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.
Life here is shaped by its setting. The school leans into its village identity, with regular outdoor learning and a distinctive local programme that includes bellboating on the River Avon and nature work in the grounds.
This is a state-funded Church of England primary, so there are no tuition fees. It is also one of those rare schools where the early years matter, not as an add-on, but as a central part of the whole offer, supported by an on-site pre-school and a strong start in early reading.
The tone is intentionally values-led. As a voluntary aided Church of England school, faith is part of the daily rhythm, including collective worship and strong links with St John the Baptist Church. The school also explicitly describes welcoming families of all beliefs, which matters for parents who want a clear ethos without feeling like outsiders.
Community is not just a word on a prospectus. One practical example is the way local connections show up in pupil experiences, from village-based outdoor learning to intergenerational visits that build confidence in communication and language.
It is a small school by design and by geography. That typically creates an everybody-knows-everybody feel, which many families prize at primary age. The trade-off is that friendship groups can be narrower, so it helps if your child enjoys mixed-age play and a familiar adult team.
Because this is historically a first school in the Pershore system, pupils have not traditionally taken end of Key Stage 2 tests at Year 6 in the way full primaries do. The local system is also in active transition, with approved changes that move schools towards a primary and high school model over time. In practice, that means parents should expect the school’s assessment story to be described more through telling evidence about reading, curriculum, and pupil development than through headline SATs tables.
The latest Ofsted inspection (25 to 26 February 2025) graded Quality of Education as Good, Behaviour and Attitudes as Good, Leadership and Management as Good, with Outstanding judgements for Personal Development and Early Years. Ofsted no longer issues an overall effectiveness grade for state-funded schools under the post-September 2024 approach.
In practical terms, the strongest academic signal in the published evidence is early reading. Phonics is described as well taught, pupils read books matched to their stage, and support is put in quickly when extra practice is needed. The implication for parents is straightforward, if your child needs a confident start in reading, the school’s core approach looks structured and closely monitored.
Curriculum design is presented as broad, balanced, and increasingly coherent, with an emphasis on making learning “stick” across subjects, not just within them. The most recent inspection evidence is also clear about an improvement focus, making stronger connections between prior learning and new content, so that knowledge deepens rather than repeating as isolated topics. That is a useful detail for parents, because it signals a school that is not complacent about being “good”, it is actively refining how curriculum sequencing works in small-school mixed-age classrooms.
Outdoor learning is a defining feature. Pre-school and Reception use woodland and grounds work as part of regular learning, and older pupils do practical local mapping in geography. This is not outdoor learning as a once-a-term enrichment day, it is positioned as a routine way of teaching and reinforcing knowledge.
Transition matters more than usual in a first school model, because pupils move on earlier than Year 6. The school’s own planning documents describe it as part of the Pershore pyramid, with most pupils transferring to St Nicholas CE Middle School and then progressing to Pershore High School.
Alongside that, the wider Pershore area review has set out structural changes across local schools, so families should treat transition patterns as something to re-check for their child’s cohort. If you are applying for pre-school or Reception now, it is sensible to ask how the school expects year groups to expand and how transition arrangements will look by the time your child reaches the top of the school.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Worcestershire County Council, with a published timetable for September 2026 entry. Applications open on 01 September 2025, close on 15 January 2026, and offers are released on 16 April 2026.
Demand, even on small numbers, is real. Recent entry-route data shows 22 applications for 9 offers, a subscription ratio of 2.44, recorded as oversubscribed. That is the kind of pattern where living locally helps, but it does not remove uncertainty, and it is wise to plan a realistic second and third preference. (No last-offered distance figure is published in the available data for the relevant intake year.)
Pre-school is a separate route. The school’s admissions information is explicit that attending pre-school does not create an automatic Reception place, families still need to apply through the local authority process for Reception entry.
A practical tip: if distance is part of how you shortlist, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand your likely travel time and compare alternatives across the Pershore area, especially while local reorganisation is still bedding in.
