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.
Outdoor learning is not an occasional treat here, it is built into the week and used to develop confidence, language, teamwork and curiosity. The school is a small, community infant setting in Sprowston, with six classrooms and a published capacity of 180 pupils, serving Reception to Year 2.
Leadership has been in a period of change. A new headteacher appointment was confirmed for September 2023, and the current headteacher is Mrs Aimee Bulman.
The school’s most recent inspection was an ungraded Ofsted inspection, published on 20 July 2023, which confirmed the school remains Good.
This is a school that puts routines and relationships first, especially in the early weeks of Reception. Children start in September on a part time basis before building up to full time, and the site design supports that gradual confidence building. Reception classes have a shared outdoor space, with specific play and investigation features such as a rock water area with a pump and a sailing boat, and children expand their use of the wider playground as they settle.
Day to day, expectations are clear and the atmosphere is settled. Behaviour and focus in lessons are described as exceptionally strong, with pupils listening carefully and following instructions, and social times characterised by cooperative play and kindness.
The physical set up is practical for an infant school, with a playground that includes a slide, a tunnel area and a maze, and regular planned use of outdoor space rather than treating it as just breaktime.
As an infant school (Reception to Year 2), the most meaningful “results” for many families are readiness for junior school and secure fundamentals in reading, writing and mathematics, rather than public exam measures.
Inspection evidence points to strong classroom learning behaviours and good assessment practice. Teachers and staff are described as knowing pupils well and using assessment to spot gaps in knowledge, particularly through frequent checks with older pupils and “in the moment” assessment for younger pupils.
Reading is treated as a priority, with a systematic synthetic phonics programme adopted in September 2022. The school’s improvement focus has been to evaluate the impact of that programme quickly and act on any remaining areas for development.
The curriculum is designed for young children who learn by doing, repeating, practising and talking. Outdoor learning is central to how the school builds understanding, with weekly sessions that mix pupils across year groups and give children new practical experiences with high adult support.
Physical Education is structured rather than ad hoc. The school references the Real PE scheme of work, with two timetabled PE sessions each week and additional daily encouragement for active outdoor play and movement skills.
Religious Education is taught using the Kapow scheme aligned to the Norfolk Agreed Syllabus, covering Christianity, Judaism, Islam and other worldviews in an age appropriate way, with an emphasis on respectful inquiry.
Music is positioned as a confidence builder. Each year group has regular singing opportunities with a pianist once a week, followed by performance opportunities for parents.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For most families, the key transition is from Year 2 to a junior school setting. The school states that most pupils transfer to Falcon Junior School at the end of Key Stage 1.
Beyond that, the local secondary pathway includes nearby options such as Sprowston Academy, which the school lists in its local feeder context.
Cecil Gowing Infant School is a community school within Norfolk’s coordinated admissions system for Reception entry, and families should expect to apply through the local authority timetable.
The school describes a designated area for admission priority, broadly between Wroxham and Salhouse Roads, the Ring Road and Blue Boar Lane, plus the area around Greenborough Road. That is helpful for parents weighing likelihood of a place, but it is not a guarantee in itself, because allocation depends on the published oversubscription criteria and the pattern of applications each year.
Demand is real. In the most recent published admissions cycle provided for this review, Reception entry showed 132 applications for 59 offers, indicating an oversubscribed picture.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Norfolk, the local authority timetable states applications opened 23 September 2025, closed 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026.
A practical tip: if you are comparing several local schools, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your home location against each school’s priority area and typical allocation patterns, then sense check those assumptions with the local authority admissions guidance.
90.6%
1st preference success rate
58 of 64 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
132
Early years wellbeing is handled through predictable routines and trusted adults. Children are expected to know who they can speak to if worried, and staff record concerns through established safeguarding systems.
The school also emphasises early transition planning for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), including communication with nurseries and tailored transition arrangements where needed, alongside curriculum adaptations or additional adult support.
For an infant school, “extracurricular” often means short, high impact experiences that broaden what children think school can be. Here, activity is linked to physical confidence and community awareness.
Examples named by the school include visits to a gymnasium, sessions from a local professional karate club, and competitive tournaments organised through Active Norfolk, all of which extend PE beyond standard lessons and give children structured goals to work towards.
The outdoor learning strand also functions as enrichment. Activities referenced in inspection material include weather experiments, role play and mud kitchens, which build vocabulary, teamwork and problem solving in a way that suits infant learners.
The school day has clear timings: arrival is from 8.40am, break is at 10.30am, lunch is served at 12.00, and pick up is at 3.10pm.
Wraparound care is available through the school’s Sunrise and Sunset Club. Sunrise runs from 7.30am, and Sunset runs until 6.00pm, with breakfast in the morning and a light snack after school.
Oversubscription risk. Demand is high and places can be competitive, so families outside the priority area should plan for realistic alternatives and keep their application options broad.
Leadership transition effects. A headteacher change in September 2023 can bring refreshed priorities and new systems. Most families will want to ask how changes are bedding in across Reception and Year 2.
Infant school pathway planning. Because the school ends at Year 2, families should think early about junior school transfer and whether their preferred junior option aligns with where they live.
Cecil Gowing Infant School suits families who want an organised, calm infant setting where outdoor learning is a planned part of the week and early confidence building is taken seriously. The culture described is kind and settled, with clear expectations and strong support for young children learning how to be at school. It is likely to suit pupils who thrive on routines, practical learning and frequent movement, and families who value a clear local pathway into junior provision. Entry remains the primary hurdle, because demand can exceed places.
The school was confirmed as Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection (published 20 July 2023). The report describes exceptionally strong behaviour and focus in lessons, and highlights outdoor learning and broader experiences as meaningful strengths.
The school describes a designated area for admissions priority around parts of Sprowston, including the area bounded by local roads such as Wroxham and Salhouse Roads and the Ring Road. Admissions are coordinated by Norfolk, and allocation depends on the published oversubscription rules and the pattern of applications each year.
Yes. The school offers wraparound care through Sunrise and Sunset Club, with morning care from 7.30am and after school care until 6.00pm.
For September 2026 Reception entry in Norfolk, applications opened on 23 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. For later years, families should check the Norfolk admissions timetable as dates follow a similar annual pattern.
Most pupils transfer to Falcon Junior School at the end of Year 2, according to the school’s published transition information.
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