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 expectations are not a slogan here, they show up in how pupils are taught to think about their future and how the school frames learning as a route to wider opportunity. The most recent Ofsted inspection, carried out on 30 and 31 January 2024, judged Kings Heath Primary Academy to be Outstanding in every category, including early years provision.
Academically, the school’s latest published Key Stage 2 headline is strong. In 2024, 75% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. Reading and maths scaled scores were 105 and 104 respectively (total combined score 311).
Demand for Reception places is real, even without a published distance boundary. In the latest admissions, there were 58 applications for 40 offers, which equates to 1.45 applications per place and an oversubscribed intake.
The leadership story is also clear. Miss Sarah Durbin has been interim principal since September 2023 and became substantive principal in March 2024.
This is a school that tries to make ambition feel normal, and practical, rather than lofty. The 2024 inspection report describes a culture that repeatedly reminds pupils that their lives can hold “endless possibilities” if they work hard and do their best, and it links that message to everyday routines and expectations.
Behaviour, in particular, is positioned as a shared social contract rather than a list of rules. The same report describes pupils as clear about expectations from the earliest days, with visible prompts around school and adults modelling the behaviours pupils are expected to copy. The tone here is that manners, readiness to learn, and pride in presentation matter because they help everyone learn more effectively, not because they are performative.
Kings Heath’s identity is also shaped by being part of the David Ross Education Trust (DRET). That matters less as branding and more as an organising principle for staff development and access to wider trust programmes, including enrichment and cultural experiences described by the principal as central to a knowledge-rich approach.
The pupil leadership layer is unusually explicit for a primary. Alongside a School Council, the school also describes structured pupil groups such as House Captains, Sports Leaders and EAL Ambassadors. For many children, these roles are a first taste of responsibility that is not just symbolic, with expectations to represent others, speak confidently, and help shape school routines.
Kings Heath’s headline Key Stage 2 outcomes indicate a school that is securing expected standards for the majority, with a reasonably strong profile across the tested areas.
In 2024, 75% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with 62% across England. In reading, 73% met the expected standard; in maths, 76%; and in GPS (grammar, punctuation and spelling), 57%. Science sits at 81% meeting the expected standard.
Scaled scores add useful nuance. The average scaled score was 105 for reading, 104 for maths, and 102 for GPS, with a combined total score of 311.
The higher standard picture is more mixed, which may help explain why the overall ranking banding looks less flattering than the headline “expected standard” figure. At the combined higher standard in reading, writing and maths, 14.33% achieved the higher threshold, compared with an England average of 8%. That is above average, but it is not in the very top tier where some schools push significantly higher proportions over the higher standard line. Writing greater depth is 5%, which is a figure to watch if your child is particularly strong in composition and you want a setting that consistently stretches high-attaining writers.
FindMySchool’s proprietary ranking, based on official data, places the school 10,139th in England for primary outcomes and 77th in Northampton. The ranking band corresponds to below England average overall, even though the 2024 expected standard figure is above the England average. For parents, the practical takeaway is that Kings Heath appears to be doing a good job getting most children to the expected standard, while the “stretch at the very top end” and the overall score profile may be less dominant than the headline percentage suggests.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
75%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Kings Heath positions itself as knowledge-rich, with an emphasis on sequencing and building learning “layer by layer”. That matters in practice because it affects how lessons are structured and how much the school relies on cumulative revisiting rather than one-off topic coverage. The 2024 inspection report describes a curriculum designed with “exceptional expertise” that identifies precisely what pupils should learn, in a logical order, and with deliberate links across subjects.
Reading is treated as a gateway discipline, not merely a subject. The school describes itself as a Read Write Inc. phonics school and sets out a reading spine that moves from decodable texts in early years and Key Stage 1 through to Accelerated Reader as pupils move beyond phonics. There is also a stated expectation that children read at least three times per week at home, with a system for logging reading digitally.
The “how” of teaching is also explicit. The principal’s welcome describes ongoing work with expert curriculum consultants and an expectation that staff continually refine practice using research-informed approaches. Ofsted similarly highlights staff training and clear explanations of new concepts in lessons, with pupils engaging because teachers generate genuine interest in what they are learning.
For families, this often translates into a school that can feel purposeful. If your child thrives on clear routines and enjoys learning framed as mastery, that is a strong fit. If your child is more exploratory and less responsive to structure, it is worth asking how flexibility is built into day-to-day teaching, particularly in Key Stage 2 where the pace and content density rise.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary academy, the main question is transition into Year 7. Kings Heath sits within West Northamptonshire, where secondary transfer is coordinated through the local authority’s admissions process. The school’s role is typically to ensure pupils leave Year 6 with strong literacy and numeracy, and with the learning habits that will help them handle a larger setting.
What Kings Heath can do, and seems to take seriously, is building “future readiness” early. The language of aspiration and careers starts young here, and the school uses cultural and employer-facing experiences to make the link between effort now and options later feel tangible. The 2024 inspection report gives distinctive examples, including Latin, performing an opera through work with the Royal Opera House, and themed “Apprentice Days”.
For parents, the implication is that transition is not just academic. Children are also being coached towards confidence, presentation, and a sense that they belong in ambitious spaces. That can be particularly powerful for families who want school to widen horizons rather than simply meet benchmarks.
Kings Heath is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Entry is governed by admissions arrangements rather than payment.
Reception admissions are coordinated by West Northamptonshire Council. For September 2026 entry, the local authority opened applications from 10 September 2025, with the on-time deadline on 15 January 2026 and offers released on 16 April 2026.
