“Happiness and Success” is more than a slogan here, it is structured into a whole-school values system that pupils work through over time, from Squire to Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum Knight. That clarity of expectations matters because this is a large primary, with 90 places per year group and three-form entry, so consistent routines and shared language help keep daily life calm and purposeful.
Academically, the most recent published Key Stage 2 outcomes are strong. In 2024, 83.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 41.67% reached greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, well above the England average of 8%. This places the school well above England average (top 10%) in the FindMySchool ranking, and in a competitive position locally.
With nursery provision on-site, plus wraparound care through STARS, it is set up for families who want continuity from age 3 through Year 6, and practical childcare options around the school day.
The school’s identity is unusually concrete for a state primary. Values are presented through the knighthood system, and pupils move through Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum expectations. The language is simple enough for younger children to understand, but detailed enough to be used as a shared reference point across the school. Bronze focuses on being respectful, trying your best, being adventurous, curious and honest; later stages extend this into reflection, challenging preconceptions, and acting against unfairness.
For parents, the practical implication is that behaviour expectations are designed to be taught and revisited rather than assumed. In a three-form entry environment, that consistency can make a real difference, especially at transition points like Nursery to Reception and infant to junior classes. It also aligns with the school council activity that is visible online, including efforts around recycling and inclusive resources, such as introducing skin-tone plasters into first aid kits.
Leadership and responsibility sit visibly within the staffing structure. The published staff list names Ms Stacey Taylor as Headteacher, with a deputy headteacher and assistant headteacher, alongside a defined safeguarding team and designated safeguarding lead. This clear signposting is helpful for families, especially those new to the school or joining in-year.
Nursery has its own character as well. It is described as a purpose-built classroom with free-flow access to a secure outdoor area and its own entrance. The daily routine includes outdoor play, creative activities and daily PE, with additional specialist sessions, such as yoga and multisport, used to broaden children’s experience.
For a primary school, the most meaningful headline is the combined reading, writing and mathematics measure at Key Stage 2. In 2024, 83.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%. Science was also strong, with 88% meeting the expected standard, compared with the England average of 82%.
Depth matters too. At the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics, 41.67% achieved greater depth, compared with the England average of 8%. This suggests the school is not only securing the basics across the cohort, it is also stretching a substantial group of pupils into the top end of the scale.
On rankings, the school is placed well above England average (top 10%) for primary outcomes. A dedicated benchmark helps: ranked 529th in England and 4th in Orpington for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), based on official performance data.
For parents comparing options locally, this is the point where FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool become genuinely useful. The raw percentage can look similar across a cluster of schools, but rank context shows how consistently a school is performing against national patterns rather than just neighbourhood averages.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
83.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum intent on the school website emphasises a broad and balanced education linked to the National Curriculum and Early Years Foundation Stage guidance, with sequencing so that knowledge builds year on year. In addition to classroom provision, the school highlights specialist physical education coaches and specialist music provision, plus outdoor and residential learning, and the opportunity for pupils to become Knights of Tubbenden.
That combination, specialist teaching plus structured values, typically translates into a predictable learning experience for pupils. Specialist PE can support both skill development and engagement for children who learn best through movement, while specialist music often broadens participation beyond the small group who already take external lessons. The school’s lunchtime music clubs reinforce this, with orchestra for Years 3 to 6 and choir options including Junior Choir and a Year 2 choir.
Inclusion is positioned as a central part of the school’s approach. The school’s SEND information stresses valuing every child, identifying and removing barriers to learning, and setting challenging and appropriate targets.
A notable element is The Burrow, the school’s Additionally Resourced Provision, which sits alongside the mainstream school and has its own curriculum overview documentation published online. For children who qualify for that specialist route, the implication is meaningful access to mainstream school life while receiving targeted support through a dedicated provision.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
As a Bromley primary, transition at the end of Year 6 is shaped by the local authority’s secondary admissions process and family preference. The school does not publish a destination list or named secondary breakdown online, so families should expect the usual pattern for the area, a mix of local comprehensive options, selective pathways for some pupils, and independent routes for others.
What the school does provide is a sense of readiness and continuity. The size of the school and the structured values system mean pupils are used to routines, responsibility and clear behavioural expectations, which tends to support a smoother move into Year 7.
For nursery families, the immediate “next step” question is internal. Nursery offers places from age 3 to 5, with some opportunity for children to start earlier where they turn 3 prior to the start of the spring term, and it is located within the main school. That proximity can make Reception transition simpler, as children are already familiar with the wider setting and events, and the nursery describes access to whole-school opportunities such as music and reading workshops.
Reception entry is coordinated by the London Borough of Bromley. The borough’s published timetable for September 2026 Reception places is clear: applications opened on 01 September 2025, the national closing date is 15 January 2026, and the national offer date is 16 April 2026.
The school also signposts its Reception admissions pathway for September 2026 and encourages prospective families to attend an open morning in the autumn term.
Demand is high. Recent admissions data records 294 applications against 52 offers at the main entry point, with an oversubscribed status and a high applications-to-offers ratio. The practical takeaway is that families should treat this as a competitive option and plan a wider set of preferences accordingly.
Oversubscription criteria are set within the trust admissions arrangements used for September 2026 entry. Priority typically starts with looked-after and previously looked-after children, then acute medical or social need, then siblings, children of staff (in defined circumstances), and then proximity measured in a straight line using the local authority’s measuring system.
The school’s published admission number for Reception entry is 90 places.
Two additional admissions routes matter for some families:
In-year admissions (Years 1 to 6) are handled through Bromley’s in-year process and depend on whether a place exists in the relevant year group.
