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 small primary in rural Cornwall, Nancledra School combines the feel of a village school with results that stand out well beyond its immediate area. In 2024, 91% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%.
The school is part of Truro and Penwith Academy Trust, which shapes governance and school improvement support. For families, the key headline is this: strong academic outcomes in a small setting, with competition for places at Reception that is meaningful rather than extreme. The most recent admissions data shows 48 applications for 17 offers, about 2.82 applications per place. This suggests demand is healthy and places can be tight, especially in a small school where class sizes and intake numbers matter.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. The main costs are the usual ones, uniform, trips, and optional clubs or music tuition where offered.
Small schools live or die by consistency. When staff change frequently, routines wobble; when staffing settles, the whole place tends to calm. Recent official review notes that the school has been through a period of change and some short-lived instability, but that it has taken effective action to maintain an orderly and friendly atmosphere.
That stability shows up in the basics that matter most to parents of primary-aged pupils: behaviour, relationships, and whether learning time is protected. Pupils are described as conducting themselves well in unstructured moments, with older pupils acting as role models and bullying not presenting as a defining issue. In a school this size, children are visible. That can be a real advantage for pupils who thrive when adults notice quickly that something is off, academically or socially.
The school’s wider approach leans towards inclusion and participation rather than selection. A good example is sport: the stated intent is that every pupil represents the school in at least one sporting event, regardless of ability. For many families, this matters as much as the top end of attainment. It signals that confidence-building is not reserved for the naturally sporty, and that the school is actively designing experiences for pupils who might otherwise opt out.
The performance picture is unusually strong for a small rural primary, and it is backed by both attainment measures and rankings.
In 2024, 91.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 62%.
At the higher standard, 31% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with the England average of 8%.
Scaled scores add useful texture. Reading averaged 109 and mathematics 108, which are both comfortably above typical national reference points.
Ranked 2185th in England and 2nd in the Penzance area for primary outcomes. These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data, designed to help families compare schools on a consistent basis.
What this means in plain English: performance sits above the England average and within the top quarter of schools in England (top 25%). For a small school, that usually reflects two practical strengths working together: tight monitoring of basic skills (especially reading) and teaching that is consistent across mixed-age groupings.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
91.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading is treated as a core priority. The most recent official review highlights a structured approach where children begin learning sounds from the moment they start Reception, with careful sequencing into Year 1 and targeted support for anyone at risk of falling behind. The important implication is not just early phonics success, but the culture it can create later in Key Stage 2: pupils who can read fluently can access every subject more easily, and small schools feel the impact quickly.
Mathematics teaching is described in unusually concrete terms for a primary website document, which is helpful for parents trying to understand what “strong maths” actually looks like. The curriculum sets out an ethos of “teach, do, secure, and deepen”, combining fluency with reasoning and problem solving. It also describes a mastery approach adapted for mixed-age classes, where expectations are framed around end-of-phase outcomes rather than a single year-group checklist.
A few specific elements stand out:
Club 99 for times tables fluency from Year 3, with a ten-minute recall expectation.
Use of Times Tables Rock Stars to build speed and accuracy.
Lesson sequencing informed by national resources such as White Rose small steps, alongside enrichment inputs such as NRICH and NCETM-linked materials.
For parents, the practical takeaway is that the school is not relying on generic statements. It is describing a repeatable classroom model, which tends to correlate with more consistent outcomes across cohorts.
The official review also notes that curriculum work in some foundation subjects is newer and less embedded, naming areas such as history, music and art as still developing for teaching approach. That is not unusual after periods of staffing change, but it is relevant if your child is highly motivated by creative subjects and you are looking for breadth as well as strong core outcomes.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Secondary transition is a major practical question for families in this part of Cornwall, and the school’s own communications indicate active links with local secondaries.
The school has referenced Year 6 transition days with Mounts Bay Academy, which suggests it is a common destination route for pupils moving on at 11. It also references additional transition opportunities with St Ives School, indicating that some pupils and families are looking that way as well.
What that implies for parents:
Transition is treated as a process rather than a single day, with the expectation that pupils will have structured opportunities to familiarise themselves with a secondary setting.
For pupils with additional needs, the school indicates preparation that includes involvement from a secondary SENDCo in Year 6 review planning.
Because destination patterns can shift year to year depending on family moves and admissions, it is still worth asking the school which secondaries last year’s Year 6 cohort went to, and how many pupils typically go to each.
Admissions for Reception are coordinated through Cornwall Council rather than handled solely by the school. The county timetable matters because deadlines are strict and late applications are processed differently.
