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.
A very small primary can feel like a risk if you are used to larger cohorts, but it can also be the point. With a published admission number of 8 for Reception, this is a setting where staff can genuinely know every family, and where older pupils quickly learn responsibility through daily routines and mixed-age working.
Leadership has been stable, with Karl Laithwaite in post since September 2016. The most recent inspection visit (19 January 2023) confirmed the school continues to be Good, and the report’s strongest theme is community: pupils are described as kind to one another, secure with staff, and comfortable raising worries.
For families who want wraparound care without losing the “everyone knows everyone” feel, this school is unusually practical: breakfast club starts at 8.00am and after-school provision runs through to 5.00pm, with structured activities rather than just supervision.
The school’s stated vision, “Living for learning; learning for life.”, is used as more than a slogan. It anchors a Church of England ethos where kindness, responsibility, resilience, hope, community and courage are explicitly taught through collective worship and day-to-day expectations.
A small roll shapes the social experience. Friendship groups are rarely fixed by a single year group; pupils see younger children as part of the same community and are expected to model manners and routines. That suits children who gain confidence from familiarity and predictable relationships, particularly those who feel overwhelmed by large, busy settings.
Community connection is not left to chance. Charity work and local projects feature as a normal part of school life, and pupils are encouraged to link what they learn to the wider world, including learning about different religious festivals and participating in international projects.
With a very small cohort, headline attainment figures can swing year to year and are less meaningful than the day-to-day quality of teaching and curriculum sequencing. What stands out in the available evidence is a strong emphasis on pupils building durable knowledge, particularly in reading, and doing so from the earliest years.
Leaders have invested in curriculum design, and the 2023 inspection report describes a broad, ambitious curriculum that is generally delivered well by teachers who receive training and support to build subject expertise.
The main area flagged for improvement is assessment precision in some subjects, specifically whether systems reliably show what pupils have remembered and understood over time, so teaching can build even more securely on prior learning. For parents, this is a useful question to explore at a visit: ask how teachers check long-term learning in mixed-age classes, and what changes have been made since 2023.
The rhythm of the day is clearly structured. Doors open at 8.45am with registration at 9.00am; mornings typically begin with assembly or phonics and spelling, then move into Maths and English. Friday mornings include Relationships and Health Education.
Reading is treated as a core habit, not a one-off lesson. The 2023 inspection report describes a newly introduced phonics programme taught from the start of Reception, staff training to deliver it confidently, and matched reading books so pupils practise exactly the sounds they know. Pupils who fall behind receive targeted support to catch up, with the intended outcome that most pupils become fluent readers.
Afternoons are where breadth shows. Science, history, geography, physical education, religious education, art, design technology, computing, music and French are all part of the planned offer. In a rural setting, the local area is used as curriculum material, for example in history where nearby sites enable hands-on learning about different periods, including evidence of Roman occupation in the region.
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 a small primary, transition is a big moment, and it is treated as a process rather than a single day. Pupils typically move on to Ullswater Community College, Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, or Appleby Grammar School.
Practical transition work includes joint events with other local primaries through the Eden Rural Alliance cluster, an annual Year 6 day at Patterdale Hall focused on team building, and structured secondary visits and meetings with Year 7 staff. The school also runs a Year 6 transition booster club to give pupils space to talk through concerns and consolidate learning before Year 7.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Westmorland and Furness Council rather than the school directly. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 3 September 2025 and close on 15 January 2026. Offers for primary National Offer Day are issued on 16 April (or the next working day).
The published admission number for Reception is 8. In the council’s published offer information, the school recorded 15 applications and 8 offers, which aligns with a setting where year-group size is intentionally small.
Oversubscription is handled using the local authority’s criteria for community and voluntary controlled schools. In plain terms, priority starts with looked-after and previously looked-after children; then catchment-area children with siblings at the school; then other catchment-area children (ranked by straight-line distance); then out-of-catchment siblings; then other out-of-catchment applicants by distance. The council also operates a catchment-area approach overall, while noting that not every school necessarily has a defined catchment and details can be requested.
