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 small primary can feel either narrow or wonderfully cohesive, the difference is usually in routines, relationships, and whether children genuinely enjoy learning. Here, the evidence points firmly to the second. The most recent inspection describes pupils who share learning excitedly, behave well, and take the school values seriously, creating a calm, orderly day for both Nursery and main school pupils.
This is a one-form entry school, with one class per year group from Nursery to Year 6, which helps shape the atmosphere. Leadership has also been refreshed recently, with Mr Matt Doody appointed as headteacher from 1 September 2024. The school itself dates to 1969, so it is not a historic building story, but it is long-established in Denton village life.
For parents, the headline practical point is demand. Reception to Year 6 admissions follow East Sussex County Council procedures, and the school is currently oversubscribed in the Reception entry route data, so timelines and criteria matter.
The school’s values are presented consistently as “Kind, Resilient, Respectful”, and that language appears in the way school life is described, both in formal materials and in external evaluation. Pupils are described as happy and proud of their school, with trusted adults they can go to if worried, which is one of the strongest indicators of a settled culture at primary age.
A distinctive feature here is pupil voice that translates into everyday experience. The school council is described as effective and influential, with pupils helping to drive practical improvements to breaktimes, including access to equipment and organised activities that draw children in rather than leaving anyone isolated. Complementing this is OPAL Playtimes activity, referenced in school communications, which signals that play and lunchtimes are treated as part of the wider educational day rather than as an afterthought.
Early years is framed as a proper starting point, not simply childcare before Reception. Children in Nursery are reported to encounter stories, rhymes, and letter sounds through planned activities, and staff model communication carefully, which matters because early language and listening habits are the foundations for later reading and writing confidence.
This is a primary-phase review, so the most useful outcomes are Key Stage 2 measures and how they compare with England averages.
In 2024, 73.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. That gap is meaningful, it suggests that, overall, pupils are leaving Year 6 with core skills at a rate above the national benchmark. (England comparisons here refer to England, not the UK.)
At the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics, 10.33% achieved this level, compared with an England average of 8%. In a one-form entry setting, cohorts can be small and year-to-year variation is normal, but this still points to a proportion of pupils being stretched beyond the basics rather than only pushed to clear the expected bar.
Average scaled scores are also supportive of a strong picture, with 105 in reading and 101 in mathematics (scaled scores are designed around a national reference point, so movement above that midpoint generally indicates stronger performance). GPS sits at 104, reinforcing the impression of good literacy fundamentals.
The school is ranked 10,690th in England for primary outcomes provided, and 4th locally (Newhaven). This places performance below the England average band in that ranking framework, while still showing a relatively strong local position. The practical implication is that results can look different depending on the comparison group parents choose, local peers versus England as a whole. Many families will sensibly prioritise whether outcomes are improving and whether the teaching approach suits their child’s needs, rather than treating any single rank as definitive.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
73.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A school can be oversubscribed and still be inconsistent in classroom practice, so it is worth looking for detail about what teaching looks like day to day.
A clear strength is the early reading pipeline. Phonics is described as well-taught by trained staff, with pupils becoming fluent readers by the start of Key Stage 2. When pupils fall behind, they are identified quickly and supported with targeted interventions, which is often the difference between a child “catching up” in months rather than carrying gaps for years.
Beyond English, the curriculum is described as ambitious and carefully sequenced, with clear thinking about what pupils should learn and when. The developmental note is consistency, some subjects are not yet applying the same checking-for-understanding routines as the strongest areas, meaning a small number of pupils do not always secure knowledge as firmly as they could. That sort of refinement is typical in schools that have a clear direction and are working to make practice consistent across every subject.
Enrichment is not framed as bolt-on. The curriculum statement highlights practical arts and sport woven into the week, including recorder and ukulele lessons, swimming lessons, and weekly PE taught with a specialist teacher referred to as “Coach”. The implication for parents is straightforward, children who learn best through doing, performing, and moving are likely to find regular outlets rather than being expected to sit still all day.
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 next step is secondary transfer rather than sixth form destinations. Specific feeder patterns are not formally published in the materials reviewed, and because Denton sits within the wider Newhaven area, secondary choices will typically depend on East Sussex admissions, family preference, and distance criteria.
The school does provide several markers of readiness for transition. Pupils are described as writing at length and accurately, recalling number facts, and applying mathematical reasoning, which are exactly the habits that make Year 7 feel manageable rather than daunting.
For families considering the longer arc, personal development is emphasised, including respect for difference and diversity, plus structured learning about staying safe online and in the community. Those are the “quiet” outcomes that often matter most when children move into larger, more complex secondary settings.
For Reception to Year 6, the school follows East Sussex County Council admission procedures, rather than operating a separate direct admissions process. For 2026 entry, the county’s published deadline for normal age group primary applications is 15 January 2026.
The demand indicators provided also matter:
74 applications for 30 offers in the primary entry route data supplied.
