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.
This is an infant school serving children from age 2 to 7, so it is judged less on headline key stage 2 tables and more on what it does in the early years and key stage 1, how well it teaches children to read, and how smoothly pupils move on into junior provision. The most recent inspection in May 2022 confirmed the school continues to be Good.
A clear thread runs through the published information: early language, phonics, and support for children who need extra help are treated as core work, not add-ons. External review evidence describes pupils as polite and very well behaved, with an ambitious curriculum that is carefully sequenced, including in subjects such as history and art.
For families weighing options locally, the practical offer is also unusually concrete for an infant setting: breakfast provision, after-school clubs, and a structured wraparound childcare option for Reception to Year 2.
The tone is defined by care and inclusion, with formal evidence describing a supportive culture where pupils feel able to share concerns and trust adults to act. Behaviour is described as consistently calm, with children understanding what bullying is and reporting that it is rare; the emphasis is on talking things through early, so small issues do not become bigger ones.
Leadership is long-established, which matters in infant schools where consistency of routines often drives outcomes. The current headteacher is Mrs Kate Longstaff, appointed from September 2015. The school also signals a strong home-school partnership approach, including welcoming parents into school to support learning activities, which often suits families who want frequent communication and clear guidance on how to help at home.
The early years provision is designed to settle children quickly. For children starting in the 2-year-old provision, staff home visits are part of transition, and there is structured liaison with health visitors and external agencies when relevant. For nursery and Reception, transition is described as a combination of short visits into classes, parent meetings, and visits to children in their current setting where appropriate. This kind of organised onboarding tends to reduce anxiety for children and parents, and it also gives staff time to understand speech, language, and communication needs early.
Because pupils leave after Year 2, there are no key stage 2 outcomes attached to the school. That changes how parents should read “results” here. The best indicators are the quality of early reading, the consistency of phonics teaching, and how well the curriculum builds knowledge and vocabulary from the start.
Formal inspection evidence highlights early reading as a high priority, with a consistent approach to phonics, close matching of reading books to the sounds children know, and frequent checks on pupils’ understanding so misconceptions do not stick. This matters because, at infant stage, fluent decoding is often the difference between a child accessing the wider curriculum confidently, or spending the next few years catching up.
The school’s own curriculum information aligns with that picture, describing daily discrete phonics lessons in early years and key stage 1, with practice built into both adult-led tasks and independent classroom areas. A separate phonics programme document sets out coverage through key stages and indicates a planned progression, including work in Year 1 that introduces adjacent consonants and alternate graphemes for previously taught phonemes.
A second “results” proxy is support for children with additional needs. The most recent inspection report describes targeted support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, delivered both in class and through small-group interventions. In an infant school, that typically shows up as earlier identification of speech and language needs, tighter links between assessment and teaching, and fewer children drifting quietly in the background.
The curriculum is described in external evidence as ambitious and thoughtfully sequenced, with subject leaders ensuring breadth and depth and clarity about what knowledge and skills are taught and when. In practice, that kind of sequencing is what stops infant teaching becoming a series of disconnected “topics”. It also helps children build vocabulary systematically, which is especially important in communities where children may arrive with different levels of language exposure.
A useful detail from the most recent inspection report is the way history and art are used to make thinking and explanation explicit. Year 2 pupils were described as able to talk confidently about Grace Darling and the sources of evidence used to learn about her. For parents, the implication is that the school is not only teaching facts, it is also teaching children to explain, compare, and reason aloud, which supports writing later.
In early years, language and communication are positioned as central. Inspection evidence describes talk and vocabulary development as a priority and links this to children’s confidence in discussing learning. That emphasis is reinforced by nursery documentation that lays out a daily routine combining group work and structured phonics and maths activities, with regular access to provision areas and outdoor learning.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The main transition point is into junior provision at the end of Year 2. Local context matters here because continuity can be a real advantage, particularly for children who benefit from stable routines.
Ofsted evidence from the neighbouring junior school notes that most pupils enter from the next-door infant school and references active work to strengthen links so pupils’ progress does not stall during the move from Year 2 to Year 3. For families, the practical implication is that the infant stage is being considered as part of a wider primary journey, not as a stand-alone experience that ends abruptly.
Nursery to Reception is a separate step. Families should note that a nursery place does not automatically convert into a Reception place; Reception entry is handled through the local authority’s coordinated system.
Admissions look slightly different depending on the entry point.
Reception applications are coordinated by the local authority. For September 2026 entry, the closing date was 15 January 2026. The broader pattern is stable across England: applications usually open in early September, close in mid January, and offers are issued in April, which helps families planning for later years.
