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.
The tone here is clear from the language used across school communications: kind, safe, respectful, and consistently trying your best. That emphasis on conduct and routines matters in a larger primary, because it is what keeps the day calm and predictable when year groups are big and the site is busy. The school is also unusually early-years heavy for a state primary, with a maintained nursery feeding into Reception and specific nursery admissions arrangements.
Academic outcomes sit a little above England averages on the headline combined measure at the end of Year 6, with particularly positive signals in reading. At the same time, the school’s relative position in England on the FindMySchool ranking for primary outcomes places it below England average overall, which is important context for families trying to interpret “good results” versus “top ranked”.
Leadership is stable. Mrs Jo Fantarrow is the current head teacher, appointed in 2020.
Daily rhythm is tightly defined. Classroom doors open at 8.35am, learning starts at 8.45am, and home time is 3.15pm. Breaks are staggered by phase, which is a practical choice in a two-form entry school because it reduces crowding and friction on the playground. Lunch is also timed separately for Reception, Key Stage 1, and Key Stage 2. For families, this tends to translate into fewer “pinch points” in the day and clearer expectations around punctuality.
The school’s stated values are Kindness, Integrity, Respect, Teamwork, and Ambition. Those are not abstract words, they are tied into how pupils earn rewards for conduct and how staff describe expectations. The simplest way to interpret this is that behaviour is treated as a learned skill, not just a rule set. That approach often suits pupils who respond well to structure and predictable routines.
There is also a wellbeing strand that is unusually tangible for a mainstream primary: the school has a designated wellbeing dog, Bella (a cockapoo), which sits alongside broader personal development work in assemblies and lessons about staying safe and maintaining good physical and mental health. Some children love this; for others, families will want to understand how the school manages allergies, anxieties, and consent around interaction.
Finally, the site itself is part of the story, because the school highlights outdoor learning and practical spaces rather than only classroom-based provision. An allotment (funded via the Tesco Bags of Help scheme) supports gardening activities, and the school also references a spinney and a woodland area called Wonder Wood for nature-based learning and quiet reading. These details matter because they hint at how the curriculum is “made real”, especially for younger pupils and those who learn best with hands-on experiences.
At the end of Key Stage 2 (Year 6), 63.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The England average in the same measure is 62%, so the school is slightly above that benchmark on the combined headline figure.
The detail underneath is where the profile becomes clearer:
Reading looks like a relative strength: 73% reached the expected standard, and the reading scaled score is 104.
Mathematics is closer to the line: 59% reached the expected standard, with a maths scaled score of 102.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling is also positive: a GPS scaled score of 104, with 68% meeting the expected standard.
For families comparing schools, “expected standard” is the threshold most children aim for. The “higher standard” (greater depth across reading, writing and maths) is a tighter lens for strong academic stretch. Here, 16.67% achieved the higher standard across reading, writing and mathematics. England’s higher-standard benchmark is 8%, so this is a notable positive indicator for pupils at the top end.
The FindMySchool primary ranking places the school at 10,964th in England for primary outcomes, and 85th locally within Northampton. Interpreting the percentile is important: this sits below England average overall, in the bottom 40% band. The implication is not that pupils are doing badly, the school’s combined expected standard is slightly above England, but rather that many schools outperform it on the combined basket of measures used to rank outcomes. Parents should read this as “solid, with some strengths”, not as a high-performing outlier.
Inspection context matters too, particularly as England’s inspection reporting has shifted away from an overall headline grade for state schools inspected from September 2024. The Ofsted inspection on 26 November 2024 judged all key areas as Good, including early years provision, and stated that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
63.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum intent is framed around curiosity, practical experiences, and resilience, with an emphasis on building knowledge so pupils understand the world around them. In practice, that generally means lessons are designed to connect ideas and give pupils concrete experiences to anchor abstract content.
One useful, specific example comes from the inspection evidence around maths teaching: pupils may use physical resources to make sense of new concepts. That is a classic “concrete to abstract” strategy, often helpful for pupils who need to manipulate materials before they can generalise an idea. The same inspection evidence also notes that the school quickly identifies additional needs and supports pupils with SEND to learn independently and achieve well, which suggests the teaching model is built to accommodate difference rather than treating it as an add-on.
The main improvement thread raised in the most recent inspection is about precision. In some subjects, important knowledge is not identified precisely enough, which can lead to activities that lack focus and make it harder for pupils to build secure knowledge over time. Early years is singled out for a similar issue: some activities do not engage children purposefully with the planned curriculum, leaving a minority less well prepared for Key Stage 1 than they should be. For parents, this is the key “watch item” to explore at open events or during a visit: how sharply planned is learning, especially in nursery and Reception, and how is staff time used to keep play purposeful rather than simply busy.
As a primary school in Duston (West Northamptonshire), most pupils will move on to local secondary schools at Year 7. Families typically prioritise travel time, friendship continuity, and whether a comprehensive or selective route fits their child. The school does not publish a definitive “destination list” for Year 6 leavers, which is common for state primaries, so families should use the local authority’s admissions information and their own shortlist planning for secondary transfer.
