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.
High demand is the headline here. For Reception entry, 157 applications were made for 73 offers in the most recent admissions cycle around 2.15 applications per place, which helps explain why many families treat early planning as essential.
Academically, the most recent published Key Stage 2 picture is encouraging. In 2024, 72.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 13.67% achieved greater depth, above the England average of 8%. Reading and GPS both average 103, with maths at 104, suggesting broadly even attainment across the core measures.
The school sits on the Broom Leys House site, a place with a documented past beyond education, including use as accommodation for Belgian refugees during the First World War and later as a hospital for injured soldiers. That local-history strand shows up in how the school talks about its curriculum and community links.
Leadership is clearly structured. Robert Prior is Executive Headteacher, with Hayley Barnard as Head of School, a model that often supports consistency in large primaries.
Broom Leys is a large primary, with a published capacity of 630 and an Ofsted-reported roll around 600, so the lived experience is closer to a “mini-village” than a small-form-entry setting. In practice, that scale can be a strength for pupils who like variety, more friendship options, and more chances to take on roles across the school. It can also feel busy for children who prefer quieter, smaller settings, which is worth thinking about if your child is easily overwhelmed.
The site itself adds identity. The school is based at Broom Leys House, and the wider local story of the building is well documented by Charnwood Forest Geopark, including its early use linked to local industry and its wartime role supporting refugees. This matters because the school repeatedly foregrounds local heritage work, including projects and partnerships connected to Coalville’s history, which tends to resonate with pupils who learn best when lessons feel rooted in the real world.
On leadership visibility, the school publicly names key leaders and roles, including the Executive Headteacher and Head of School, plus leadership and SEND roles, which usually signals a preference for clear points of contact rather than a single “all roads lead to the head” model.
This is a state primary, so the most meaningful results measures here are Key Stage 2 outcomes.
In 2024, 72.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with the England average of 62%. That is a clear positive indicator for families who want reassurance about core basics. At the higher standard, 13.67% achieved greater depth in the combined measure, above the England average of 8%, suggesting there is some stretch for higher attainers rather than a single focus on securing “expected” outcomes.
Scaled scores reinforce the same story. Reading averaged 103 and GPS averaged 103, with maths at 104. Those scores sit above the national scaled-score benchmark of 100 and point to broadly consistent attainment across the core domains, rather than one standout area and one weak area.
The FindMySchool ranking position is less flattering: 10,663rd in England and 14th within North West Leicestershire for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). That places the school below England average overall when viewed through the ranking lens. A sensible way to interpret the apparent tension is that families should focus first on the absolute KS2 outcomes and their trajectory, then use the ranking as a comparative signal rather than a final verdict. Some ranking models are sensitive to measure selection and weighting, and high “expected standard” results can still coexist with a relatively lower comparative position depending on the full metric set.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
72.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is presented subject-by-subject, with published intent and maps across areas including Computing, French, Music, PE and PSHE, which is useful for parents who want transparency on what is taught and when.
A notable feature is the explicit inclusion of French within the curriculum subjects list, which often indicates a deliberate approach to languages rather than “occasional enrichment”.
The school also places emphasis on local history as a structured component of learning, with a stated approach that includes progressive local-history units across year groups. For children who respond well to place-based learning, this can make humanities feel more concrete and engaging, and it often supports strong vocabulary development through topic-led reading and writing.
From the most recent Ofsted report (September 2023), the published outcome is that the school continues to be good, and the report notes an ambitious curriculum that is structured to build vocabulary, knowledge and skills across stages, while also indicating that some subjects were still being refined and not equally embedded. That tends to be typical in schools that have recently tightened curriculum sequencing across foundation subjects.
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 primary, “next steps” is mainly about transition to Year 7 and how well pupils are prepared for the shift.
The school provides general guidance to families on the secondary timeline, including the typical pattern of open evenings in September and the Year 6 application deadline on 31 October for secondary transfer. That is standard, but useful, because families often underestimate how early Year 6 becomes “application season”.
If you are choosing Broom Leys, a practical next step is to map likely Year 7 destinations by your address and transport route, then sense-check what your child will need to thrive in that secondary setting. For many children, the key question is not “which school is best”, but “which school fits my child’s learning style and maturity at 11”.
Admissions are through the local authority route for the normal September intake, with the school also signposting in-year applications via the local authority process.