The Burrow (Additionally Resourced Provision) is not a mainstream admissions route; it links to specialist placement processes, and the trust admissions document notes additional places within the provision at Tubbenden.
If you are shortlisting based on distance, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to measure your home-to-school distance precisely and sanity-check it against how tight oversubscription tends to be locally. Even where criteria look straightforward, distance patterns can shift year to year.
Applications
294
Total received
Places Offered
52
Subscription Rate
5.7x
Apps per place
The pastoral approach is best understood through the school’s own systems: safeguarding leadership is clearly published, and the values framework is designed to be lived day to day rather than treated as a poster.
Support for additional needs is described as a whole-school commitment, with processes for requesting external expertise where a child’s difficulties significantly affect progress. The school references use of local authority processes and banded funding routes where appropriate, which indicates a structured approach to escalation rather than informal, ad hoc support.
A practical wellbeing factor for many families is simply time and routine. The school day is slightly different for infants and juniors, with morning sessions beginning at 08:50 for Reception to Year 2 and 08:55 for Years 3 to 6, and finishing at 15:20 for Reception to Year 2 and 15:25 for Years 3 to 6.
For families juggling work and childcare, STARS provides on-site wraparound from 07:45 to 08:45 and 15:20 to 18:00.
In a large primary, the difference between “clubs exist” and “clubs shape school life” usually comes down to specificity, access and variety. Here, the published offer is unusually detailed, with a mix of teacher-led clubs and carefully selected external providers.
Music is a clear pillar. Lunchtime provision includes orchestra for Years 3 to 6, plus choir options that bring younger pupils in early, including a Year 2 choir. The implication is that pupils who enjoy music can participate without needing private lessons, while those who do take instrumental tuition have ensemble opportunities that reward practice and commitment.
External clubs broaden the menu further. The school lists a range of term-time providers, including Aquila Taekwondo, Centre Stage, Class Act, Elys Musical Theatre, Georgina Weston Dance Academy, LCF French Club, RecreLingo Spanish Club, Spectacular Science, PerformR Street Dance, and Yoga Bees.
This matters for two reasons. First, it makes enrichment more accessible for families who cannot manage mid-week travel to activities elsewhere. Second, it gives children a chance to try structured disciplines, languages, or performance in a familiar environment before committing more seriously.
Community-facing opportunities also feature. The school lists external community clubs such as Stagecoach performing arts classes and Singsmiths Choirs (including a youth choir for older children), and holiday-oriented provision such as multi-sport camps.
There is also evidence of pupil voice. The “Children’s View” page describes a pupil reporting team producing the Tubbenden Times, and the school council reporting includes practical initiatives such as recycling projects and equity-focused resources.
For parents, the implication is that pupils have structured routes to contribute, not only through one-off events but through ongoing projects that develop confidence and communication.
The school day runs 08:50 to 15:20 for Reception to Year 2, and 08:55 to 15:25 for Years 3 to 6.
Wraparound childcare is available on site via STARS, operating 07:45 to 08:45 and 15:20 to 18:00.
For nursery-age families, the nursery is open term time from 08:00 to 17:00, with government-funded hours used within a 09:00 to 15:00 core period, and wraparound available outside those hours. For nursery fee details, families should refer to the nursery information pages directly.
Transport-wise, this is a school designed for local families, with admissions prioritising proximity once higher criteria are met. Where walking routes and drop-off routines matter, an open morning is the most efficient way to understand practicalities, and booking for the Reception 2026 open mornings is signposted online.
Inspection information is dated. The latest available Ofsted report is from March 2013 and judged the school to be Good. Because this is more than five years old, it should be treated as weaker evidence for how the school operates today, and families should rely more heavily on current information from the school and local authority.
Large school, large cohort. With 90 places per year group, this is a sizeable primary. Many children thrive with that social breadth, but families who want a very small setting should reflect on fit.
Admission pressure. Reception entry is competitive, with recent admissions data indicating far more applications than offers. Families should plan realistic preferences and timelines.
Understand specialist routes clearly. The Burrow (Additionally Resourced Provision) and mainstream places are different pathways with different processes. Families considering specialist support should start early with the relevant professionals and the local authority.
Tubbenden Primary School combines the practical strengths parents often look for, on-site nursery, wraparound childcare, and a clear set of expectations, with academic outcomes that are well above England averages. Its defining feature is how explicitly it builds culture through the knighthood system, making values visible and developmental rather than abstract.
Best suited to families who want a structured, values-led primary experience with strong Key Stage 2 outcomes, and who are comfortable with a large, three-form entry environment. The limiting factor for many will be admission competition, so it works best as part of a well-planned shortlist.
On outcomes, the picture is strong. In 2024, 83.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%, and 41.67% reached the higher standard, compared with the England average of 8%. The school is also placed well above England average (top 10%) in the FindMySchool ranking.
Reception applications for Bromley residents are made through the London Borough of Bromley. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 01 September 2025, the closing date is 15 January 2026, and offers are released on 16 April 2026. The school also encourages families to attend open mornings in the autumn term.
Yes. Nursery places are offered for children aged 3 to 5, with some opportunity to start earlier where children turn 3 prior to the start of the spring term. Government-funded hours are accepted for eligible children, used within a 09:00 to 15:00 core period, with wraparound available outside those hours.
STARS provides on-site wraparound childcare. Breakfast runs from 07:45 to 08:45, and afternoon provision runs from 15:20 to 18:00.
The Burrow is the school’s Additionally Resourced Provision. It sits alongside the mainstream school and has its own published curriculum overview documents. Admission to the provision follows a specialist placement route rather than mainstream Reception admissions.
Get in touch with the school directly
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