Oversubscribed status is recorded for that route, with an applications-to-offers ratio of 2.47.
First-preference pressure is present, with a first-preference ratio of 1.26.
The school also offers Nursery places from age three. Nursery admissions are handled by contacting the school directly, and the Nursery admission policy sets out session structures including 8:30am to 11:30am morning sessions and 8:30am to 3:00pm all-day sessions, plus an optional lunch session for morning children.
If you are shortlisting multiple schools, this is a good moment to use a distance checker such as FindMySchool’s Map Search, because oversubscription outcomes can shift year to year even when a school’s popularity is stable.
79.4%
1st preference success rate
27 of 34 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
74
Pastoral strength shows up in daily routines, and the available evidence points to a school that takes behaviour and belonging seriously. Pupils behave well, routines are clear from early years, and adults are described as building warm, supportive relationships with children.
Additional support is not treated as rare or exceptional. The school identifies pupils who need extra guidance and uses therapeutic support, including access to a school therapy dog, which can be particularly effective for anxious children or those who find it easier to communicate in less formal settings.
Safeguarding is not an area where parents should accept vague reassurance, and the latest inspection explicitly confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The most convincing extracurricular offer is one that connects directly to pupils’ interests and the school’s curriculum priorities, rather than listing generic clubs.
There is clear evidence of structured outdoor learning. Forest School has been running since Summer Term 2018, and is described in practical terms, including woodcraft, shelter-building, fire-lighting and cooking, plus environmental care. The implication is confidence-building for pupils who thrive when learning is active and hands-on, and a different kind of success for children who do not always shine in written tasks.
Clubs and enrichment are also evidenced with specificity. A school newsletter lists, among other options, Coding Club, Choir, Dodgeball, boys’ football, and girls’ football, plus an Art club linked to the school’s work with the “So Sussex” arts organisation. The curriculum statement also references clubs including Dance and Netball, alongside instrumental opportunities such as piano and violin.
For pupils who enjoy responsibility, school council roles are described as meaningful, including collecting views from other children and influencing decisions about play and breaktimes.
Teaching hours run from 8:30am to 3:10pm, with registers taken at 8:50am. Nursery finishes at 3:00pm, and at 12:30pm on Fridays.
The school manages breakfast and after-school provision for pupils. Specific times and booking arrangements are not consistently published in a single permanent page, so families should check the most recent school communications when planning childcare.
The school points families to East Sussex term dates and its own calendar for INSET days and school-specific events.
The setting is in Denton, Newhaven. Most families will be thinking for walkability and short local journeys, especially given oversubscription pressure, so it is sensible to test your real commute at drop-off time before relying on it.
Oversubscription pressure. Application demand is high in the primary entry route data, with 74 applications for 30 offers. If you are applying for Reception, treat deadlines as non-negotiable and build a realistic list of preferences.
Consistency across all subjects. The curriculum is ambitious, but subject-to-subject practice is still being evened out, particularly around consistent checking and recall strategies. For many families this is a manageable improvement point, but it is worth asking how it is being addressed.
Wraparound detail may require chasing. Breakfast and after-school provision exists, but parents may need to rely on up-to-date letters and termly updates rather than a single static information page.
One-form entry feel. A single class per year group can be a strength for community and consistency, but it can also mean friendship dynamics are concentrated. If your child needs a very large peer group to find their people quickly, ask how the school supports social integration.
Denton Community Primary School and Nursery reads as a school where behaviour is settled, relationships are warm, and pupils enjoy learning. The early reading picture is strong, enrichment is practical and varied, and leadership is clearly identified with a recent headteacher appointment.
Best suited to families who want a community-focused, one-form entry primary with clear routines, strong reading foundations, and hands-on enrichment such as Forest School, plus a culture where pupils take responsibility through roles like the school council. Admission is the obstacle, so families should plan early and keep application deadlines front of mind.
The school is rated Good, and the most recent inspection (12 and 13 November 2024, published 10 December 2024) reported calm behaviour, positive attitudes to learning, and an ambitious curriculum, while confirming safeguarding is effective.:contentReference[oaicite:35]{index=35}
Reception applications follow East Sussex County Council procedures rather than a separate school-run application. For 2026 entry, the council’s published deadline for normal age group primary applications is 15 January 2026.:contentReference[oaicite:36]{index=36}
Yes. The Nursery admission policy sets out sessions including 8:30am to 11:30am mornings and 8:30am to 3:00pm all-day sessions, with an additional lunch session option for morning children.:contentReference[oaicite:37]{index=37}
In the 2024 Key Stage 2 measures provided, 73.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 10.33% achieved this level, compared with an England average of 8%. (These figures are England measures.)
Evidence from school materials includes Forest School, swimming, recorder and ukulele, plus clubs such as choir, coding club, dodgeball, and football options. Availability can change termly, so it is worth checking the latest school updates.:contentReference[oaicite:38]{index=38}
Get in touch with the school directly
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