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 first school that takes its Church of England identity seriously, and uses it as a practical framework for school life rather than a label. The core language is “love” and “determination”, drawn directly from the school’s published Christian vision, with leadership roles for pupils built into the routine through councils and buddy systems.
For families weighing nursery through to Year 4 in Gosforth, the structure is clear: children can start from the term after their third birthday, and most stay until transfer to middle school in Year 5. Admission is competitive at Reception, with far more applications than offers in the most recent data available, so planning early matters.
The school’s identity is shaped by two things that sit comfortably together: a local social-history story, and a modern Church of England ethos. The history section describes the original drive to educate children from mining families, beginning with church-led education activity in the mid 1800s, and it also explains why the name matters locally, with a link to Robert Runcie’s time connected to All Saints’ in the early 1950s.
The current vision is unusually explicit and practical. It centres on courage, strength, and doing things in love, and the school translates that into day-to-day pupil responsibility. The leadership structure is not confined to older pupils either, it is visible through Play Leaders, Library Champions, buddying between year groups, and a set of councils that give pupils real roles in collective worship and environmental action.
Church life is present through collective worship and Christian language, but the school also states openly that it welcomes children of all faiths and none. In practice, that usually means families should expect worship to be part of the rhythm of the week, while day-to-day relationships and behaviour expectations are framed in broad values language that most families will recognise.
The latest Ofsted graded inspection (10 to 11 December 2024, published 28 January 2025) judged the quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision all as Good.
Reading is treated as a key driver in the school’s approach. The inspection report describes regular checking of pupils’ progress and swift identification of pupils who need extra help, with books matched closely to pupils’ phonics knowledge so that practice builds fluency rather than guessing.
Beyond early reading, subject teaching is designed to stick. Mathematics is described through reasoning and problem-solving work, and geography is supported by local study and educational visits so that pupils can connect classroom ideas to the real world. Art is positioned as a knowledge-building subject too, with pupils’ sketchbooks used to show the accumulation of skills and ideas.
A useful “watch this” detail is also flagged: misconceptions are not always identified consistently in pupils’ work, which can allow errors to persist. For parents, the implication is not that learning is weak, but that feedback consistency and checking for understanding is an area worth asking about when you visit, especially if your child benefits from rapid correction and clear next steps.
Because this is a first school (ages 3 to 9), the main transition is to middle school at the end of Year 4. The local authority’s directory lists Gosforth Central Middle School as a feeder link, which is a helpful starting point for families thinking ahead to Year 5.
In practical terms, that means you should evaluate fit in two stages: nursery to Year 4 here, and then the middle school that follows. Asking how transition is managed, including curriculum continuity and pastoral handover, is especially important in a three-tier system.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Newcastle City Council, with the school’s website publishing the local authority timetable for 2026 to 2027 entry. Key dates shown include applications opening on 1 September 2025, a closing date of 15 January 2026, and National Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
Demand indicators show an oversubscribed picture for the primary entry route, with 92 applications for 17 offers, a ratio of 5.41 applications per offer. The implication is simple: if this is your preferred option, it is wise to line up alternatives you would genuinely accept, and to be realistic about the chance of an offer if you are not near the top of the criteria.
Nursery admissions are managed directly by the school. The published model is three intakes per year (September, January, April), with places available from the term after a child’s third birthday. For September 2026 nursery entry, the school lists a closing date of 27 March 2026, offers on 1 April 2026, and an acceptance deadline of 24 April 2026.
If you are using distance as a strategy, note that no last-offered distance figure is available for this school, so you should focus on the published admissions criteria and, where relevant, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand your exact distance to the school gate relative to comparable local options.
100%
1st preference success rate
15 of 15 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
17
Offers
17
Applications
92
The inspection evidence points to pupils being happy in school, behaving well, and taking responsibility for each other and the wider community through structured roles. The school’s model makes those roles visible, from worship leadership to play leadership, which can be especially positive for pupils who gain confidence through responsibility rather than through being centre-stage academically.
For pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities, the inspection narrative describes pupils learning alongside their peers with needs carefully met. The practical implication for parents is to ask how support is planned within lessons, particularly in reading and mathematics where misconceptions can compound if not addressed quickly.
Leadership and service are a defining strand here, and the school documents this in detail. The School Council, Green Team, Worship Council and Play Leaders are presented as part of a wider “courageous advocacy” approach, including activities such as writing to an MP about local traffic and litter-picking at a local park.
Clubs are organised to maximise access by placing many activities at lunchtime rather than after school. The published examples include Colouring Club, Games and Puzzles Club, Recorder Club, Mini Yoga, Choir, football delivered by an external provider (Lee Sterry), and an All Stars Christian Club run by parents and carers with staff support.
Music enrichment also extends beyond the school gates through Gosforth Voices (aimed at Years 3 and 4 across the local trust schools) and Gosforth Band (a mixed instrumental ensemble from Year 3 upwards), with staff able to take children to rehearsals and collect them afterwards. This matters for families who want structured music without needing to manage every transport detail themselves.
The school publishes a 32.5 hour week. Children can enter in the morning between 8:35am and 8:45am, with the register at 8:45am. Teaching finishes at 3:15pm, and collection is expected by 3:20pm.
Wraparound care is school-run. Breakfast club starts from 7:45am and includes breakfast if children arrive by 8:15am, priced at £6.00 per child, with free breakfast places described for pupil premium children and young carers. After-school sessions are listed as 3:15pm to 4:15pm for £6.00, or 3:15pm to 5:30pm for £12.50 including a light snack.
Drop-off traffic and parking pressure on Christon Road is acknowledged in the school day information, with a stated aim of keeping arrival calm and easing congestion. If you rely on driving, it is worth testing your routine at peak times before committing.
Competition for places. The most recent demand data available shows 92 applications for 17 offers. If you are set on this option, build a realistic shortlist of alternatives you would accept.
Three-tier transition. Transfer to middle school in Year 5 is a built-in change point. Ask specifically about transition planning and how learning is sequenced across Year 4 into Year 5.
Feedback consistency. Formal inspection evidence highlights that misconceptions are not always identified consistently in pupils’ work. This is worth probing if your child needs tight feedback loops to stay confident.
Wraparound costs and rules. The provision is clear and well-specified, but there are set session structures and published late fee rules, so it suits families with predictable pick-up routines.
This is a values-led first school with a strong early years offer, a clear Christian vision, and a practical approach to pupil leadership that shows up in councils, buddy systems, and service projects. Academic quality is supported by Good judgements across all key areas at the most recent inspection, alongside a curriculum that prioritises reading and builds knowledge through practical application.
Best suited to families in Gosforth who want a Church of England first school where children can start from nursery, take on responsibility early, and move on to middle school in Year 5 with a strong sense of belonging. The main limiting factor is securing a place at Reception in an oversubscribed context.
The latest Ofsted graded inspection judged all key areas as Good, including early years provision. The report describes pupils behaving well, strong attention to reading, and a curriculum that helps pupils apply learning through practical work and local study.
Reception places are allocated through Newcastle City Council’s coordinated process. The school publishes the timetable, with applications opening in early September and closing in mid January for the following September start, and offers released on National Offer Day in April.
Nursery admissions are managed directly by the school, with up to three intakes per year, and children eligible from the term after their third birthday. The school publishes application deadlines and offer dates for each intake on its admissions page.
Yes. The school runs wraparound care on-site, including breakfast provision from 7:45am and after-school sessions up to 5:30pm. Session times and prices are published, along with guidance on booking and late collection.
As a first school, the main transition is to middle school in Year 5. The local authority directory lists Gosforth Central Middle School as a feeder link, which is a useful starting point when mapping the next stage.
Get in touch with the school directly
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