A key early-years point to understand is that attendance in a nursery or pre-school does not guarantee admission to Reception. If you are considering the pre-school route, treat Reception as a separate application you will still need to make through the council.
Parents weighing distance-sensitive schools can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check their home-to-school distance accurately, then sense-check it against recent offer patterns and any local authority distance guidance.
Applications
15
Total received
Places Offered
8
Subscription Rate
1.9x
Apps per place
Pastoral strengths are described in unusually concrete terms. Pupils are reported as confident that staff will listen to concerns; bullying is described as rare, and leaders are said to handle incidents well so pupils feel safe and happy.
Support for special educational needs and disabilities is framed as proactive rather than reactive. Leaders and teachers are described as quick to identify needs and to secure early support and specialist input when required, with the goal that pupils access the same curriculum as their peers and achieve well.
The 19 January 2023 Ofsted inspection confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The extracurricular offer is stronger than many parents expect from a very small primary, largely because wraparound care is designed around purposeful activity. After-school club includes a snack and quiet activity time, followed by an activity session from 4.00pm to 5.00pm (with a Friday variation), refreshed termly.
Examples of activities referenced by the school include Gardening Club, Film Club, Art Club, Razzamatazz Theatre Skills, and music through a school band. Sports options cited include football, netball, fencing, karate and multi-skills. For pupils who respond well to structured challenges, the school also runs the Junior Dukes award programme from Reception upwards, with age-staged awards through to Year 6.
Community-facing activity also matters here. Pupils are encouraged to contribute locally, including fundraising and supporting a local food bank, and the curriculum includes regular local visits so learning is not confined to the classroom.
The school day runs 9.00am to 3.30pm, with doors opening at 8.45am. Breakfast club starts at 8.00am; after-school provision runs to 5.00pm, with published session pricing for breakfast and after-school club.
Pre-school is available from age 3, with sessions running 9.00am to 3.30pm and wraparound care available from 8.00am to 5.00pm. Families can use government-funded hours where eligible. For younger children, the school promotes a weekly playgroup, Temple Sowerby Tots, held Friday mornings 9.15am to 10.30am.
As with most rural village schools, daily logistics tend to be driven by family transport patterns and local routes. It is worth checking journey times at drop-off and pick-up before committing, particularly if you are balancing wraparound care with commuting.
Very small intake: A published admission number of 8 keeps class sizes small, but it also means fewer places and less margin for error if you are moving into the area late in the admissions cycle.
Catchment and distance can decide it: Oversubscription criteria prioritise catchment and siblings, with distance as a tie-breaker for many families. If you are outside the likely catchment, you should be realistic about the chance of an offer.
Pre-school is not an automatic route into Reception: Attendance in early years provision does not guarantee a Reception place; Reception still requires a separate council application.
Assessment systems were an improvement focus: The latest inspection highlighted that in some subjects, assessment did not always pinpoint what pupils had retained over time. Ask what has changed since 2023 and how staff track long-term learning in mixed-age classes.
This is a small, values-led Church of England primary where pupils are expected to be kind, responsible and involved in their community, and where wraparound care is organised around real activities rather than childcare-as-waiting-room. Best suited to families who want a close-knit village school with clear routines, a structured approach to early reading, and practical before-and-after-school options. The main challenge is that a small intake makes admissions more competitive, so understanding catchment and distance realities matters early.
The most recent inspection visit (19 January 2023) confirmed the school continues to be Good, with pupils described as safe, happy and part of a strong community. A clear strength is early reading, including a structured phonics programme from Reception and extra support for pupils who fall behind.
Admissions are coordinated by the local authority, which operates a catchment-area approach for school admissions, although not every school necessarily has a defined catchment and families can request details. Where the school is oversubscribed, catchment status and distance are key factors after higher priorities such as looked-after children and siblings.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast club starting at 8.00am and after-school provision through to 5.00pm, including structured activity sessions.
No. The local authority states that attendance at a school’s nursery does not guarantee admission to Reception, and Reception still requires a separate application through the coordinated admissions process.
The school states that pupils typically go on to Ullswater Community College, Queen Elizabeth Grammar School or Appleby Grammar School, supported by structured transition work across Year 6.
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