Applications
22
Total received
Places Offered
9
Subscription Rate
2.4x
Apps per place
Personal development is the clearest headline strength in the current evidence. The school’s approach emphasises pupils building confidence, resilience, and respectful relationships, supported by a programme that includes regular enrichment and community-facing activities.
Safeguarding arrangements are described as effective in the most recent inspection evidence.
For parents, the useful implication is that wellbeing is treated as part of the core job of school, not a poster campaign. Expect routines around online safety, healthy relationships, and pupils being confident to seek help from trusted adults.
This is where the school feels most distinctive, because it uses local assets in ways most primaries cannot.
Bellboating is a signature activity, linked to the village’s canoe and kayak club and run with input from local expertise, including Olympian-level coaching connections. Pupils learn teamwork and confidence on the river, and the school explicitly connects the programme to wider learning about nature and climate issues. The implication is real breadth for children who learn best through doing, not just through worksheets.
Forest School and Eco work is not generic. The school names activities such as composting, growing and eating produce, monitoring birds using nesting boxes, and creating habitats for minibeasts, under the guidance of a named Forest School leader. This kind of programme tends to suit pupils who thrive with hands-on problem solving and regular responsibility.
Clubs vary termly, but the school lists a wide set of practical options, including Drum Club, Eco Club, cookery, gardening, board games, and Lego, alongside sport. Wraparound provision is run on site, creating continuity for children who stay beyond the school day.
A final cultural detail that will matter for some families: the school uses a house structure named after local landmarks, including Malvern Hills, Lickey Hills, and Bredon Hill, which helps create identity across mixed-age groups.
The school day is clearly set out. The school day officially runs from 08:55 to 15:25, with doors open from 08:45 for a soft start. Breakfast Club runs 07:45 to 08:45 and after-school provision runs 15:30 to 17:30.
Transport is addressed directly for local villages. The school describes bus or taxi provision serving Wyre Piddle, Upper Moor and Lower Moor, with statutory walking distance rules referenced for under and over eight-year-olds.
For pre-school, the site sets out session timings and the availability of funded hours for eligible families, but families should check the school’s current arrangements before relying on a particular pattern for the next academic year.
Small-school fit. A smaller roll can be a strength, but it can feel limiting for children who need a bigger peer group or lots of separate friendship circles.
Faith is present. Daily worship and church links are central to school life. Families seeking a completely secular setting should weigh this carefully, even though the school states it welcomes children of all beliefs.
Competition for places. Recent admissions data shows oversubscription at entry point. Build a realistic plan across multiple local options.
Local system change. The Pershore area school structure is evolving, which can affect year-group organisation and transfer routes over the life of your child’s time in school. Ask direct questions about how cohorts will move through.
A small, values-led village school with an unusually concrete outdoor and local-life offer. The evidence points to a strong start in early years and a personal development programme that goes beyond the basics, backed by an inspection profile that includes Outstanding judgements in those areas.
Who it suits: families who want a Church of England ethos, a close-knit setting, and a primary experience where outdoor learning, local sport, and community links are part of normal life, not occasional extras. The main challenge is admission competition, and the second is navigating local system changes thoughtfully. Families considering it should use Saved Schools to keep alternatives organised while waiting for allocations.
The latest Ofsted inspection in February 2025 graded Quality of Education as Good and Personal Development as Outstanding, with Outstanding also recorded for Early Years. That combination usually signals a school that balances academic foundations with strong character education and enrichment.
Applications are made through Worcestershire County Council’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 01 September 2025, close on 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
No. The school’s admissions information is clear that pre-school attendance does not create an automatic Reception place. Families still need to apply through the local authority process for Reception admission.
The school publishes breakfast and after-school provision and describes wraparound as being based on site, within school grounds and buildings. Times are set out on the school day information, and wraparound guidance is published separately by the school.
The school describes itself as part of the Pershore pyramid, with most pupils transferring to St Nicholas CE Middle School in Pinvin and then progressing to Pershore High School. Because local reorganisation is under way, it is sensible to confirm how this will apply to your child’s cohort.
Get in touch with the school directly
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