One practical way to handle this is to treat Year 5 as the decision year: visit likely secondaries, check transport routes at peak times, and then use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools to view performance and admissions patterns side by side when you are finalising preferences.
Nursery admissions are handled directly with the school rather than through the local authority. Applications are welcomed throughout the year, and places are allocated based on entitlement and term of eligibility. Nursery offers the 15- and 30-hour government funded entitlement from the term after a child turns three, with the standard HMRC cut-off dates for validating 30-hour funding before each term.
A practical implication here is timing: families aiming for 30 hours need to be organised about reconfirming eligibility, and those who miss the HMRC deadline may find their funded hours reduce temporarily. The school’s own guidance is to apply early to secure a place on the waiting list.
Reception admissions are coordinated by West Northamptonshire Council rather than the school. For September 2026 entry, applications open from 10 September 2025, the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Demand signals indicate an oversubscribed picture for the main intake: 79 applications for 43 offers, which is about 1.84 applications per place offered. Oversubscription does not automatically mean “impossible”, but it does mean families should approach preferences strategically and understand the local authority’s published oversubscription criteria in detail.
100%
1st preference success rate
41 of 41 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
43
Offers
43
Applications
79
Personal development is treated as a planned strand rather than an occasional assembly theme. Pupils learn about staying safe and about physical and mental health, and staff encourage pupils to talk about feelings and support emotional regulation. That is a helpful foundation in a larger primary, where children need consistent language and routines around behaviour and wellbeing across multiple adults and classes.
Safeguarding is an area where parents want clear assurance. The most recent inspection states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The school also describes a clear leadership and support structure, including a designated safeguarding lead and deputy safeguarding leads. For families with SEND or pastoral concerns, a useful next step is to look at how early needs are identified and what support looks like in the classroom, because that is where most help is delivered day to day.
The enrichment offer has two distinct strands: structured clubs and outdoor, practical learning.
On clubs, the school describes a termly changing programme across year groups, including cooking, Lego, arts and crafts, singing, dance, gardening, STEM, and sports clubs. It also states that pupils eligible for free school meals are entitled to one free school-run club per term (with cooking excluded). The implication is that enrichment is treated as part of the entitlement, not only an optional extra for families able to pay, which can make after-school life feel more inclusive.
On outdoor learning, the school’s allotment and gardening group are unusually concrete examples of pupils producing something tangible, not just “doing outdoor play”. The school also references nature-based areas such as Wonder Wood and a spinney used for bug hunting, learning about plants and trees, and quiet reading. For some children, especially those who concentrate better with movement and practical tasks, this kind of provision can be the difference between a day that feels manageable and one that feels relentlessly desk-bound.
The core day runs from 8.45am (learning start) to 3.15pm (home time), with classroom doors opening at 8.35am. Wraparound care is available for Reception to Year 6 through Breakfast and OSCAR Club, extending the day from 8.00am to 5.00pm.
The school day page also signals practical site assets used in daily life and clubs, including gym equipment, a school field, and outdoor learning areas. For transport planning, most families will be thinking for walkability, safe crossing points, and whether wraparound hours align with commutes, rather than rail connections.
Interpreting performance fairly. The combined expected-standard figure is slightly above England average, but the FindMySchool ranking places the school below England average overall. Families comparing options should look beyond a single headline and consider whether your child is aiming for expected standard, higher standard, or needs additional support.
Early years focus and readiness. The most recent inspection highlights that some early years activities are not sharply aligned to the planned curriculum, which can affect how ready a minority of children are for Key Stage 1. Ask how nursery and Reception balance play with purposeful learning, and how staff track progress through the term.
Oversubscription reality. The figures show more applications than offers for the main intake, so treat admissions as competitive and make sure your preference strategy includes realistic alternatives.
Clubs and costs. Clubs vary by term and some have payments. If clubs are important for childcare or enrichment, check the current term’s offer and how places are allocated.
This is a large, well-organised Duston primary where routines, values, and personal development are clearly signposted, and where reading outcomes and higher-standard performance look encouraging. The 2024 inspection picture supports a broadly positive view, while also pointing to a specific improvement priority around curriculum precision, especially in early years.
Best suited to families who want a structured day, access to wraparound care, and a primary with a maintained nursery pathway, and who are comfortable doing a bit of extra due diligence on early years curriculum focus and admissions competitiveness.
The most recent inspection profile is positive, with Good judgements across the key areas and effective safeguarding. Academic outcomes are slightly above England average on the combined expected standard measure at the end of Year 6, with reading a clear strength.
Reception applications are made through West Northamptonshire Council. For September 2026 entry, applications open from 10 September 2025, close on 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes, the school has a maintained nursery. Applications are made directly to the school, and the nursery offers 15 and 30 hours of government-funded entitlement from the term after a child turns three. Applications are welcomed throughout the year, and families using 30 hours need to meet HMRC eligibility deadlines ahead of each term.
Yes. Breakfast and OSCAR Club provides wraparound care for Reception to Year 6, extending the day from 8.00am to 5.00pm.
The school describes a termly rotating programme including cooking, Lego, arts and crafts, singing, dance, gardening, STEM, and sports clubs. Outdoor learning is also emphasised through the allotment and named nature areas used for activities.
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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