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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Olney Infant Academy is a small, focused 4 to 7 setting that concentrates its energy on the foundations, early reading, phonics, number sense, and confident routines. It serves families in and around Olney and sits within Milton Keynes local authority for admissions, which matters because Reception entry is coordinated through the council.
The academy has an established improvement story in the current era, with Mrs Sarah Armitage appointed as headteacher in September 2020. A June 2022 Ofsted inspection judged the school Outstanding.
For parents, the practical offer is clear. The school day is 8.40am doors open, 8.50am registration, 3.20pm finish. Wraparound is available through Kidz Club, including breakfast club from 7.45am and after school up to 6pm, plus holiday provision.
The school’s identity is built around early independence and calm, consistent expectations. In practice, that shows up in the language children use, the routine-driven structure of the day, and a noticeable emphasis on pupils becoming articulate and self-confident learners early on.
Leadership stability is a meaningful part of the current picture. Mrs Sarah Armitage leads the school, supported by a clearly defined senior team that includes an inclusion lead who is also the designated safeguarding lead. For families, that combination usually translates into two day-to-day strengths, clarity about who to go to, and consistency in how concerns are handled.
This is also a community-facing infant school rather than a “closed world” campus. Links with local community life are part of the school’s public messaging, and that tends to suit families who like a school to feel rooted rather than self-contained.
. What parents can rely on instead is inspection evidence about how well pupils learn in these early years, plus the strength of the school’s curriculum design.
The 2022 inspection outcome matters in this context because infant schools are judged heavily on early reading, behaviour routines, and the consistency of teaching across classes. With an Outstanding judgement in June 2022, the baseline expectation is that the school is delivering those fundamentals strongly and consistently.
If you are comparing local schools, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools for side-by-side context. For infant settings, that is often most useful for practical factors such as admissions pressure, wraparound availability, and pastoral structures, rather than end-of-Key-Stage exam measures.
The curriculum emphasis is firmly on strong early foundations, with a whole-school approach designed for Reception through Year 2. The school describes its learning model as CURIOUS, and uses that as an organising idea for how children build independence and positive learning habits.
A notable feature on the curriculum side is the explicit attention given to physical development, with a stated focus on fundamental movement skills and confidence across a range of physical activities. For many pupils, that kind of motor-development focus is not a “nice to have”, it supports handwriting stamina, concentration, and general confidence in the classroom.
For parents, the most practical question to ask at an open event is how the school sequences early reading and phonics across Reception and Year 1, and how quickly pupils who fall behind are identified and supported. In infant schools, it is the speed and precision of that early support that tends to make the biggest long-run difference.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because Olney Infant Academy ends at age 7, transition is the main “destination” topic. The most common route locally is Year 3 entry at Olney Middle School, which explicitly lists Olney Infant Academy among its feeder infant schools.
Families should still treat Year 3 transfer as a separate admissions process, with the local authority coordinating end-of-key-stage transfers, and in-year admissions handled directly by the receiving school.
Reception entry sits within the Milton Keynes coordinated admissions process, even though the school is physically in Buckinghamshire. That means your application route and deadlines are driven by Milton Keynes guidance, not simply by postcode assumptions.
From the school’s own admissions information, National Offer Day is typically around mid April, and appeals follow that offer point.
Catchment detail is set out in the trust’s admissions arrangements. Recent published admissions arrangements define the catchment area using local villages and communities around Olney (for example, Olney and nearby villages).
Demand looks real rather than theoretical. In the latest available admissions figures, 114 applications resulted in 86 offers, and the school is classified as oversubscribed on that measure. This is not “impossible to get into” territory, but it does suggest families should apply on time and keep alternative preferences realistic.
Parents considering the school should use FindMySchoolMap Search to understand how location and admissions priority might play out, especially if you are moving house. Even where a school has a defined catchment, there is year-to-year movement in who applies and how places are allocated.
Applications
114
Total received
Places Offered
86
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
Safeguarding structures are clearly signposted in leadership roles, including a designated safeguarding lead position within the senior team. For an infant setting, that kind of clarity matters because early concerns often present first as attendance issues, anxiety, or sudden changes in behaviour.
Wraparound provision is also a pastoral factor, not just childcare. Kidz Club is run by school staff, which tends to support continuity for younger children and makes the end-of-day handover more straightforward for working families.
Extracurricular at infant phase works best when it is structured, simple, and confidence-building, rather than a long list of clubs that only older children can really manage. Here, the menu includes a mix of physical and creative options.
Examples publicly listed include Harmonize Choir, Bug Buddies, Strings, OOMPH Yoga, gymnastics (including a Foundation option), tennis, dance, and Kids Outdoors. The practical implication is that children can explore music-making and movement early, and parents can use clubs as a gentle extension of school routines rather than a second full-time timetable.
A useful detail for parents budgeting and planning is that the school asks families to contact the office for session costs and places for these activities, which is typical for clubs delivered by external providers or specialist coaches.
The school day is clearly set out: doors open 8.40am, registration 8.50am, and the day ends at 3.20pm.
Wraparound care is a significant strength for working families. Breakfast club runs from 7.45am and after-school provision runs 3pm to 6pm, with holiday opening also described on the school’s wraparound page.
Term dates are published well ahead, including Autumn Term 2026 start dates and inset days.
Oversubscription pressure. Recent admissions figures classify the school as oversubscribed, so applying late meaningfully increases risk. Keep backup preferences realistic.
Young age range, fast transition. Children leave at 7 and move to a different school structure for Year 3. Families should think ahead about the Year 3 transfer process and transition support.
Wraparound pricing can change. The school notes a price increase from September 2025 for Kidz Club, so confirm current costs early if childcare budgeting is tight.
Local authority complexity. The school is in Olney but admissions are tied to Milton Keynes local authority processes, which can surprise families new to the area.
Olney Infant Academy suits families who want a tightly focused infant education with strong routines, a clear early-years and Key Stage 1 curriculum, and practical wraparound care that covers the working day. The 2022 Outstanding judgement underpins confidence in teaching quality and school standards.
Who it suits: families in and around Olney who value early foundations, predictable routines, and wraparound provision; particularly those planning childcare coverage across the full working week.
Olney Infant Academy was judged Outstanding at its June 2022 Ofsted inspection. This provides external reassurance about quality of education, behaviour, personal development, leadership, and early years provision, which are the core levers in a 4 to 7 setting.
Reception places are allocated through the Milton Keynes coordinated admissions process. The school’s admissions information notes that National Offer Day is typically around mid April, with appeals following that point.
Doors open at 8.40am with registration at 8.50am, and the school day ends at 3.20pm.
Yes. Kidz Club provides breakfast club from 7.45am and after-school care that runs until 6pm, with additional holiday opening described by the school.
A common route is Year 3 entry at Olney Middle School, which lists Olney Infant Academy among its feeder infant schools.
Get in touch with the school directly
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