In the most recent admissions for Reception entry, Kings Heath shows as oversubscribed, with 58 applications for 40 offers, equating to 1.45 applications per place. That is competitive, but it is not in the extreme demand category seen in some urban primaries. The practical effect is that preferences and oversubscription criteria matter, and families should read the published admissions policy carefully.
No “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure is available for this school, so it is not sensible to make assumptions about how close you must live. Families considering the school should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check practical distance from the gates and keep an eye on local authority allocation patterns, because distance thresholds can change year to year depending on where applicants live.
Nursery is offered from age two, which creates an additional pathway question. Nursery attendance does not automatically guarantee a Reception place in most state admissions systems, so treat it as valuable early education rather than a secured route into the main school. The nursery runs morning, afternoon and full-day sessions, and the school notes funded places for eligible families. For current early years pricing and availability, use the school’s official nursery information.
100%
1st preference success rate
40 of 40 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
40
Offers
40
Applications
58
Pastoral strength here is closely tied to clarity and consistency. The school puts visible emphasis on expectations and respectful behaviours, and Ofsted describes pupils’ behaviour and attitudes as exceptionally strong, with routines embedded from the youngest age group.
There are also signs of a school that understands representation and belonging as part of wellbeing. The EAL Ambassadors group is framed as a practical support for families and pupils navigating additional languages, and the school explicitly references the breadth of languages represented in the community. That matters in daily experience because it signals to children that linguistic identity is recognised and can be a source of leadership, not a barrier.
Safeguarding information sits within the school’s parent information area, and the most recent Ofsted inspection judged the school Outstanding overall, which includes leadership and management.
Kings Heath’s enrichment offer is unusually specific, and it helps define the school.
A headline signal is cultural participation that goes beyond the standard primary menu. Ofsted records pupils learning Latin, performing an opera with the Royal Opera House, and taking part in “Apprentice Days”. These are not generic clubs, they are structured experiences that can change what children think is “for people like me”.
The school also describes partnership work with local cultural venues, including the Royal and Derngate Theatre and The Corby Cube. Participation includes workshops, involvement in Shakespeare Schools Festivals, trust music festivals, and work with Northern Ballet. The practical implication is that drama, performance, and cultural literacy are treated as part of the core identity rather than occasional extras.
Sport is framed as inclusive, with two hours of PE per week plus additional opportunities at morning, lunchtime, and after school. The sport page lists a broad range of activities across the year, including gymnastics, dance, athletics, football, cricket, handball, dodgeball, rugby, and hockey. A Gold School Games Mark is also referenced within the school’s wider personal development material, and Sports Leaders are positioned as a pupil leadership route.
If your child is not naturally sporty, the most important question to ask is how the school ensures every pupil feels successful in PE, not just the confident athletes. The school’s stated emphasis on values such as self-belief, courage and teamwork suggests a deliberate attempt to do that, but it is worth probing what it looks like in practice for less confident pupils.
Wraparound care is a concrete strength. Breakfast Club runs every school day in term time for Reception to Year 6, opening at 08:00 and running until the school day starts at 08:30. After-school care runs from 15:30 to 17:30. The school also describes a partnership with Magic Breakfast, with every child receiving a warm bagel at the start of the day in class.
Holiday provision is limited. The school states it does not offer regular holiday childcare due to staffing and space, although it runs a short Easter club for Year 6 by invitation. For working families, that means term-time wraparound is strong, but holiday cover will likely need alternative planning.
On transport and access, the school is in Kings Heath, Northampton, and most families will treat it as a local-drive or walkable option. If you are comparing schools, focus on realistic door-to-door timings at drop-off and pick-up, particularly if you intend to use breakfast or after-school care.
The school’s pace and expectation level. The whole culture is built around “no limits” aspiration and high expectations. That suits many children, but some may need reassurance and careful support if they are prone to anxiety around performance.
Oversubscription is meaningful. With 1.45 applications per place in the latest Reception results, admission is competitive enough that families should not treat it as a default. Read the admissions policy and plan preferences carefully.
High attainer stretch varies by subject. The higher standard outcomes are above the England average overall, but the writing greater depth figure is modest. If your child is an especially strong writer, ask how the school extends pupils at the top end.
Holiday childcare is not comprehensive. Term-time wraparound is clearly set out, but holiday provision is limited. Working families should plan for school holidays early.
Kings Heath Primary Academy combines an explicitly ambitious culture with genuinely distinctive enrichment, and the latest inspection outcome confirms that quality is consistently high across education, behaviour, personal development and early years.
Best suited to families who want a structured, knowledge-rich primary where aspiration is actively taught, and where children are offered cultural experiences that can widen horizons. The main challenge is admission, and then keeping pace with a school that expects pupils to rise to demanding routines and a high standard of conduct.
Yes, by current official measures it is. The most recent Ofsted inspection (30 and 31 January 2024) rated Kings Heath Primary Academy Outstanding overall and Outstanding across all graded areas, including early years. Academically, 75% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in 2024, above the England average of 62%.
Apply through West Northamptonshire Council’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened from 10 September 2025, the on-time deadline was 15 January 2026, and offers were released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school runs nursery provision for children from age two and describes morning, afternoon and full-day sessions, with funded places for eligible families. For current availability and nursery pricing, check the nursery information on the school’s official website.
Breakfast Club runs from 08:00 to 08:30 for Reception to Year 6. After-school care runs from 15:30 to 17:30. The school also describes a Magic Breakfast partnership providing a warm bagel at the start of the school day.
The latest Ofsted report highlights unusual opportunities for a primary, including Latin, performing an opera through work with the Royal Opera House, and themed “Apprentice Days”. The school also describes theatre partnerships with local venues and participation in Shakespeare Schools Festivals and trust music festivals.
Get in touch with the school directly
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