For September 2026 intake, the school publishes a closing date of 15 January 2026, and an offer date of 16 April 2026 for the 2026 to 2027 transfers. Parents should treat the published dates as the first reference point, then confirm details on the local authority portal in case of annual adjustments.
Demand is meaningfully above supply for primary entry, with 157 applications for 73 offers, and a first-preference ratio of 1.0, implying that most offers were to families who placed the school first. That typically means the school is a deliberate first-choice for many local families, rather than a fallback option.
No last-distance figure is available for this school, so families should avoid relying on second-hand “how far it went last year” discussions. The practical way to handle this is to check catchment mapping tools and understand the oversubscription criteria used by the admission authority and local authority coordination.
As a shortlisting tool, families often find it helpful to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check distance and compare nearby alternatives, especially when a school is consistently oversubscribed.
100%
1st preference success rate
71 of 71 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
73
Offers
73
Applications
157
The school publishes SEND information and names a SENDCo on the staff listing, which usually reflects a visible approach to inclusion rather than something handled quietly in the background.
The most recent Ofsted inspection outcome states the school continues to be good, and the published report confirms that pupils feel safe.
As with any large primary, pastoral experience often varies by class team, year group, and individual needs. If your child has additional needs, the most important practical step is to ask how support is delivered day-to-day in classrooms, not only what policies say.
The school has evidence of structured enrichment rather than generic “we offer clubs”. Two concrete examples stand out:
Fishkeeper Fry programme after-school club activity, linked to learning how to set up and maintain an aquarium and care for fish. This is the sort of hands-on science and responsibility-building activity that can hook pupils who are less motivated by worksheet-style learning.
Competitive sport and participation culture, reflected in the School Games Platinum Award news item and the school’s emphasis on participation, competition and links with local clubs. For sporty children, this can translate into more fixtures, more leadership roles, and more chances to represent the school.
The school also highlights STEM-oriented activity, including accreditation with the STEM Learning I Belong programme, which suggests an intentional approach to inclusion and identity in STEM learning rather than ad hoc events.
The school publishes a detailed school-day structure. Drop-off is 08:40 to 08:50, registration closes at 09:00, and the school day ends at 15:20, with phase-specific break and lunch timings.
Wraparound care is a clear practical strength. Breakfast Club runs 07:30 to 08:45 and is priced at £5.50 per session. After School Club runs from 15:15, with a half session to 16:30 priced at £5.50 and a full session to 18:00 priced at £9.00, with the school noting an increase to £10 after Easter.
For transport, the school is in Coalville and mainly serves the Bardon, Broom Leys and Greenhill areas of east Coalville, so walkability and short drives are common for many families.
Oversubscription pressure. With 157 applications for 73 offers competition is real. Families should plan early and understand the oversubscription criteria that apply to them.
Large-school feel. Capacity is 630, so the school will suit children who like a bigger peer group and lots going on. Quieter children may need more careful settling support in the early weeks.
Curriculum consistency across subjects. The most recent Ofsted report describes an ambitious curriculum while also noting that some subjects were still being refined and not equally embedded. If you care deeply about a particular foundation subject, ask how it is taught and assessed in your child’s year group.
Wraparound costs. The wraparound offer is strong, but regular use adds up. It is worth budgeting realistically if you expect frequent Breakfast Club or After School Club use.
Broom Leys School offers a lot of what families in a busy working routine tend to prioritise: clear wraparound care, a structured day, and Key Stage 2 outcomes that sit above England averages in the most visible combined measure. The scale of the school can be a genuine advantage for confident, sociable pupils who like variety and opportunities.
It best suits families who want a large, organised primary with dependable routines, and who are prepared to engage early with admissions because demand is consistently high.
The latest Ofsted inspection outcome (September 2023, published October 2023) states the school continues to be good. In 2024, 72.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%, and 13.67% achieved the higher standard, above the England average of 8%.
The school signposts applications through the local authority online admissions route. For the September 2026 intake, the published closing date is 15 January 2026, and results are due 16 April 2026.
Yes. Breakfast Club runs 07:30 to 08:45. After School Club runs from 15:15, with collection options at 16:30 or 18:00, and published session prices.
Drop-off is 08:40 to 08:50, registration closes at 09:00, and the school day ends at 15:20, with phase-specific break and lunch timings published by the school.
The school evidences structured enrichment through activities such as the Fishkeeper Fry after-school programme and sports participation recognised through School Games award reporting, alongside wider clubs and opportunities that vary by term.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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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