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.
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A close-knit nursery and infant setting can be hard to capture on a checklist, but the defining theme here is consistency, in expectations, relationships, and routines. The age range (2 to 7) means the school is focused on the foundations: language, early reading, number, and learning habits that stick.
Two features help it stand out locally. First, early reading has clear priority, with a consistent approach and swift extra help when children fall behind. Second, there is an on-site Enhanced Resource Facility for deaf and hearing impaired children, which shapes day-to-day inclusion and awareness for the whole community.
For families who want a warm start to schooling, practical wraparound options, and a setting that takes individual needs seriously, this is a strong proposition. Competition for places is real, so admissions timing matters.
The tone is proudly community-minded, with a “one big family” description that is backed by specific structures rather than vague sentiment. There are named pupil responsibilities, such as mini leaders who help other pupils at playtimes and lunchtimes, and a culture that explicitly talks about difference and inclusion.
The Enhanced Resource Facility matters here because it is not a bolt-on. The provision supports deaf and hearing impaired children aged 2 to 7, and it sits within a mainstream infant school day, which naturally builds confidence in communicating across differences for pupils who may not otherwise encounter it so early. For parents of deaf children, the practical implication is access to specialist support within an infant setting. For other families, it often means children grow up with inclusion as an everyday norm, not a special topic.
Leadership is stable and visible. The headteacher is Michelle Siddons, and the school sits within Embark Multi-Academy Trust. The trust link is relevant because it frames governance and improvement capacity, while the day-to-day feel remains very much that of a small, local infant school.
Because this is a nursery and infant school (up to Year 2), parents should not expect the familiar Year 6 SATs data that drives many primary comparisons. Progress is better judged through curriculum quality, reading development, and the school’s ability to meet individual needs early.
In October 2024, Ofsted graded all key areas as Good, including early years provision. The detail within that inspection is particularly useful for families: reading is prioritised; staff use a consistent approach; and pupils who fall behind receive help quickly and catch up.
The curriculum story is about sequencing and retrieval rather than flashiness. Key knowledge is identified, connected over time from the Early Years Foundation Stage to Year 2, and revisited so pupils remember it long-term.
Reading is the clearest academic anchor. Staff apply a consistent approach to teaching reading; quality books are used across the curriculum; and whole-class story time is used deliberately to build enthusiasm for books. The implication for parents is straightforward: if you want a school that treats reading as the core engine of later learning (not just a timetable slot), this aligns well.
Early years transition is handled with routines that link home and school. The inspection notes the use of a small toy dog, Hector’s puppy, as part of helping children know what to expect and build connection. That may sound small, but the underlying point is bigger: predictable routines and familiar cues matter in nursery and Reception, particularly for children who are anxious, young for their year, or adjusting to group settings for the first time.
One area to watch is stretch for higher attainers. The inspection highlights that in a few subjects, work is not consistently adapted to extend thinking for some higher attaining pupils, and the school was asked to check the impact of curriculum changes with greater precision. For many families, this will be a “keep an eye on it” point rather than a deal-breaker, but it is worth raising on a visit, especially if your child tends to race ahead and needs consistent challenge.
Most pupils move on to junior provision at the usual transition point after Year 2. The most important question for parents is less about destinations by name, and more about readiness: reading fluency, confidence with number, and learning behaviours.
The curriculum approach, inclusive ethos, and the focus on individual needs are all geared towards that. If your child is within the Enhanced Resource Facility cohort, transition planning and the continuity of support will be particularly important to discuss early, so you understand how specialist input will look beyond age 7.
Admissions for Reception are coordinated by Derbyshire County Council, and families must apply via the local authority even if their child already attends the nursery. The planned admission number is 50 per year group.
Demand looks healthy. In the latest available admissions cycle there were 62 applications and 41 offers, around 1.5 applications per place, which aligns with an oversubscribed picture. (FindMySchool admissions results.)
Nursery entry is separate from Reception admissions. The nursery runs for ages 2 to 4, operates a waiting list, and commonly has September availability, with additional intakes in January and April depending on spaces.
If you are planning for September 2026 Reception entry in Derbyshire, the published local authority window is 10 November 2025 to midnight on 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026.
100%
1st preference success rate
40 of 40 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
41
Offers
41
Applications
62
Pastoral support is a headline strength, described in external reporting as high quality, with pupils and families speaking positively about the help put in place. The practical mechanisms include named support spaces and groups: The Hive is described as a place where pupils learn to manage feelings and behaviour, and the Honey Bees nurture group runs three times a week to build social and emotional skills.
Safeguarding is treated as a baseline expectation, and the most recent inspection confirms it is effective.
At infant level, enrichment works best when it is purposeful and routines-based, not just a carousel of clubs. The school has several named leadership and participation routes that fit this stage: mini leaders helping at social times, and a smart school council that encourages pupils to discuss, debate, and share ideas on making school better.
The deaf club is another example of a “small school, specific identity” feature. It links directly to the Enhanced Resource Facility and helps pupils celebrate difference rather than simply accommodate it.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
The school day runs 8.45am to 3.15pm (gates open 8.40am). Breakfast club operates from 8.00am on school days during term time, and it costs £3 per session. For families needing childcare beyond the school day, the school signposts local providers that handle before and after-school care and holiday care, with collection and drop-off arrangements.
Nursery sessions are clearly structured. Morning nursery is 8.45am to 11.45am, afternoon nursery is 12.30pm to 3.30pm. For eligible families, the nursery offers funded hours and sets out how 15-hour and limited 30-hour places operate.
Stretch for higher attainers. External review highlights that in a few subjects, work is not consistently adapted to extend thinking for some higher attaining pupils. Ask how challenge is planned across subjects, not just in reading and maths.
Admissions are competitive. The figures indicate an oversubscribed position, so timing your application and having realistic alternatives matters.
Nursery does not guarantee Reception. Even if your child attends the nursery, Reception applications still go through the local authority process.
Wraparound is a mix of in-school and partner provision. Breakfast club is on-site; longer hours rely on local providers, so check availability, cost, and logistics early.
A well-organised nursery and infant school with a strong early reading focus, a genuinely inclusive culture, and specialist deaf support that gives it a distinctive identity. Best suited to families who value consistent routines, warm pastoral support, and a strong start in reading and language. The main hurdle is securing a place, so it suits families who can plan admissions early and keep a practical shortlist using tools like Saved Schools and distance checks where relevant.
It is graded Good across all key areas in the most recent inspection (October 2024), including early years. Reading is prioritised, and the wider culture emphasises inclusion and strong pastoral support.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Derbyshire County Council. Applications for September 2026 entry are made in the published window (10 November 2025 to 15 January 2026), with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No. Children can move from the nursery into Reception, but families must still apply for Reception through the local authority process, even if their child already attends the nursery.
The school has an on-site Enhanced Resource Facility for deaf and hearing impaired children, and wider support structures that focus on individual needs. For children needing social and emotional support, the Honey Bees nurture group is one example of targeted provision.
Breakfast club is run on-site from 8.00am during term time. For longer childcare needs, the school signposts local providers who offer before and after-school care and holiday care arrangements.
Get in touch with the school directly
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