The school publishes an admission number of 64. Recent admissions data also indicates demand: 96 applications for 60 offers, around 1.6 applications per place, which supports the “oversubscribed” label. This is not an extreme ratio, but it is enough to make first preferences and local priority criteria matter. Parents comparing options should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check practical proximity and then read the local authority’s oversubscription criteria carefully.
Nursery entry is separate from Reception, and the school describes home visits and transition meetings as part of starting arrangements, including for the 2-year-old provision. Families considering early years should check current session patterns and eligibility rules directly with the school and local authority, including government-funded hours for eligible children.
Applications
96
Total received
Places Offered
60
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Apps per place
In an infant setting, pastoral care is often the work of routines, relationships, and early intervention. The most recent inspection report highlights regular adult time spent talking with pupils, which builds confidence to share concerns. Safeguarding arrangements are described as effective, with staff trained to spot concerns and systems in place for reporting and referrals.
Support for children with additional needs is a recurring strength in the evidence base. Leaders are described as ambitious for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, and targeted support is embedded in classroom practice. For families, the implication is that needs are more likely to be identified and acted on early, which can make a significant difference by the time children reach junior school.
The school also signposts wider family support, including local family hub services, which may suit parents looking for joined-up help beyond school alone.
Extracurricular life in infant schools needs to be practical and age-appropriate, with short sessions that build confidence. The school’s published clubs list for the term includes Ocarina Club, Baking Club, Film Club, Lego Club, Yoga Club, Disco Club, Construction Club, plus games and colouring options. This mix suggests an offer that balances creative play, movement, and simple skill-building.
The timetable information also indicates a structured day with dedicated phonics time and regular reading, plus space for outdoor provision. For parents, the implication is that enrichment sits alongside the core priorities of reading and language, rather than displacing them.
Two practical extras often make a difference for working families. Breakfast provision is supported through a partnership with, and the school states it provides healthy breakfasts so children are settled and ready to learn. Wraparound childcare after school is also clearly structured, including a longer session running until 5:30pm on Monday to Thursday.
The school runs breakfast club from 8:15am to 8:55am, with children asked to arrive no later than 8:30am. The school day begins at 8:45am. Reception home time is shown as 3:00pm, and key stage 1 home time as 3:15pm. After-school clubs are shown finishing at 4:15pm.
Wraparound childcare is available for Reception to Year 2, with sessions from 3:15pm to 4:30pm or 3:15pm to 5:30pm (the later finish is Monday to Thursday). Charges are published for childcare sessions, and the school notes children are collected directly from classrooms by school-based teaching assistants.
Oversubscription reality. Recent data shows 96 applications for 60 offers, which means not every family who applies will get a place. First preference strategy and eligibility criteria matter.
Reception deadlines are fixed. For September 2026 entry, the closing date was 15 January 2026; late applications can reduce choice.
Infant-to-junior transition is a key decision. Children leave after Year 2, so parents should evaluate the onward route early, including how the move into Year 3 is handled.
Wraparound logistics. Wraparound childcare is structured and time-limited by day of week (the later finish is Monday to Thursday), so families needing consistent late finishes on Fridays should check the current arrangement before relying on it.
For families who want an infant school with clear routines, strong early reading practice, and a settled behaviour culture, this is a credible option with consistent external validation. The most recent inspection evidence supports a picture of ambitious curriculum thinking paired with targeted support for children who need it.
It suits children who benefit from structure and close adult support, and it suits parents who value practical wraparound options alongside learning priorities. The key decision points are admissions competitiveness at Reception, and planning the Year 2 to Year 3 step early. Families considering it should use the Saved Schools shortlist feature to compare it alongside the likely junior route and any nearby alternatives.
The most recent inspection in May 2022 confirmed the school continues to be Good. Evidence highlights strong early reading, calm behaviour, and effective safeguarding, alongside an ambitious curriculum and targeted support for pupils with additional needs.
Reception places are coordinated by rather than applied for directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, the closing date was 15 January 2026, with offers made later in April.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 8:15am to 8:55am. Wraparound childcare for Reception to Year 2 runs after school, including a later session until 5:30pm on Monday to Thursday, with published charges.
The school publishes a rotating clubs list, including options such as Ocarina Club, Lego Club, Yoga Club, Baking Club, and Construction Club. Sessions are designed to be short and age-appropriate for infant pupils.
Children move on to junior provision for Year 3. Ofsted evidence from the neighbouring junior school notes most pupils enter from the next-door infant school and that both settings work to strengthen transition so progress continues smoothly.
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