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 focused early years setting that combines a nursery, Reception, and Key Stage 1 in one place, with a clear emphasis on routines, reading, and helping young children feel they belong. The most recent inspection (November 2023) judged the school Good across all areas, including early years, with pupils described as happy and well cared for.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. For families weighing up local options, the main practical question is entry. Reception places are coordinated by the local authority and the school’s most recent demand data shows more applications than offers, so first preferences and distance can matter in practice.
The tone is intentionally child-centred and community-minded. The inspection report describes pupils feeling they belong early on, supported by simple identity-building routines and visible whole-school participation. That matters for a setting where children are often in school for the first time, and where confidence, language, and social ease set the base for everything that follows.
The school also signals a broad view of early childhood. A structured list of experiences (including local visits and trying unfamiliar foods) sits alongside curriculum learning, with parents and carers brought in to talk about their work during a themed week. That kind of planned exposure can be especially helpful for pupils whose world is naturally small at ages two to seven.
Leadership is clearly established. Mrs Emma Heeley is named as headteacher on both the school’s team information and the Department for Education’s official records register.
Infant schools are not judged on the same end-of-primary Key Stage 2 headline measures that parents often use for Year 6 comparisons, so the most meaningful “results” indicators here are about early reading, language development, and how well the curriculum builds in small steps across Nursery, Reception, Year 1 and Year 2.
Reading has a notably prominent place in day-to-day life. Books, stories, and poems are part of the daily rhythm for all pupils, with phonics starting from the beginning of early years. This is exactly the kind of high-frequency practice that tends to support later fluency, particularly for children who arrive with less exposure to books at home.
The report also points to strengths in presentation and a strong focus on handwriting, spelling, grammar and sentence structure. At the same time, there are clear development areas: curriculum sequencing in mathematics, and making subject-specific writing knowledge consistently explicit in Key Stage 1. For parents, that reads as a school with solid classroom practice and a clear improvement agenda rather than a complacent “steady state” setting.
Curriculum planning is described as secure in several subjects, with history given as an example where key knowledge and vocabulary are mapped clearly, and local Newport is used as a central thread in pupils’ learning. This kind of local anchoring works well for infants, it makes abstract ideas tangible and supports language development through familiar reference points.
Support systems to catch pupils who are falling behind are described as established, with help put in quickly. That is particularly relevant in an infant school because gaps in phonics, oral language, or early number often widen fast if not addressed early.
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 an infant school (up to age 7), the next step is typically transfer to a junior school for Year 3. In Telford and Wrekin, infant-to-junior transfer applications sit within the coordinated admissions process, and the council’s primary admissions guide explicitly references Newport Infant and Junior Schools as linked.
For families, the practical implication is that “having a place now” does not remove the need to plan for Year 3. The council guidance makes clear that an application is required for the junior phase, even where a linked school exists.
Reception applications are handled through the local authority rather than directly through the school. The key national and local deadlines for September 2026 entry in Telford and Wrekin are:
Closing date: 15 January 2026
Primary National Offer Day: 16 April 2026
EHCP timeline note: applications linked to an Education, Health and Care Plan follow an earlier timetable (closing date shown as 31 October 2025 in the council guide)
Demand indicators show the school as oversubscribed for the measured period, with 82 applications for 58 offers, 1.41 applications per place, and first-preference demand matching first-preference offers (ratio 1.00). In plain English, that suggests the school is appealing locally, and some families will not be offered a place even when it is their first choice.
Applications
82
Total received
Places Offered
58
Subscription Rate
1.4x
Apps per place
The inspection report describes clear routines and adults actively interacting with pupils during play, which is often a key marker of strong early years practice. In a setting of this age range, adult presence at the margins matters, not just for safety but for language modelling, turn-taking, and helping children manage emotions in the moment.
Safeguarding is also described as effective in the most recent inspection.
This setting includes nursery, including provision for two-year-olds, with that two-year-old offer described as opening in September 2022 (registered previously under a different provider).
For families considering Nursery into Reception, it is important to understand how admissions typically work in coordinated systems. A nursery place does not automatically translate into a Reception place, and parents should plan for a Reception application even when their child is already attending on site (the local authority’s primary admissions guide sets this out for Reception entry generally).
Nursery fee details vary by entitlement and session pattern, so the right approach is to use the school’s published nursery funding information and confirm the funded-hours position for your child’s age and circumstances.
This school has a specially resourced provision for pupils with SEND, described as opening in September 2022 and resourced for eight pupils with speech, language and communication needs and autism, with all pupils in that provision having an Education, Health and Care Plan. That is a meaningful differentiator for families who need a mainstream base with structured specialist support on site.
The report also describes pupils being taught to communicate using signing and visual aids, with work underway to apply communication systems consistently through the day. For families, that points to a setting that understands communication as a whole-day priority, not a “slot” delivered only when an adult has time.
Extracurricular life is present, but with a realistic acknowledgement that widening access is still a development area. The inspection report references specific clubs including music club, sports club, and teddy-bear club, plus the structured “30 things to achieve” programme and a careers-themed week where families share their professions.
For parents of infants, the value here is not prestige, it is habit formation. Clubs and themed experiences help children practise independence, social confidence, and listening skills in a low-stakes setting.
The inspection report confirms there is before and after-school provision on site, operated by the school.
Travel planning for infants is often about convenience and consistency. Families should consider whether walking routes and drop-off arrangements fit daily routines, and use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check practical proximity alongside admissions rules where distance is a factor.
Competition for places. The school is shown as oversubscribed which can make outcomes hard to predict for Reception applicants.
Infant-to-junior transition needs planning. Transfer at Year 3 requires an application through the coordinated system, even where a linked junior school exists.
Curriculum refinement underway. The inspection highlights improvements needed in the sequencing of mathematics knowledge and in clarifying writing knowledge in Key Stage 1, which is useful to ask about when speaking with the school.
A well-organised infant and nursery setting with a Good inspection profile, strong emphasis on reading culture, and a clear plan for tightening curriculum precision. It will suit families who want a structured early years start, value quick identification of gaps, and appreciate an inclusive approach that includes on-site wraparound and specialist SEND resourcing. The main challenge is admission competition for Reception places in some years.
The most recent inspection in November 2023 judged the school Good overall and Good in each graded area, including early years. Pupils are described as happy, well cared for, and supported by clear routines and an ambitious culture for learning.
Applications for Reception are made through the local authority’s coordinated admissions process. In Telford and Wrekin, the closing date for Reception applications for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No. In coordinated admissions systems, a Reception application is still required even if a child already attends the nursery on the school site. Families should plan ahead for the Reception application window and deadlines.
Yes. The most recent inspection report confirms that there is before and after-school provision on site, operated by the school. Families should check current session times and availability directly with the school.
The inspection report describes a specially resourced SEND provision that opened in September 2022, resourced for eight pupils with speech, language and communication needs and autism, with pupils in that provision having Education, Health and Care Plans. Communication support includes signing and visual aids.
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