For September 2026 Reception entry, Cornwall Council lists:
Application deadline: 15 January 2026
National Offer Day: 16 April 2026
The school’s own admissions page confirms that children start Reception full-time from September and points families to Cornwall Council for the formal application route.
Demand data indicates the school is oversubscribed at Reception entry, with 48 applications for 17 offers snapshot. In a small school, even modest changes in numbers can significantly affect outcomes for individual families, so it is sensible to treat “oversubscribed” as a meaningful flag rather than a label.
A practical tip: if you are comparing multiple local primaries, FindMySchool’s map tools and comparison features can help you keep a consistent shortlist and sense-check travel practicality alongside academic outcomes.
Applications
48
Total received
Places Offered
17
Subscription Rate
2.8x
Apps per place
A small school’s pastoral model is often built on speed of response: staff notice issues early, and pupils are less able to disappear into a crowd. The most recent official review describes strong relationships underpinning behaviour expectations, with a generally positive behaviour culture.
Safeguarding is a non-negotiable for any parent, and this is where official confirmation carries weight: Ofsted confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Attendance is also worth noting. The official review indicates attendance had been low until recently, and that the school changed its approach to challenge poor attendance and work with families to remove barriers, with improvement underway. For families, this is a helpful sign that leadership is focusing on basics that directly affect learning time.
Extracurricular breadth looks different in a small primary. The strength is not the sheer volume of clubs; it is the ability to make participation normal and accessible, including for pupils who are not naturally confident.
Sport is clearly a significant strand. The school’s PE and sport planning references links with external organisations and clubs such as Chance to Shine Cricket, Global Boarders Surf School, St Ives Rugby Club, and Bikeability (Year 5). It also describes specific development areas such as Forest School and gardening, a circus skills club, and an after-school Bike club initiative.
The implication is that physical education is not limited to a couple of weekly lessons. There is an attempt to build a wider activity culture, with variety that can suit different personalities, competitive team sport for some, individual skills and outdoor learning for others.
Music is present too, including access to instrumental learning via tutors, and this is referenced explicitly in the official review as part of wider development. If your child is musical, the right question to ask is not “do you do music”, but “how many pupils learn an instrument, how is it scheduled in the week, and what performance opportunities exist”.
This is a state primary school, so there are no tuition fees. Families should plan for normal extras such as uniform, trips, and optional enrichment.
The school indicates that breakfast club and after-school club can be booked, with wraparound care offered via the on-site pre-school arrangement. Because wraparound models can change term by term in small schools, it is worth confirming current session times and availability directly with the school.
Nancledra is a rural village setting, so most families will find that travel planning matters. If you are relying on transport assistance, check Cornwall Council eligibility guidance before listing preferences, as the council explicitly advises parents not to assume eligibility.
Small-school dynamics. Small cohorts can be a real advantage for individual attention, but friendship groups are naturally narrower. If your child needs a very wide peer group to find their people, ask about cohort size by year group.
Competition for Reception places. The school is described as oversubscribed, and the most recent results shows 48 applications for 17 offers. In a small school, a few extra local families applying can shift the cut-off significantly.
Curriculum development in foundation subjects. Recent external review notes that some subjects have newer curriculum work and less consistent teaching approaches at present, which may matter if you are prioritising a particularly strong arts offer alongside core academic outcomes.
Attendance focus. Attendance has been a priority area recently, with improvement noted. If your child has medical needs or you anticipate absences, ask how the school supports learning continuity and reintegration.
Nancledra School offers something quite specific: a small, village-style primary with outcomes that outperform most schools in England, and a curriculum approach that is articulated in practical classroom terms rather than slogans. It suits families who want strong core academics, a calm behaviour culture, and broad participation in sport and wider development.
Who it suits best: pupils who will thrive with high expectations, close adult oversight, and a community-sized setting where participation is encouraged and noticed. The main challenge is entry at Reception, where oversubscription means planning and deadlines matter.
The evidence points to a strong school. 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes show 91% of pupils meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average. The latest official review also describes an orderly, friendly atmosphere and confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Applications are made through Cornwall Council rather than directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, Cornwall lists 15 January 2026 as the application deadline, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Recent admissions demand data indicates it is oversubscribed at Reception, with more applications than offers. In a small school, that can make outcomes more sensitive to local demand, so families should submit on time and include realistic alternative preferences.
The school has referenced transition days with Mounts Bay Academy and additional transition opportunities with St Ives School, suggesting these are common next-step routes for some pupils.
The school indicates that breakfast club and after-school club can be booked, with wraparound care linked to the on-site pre-school arrangement. Availability and timings are worth confirming directly, as they can change.
Get in touch with the school directly
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