.
No. Staffordshire’s admissions guidance is clear that nursery attendance does not give priority for Reception admission, so families should still apply on time and include realistic alternative preferences.
Yes. BUZZ Club provides breakfast care from 7:45am to 8:50am and after-school care from 3:30pm to 5:30pm during term time.
The school provides a daily act of collective worship, delivered in whole-school, key stage, or class settings, and frames its vision around helping pupils flourish and contribute positively to others.
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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