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 a small, local infant and nursery setting serving families in Featherstone, with an age range of 3 to 7 and a published capacity of 180. The tone is community-first, with staff aiming for consistent expectations and calm, supportive relationships from nursery through to Year 2.
Leadership looks stable. The current headteacher is Philip Barnett, shown as headteacher on the school website and local authority listings, and recorded as headteacher from 01 September 2017 in the school’s governor register.
For parents, the headline is a Good judgement under the current Ofsted framework, paired with clear evidence of structured early reading, a mapped mathematics sequence, and a generally positive pupil experience.
A “strong sense of community” comes through clearly in the most recent official report, and it shows up in how the school talks about partnership with families and the way pupils describe feeling secure. The setting is small enough that routines matter, and the report’s emphasis on adults knowing pupils well suggests a culture where behaviour expectations are taught explicitly rather than assumed.
Early years is not treated as a bolt-on. Nursery is referenced as the start point for mathematics sequencing, and early reading is described as beginning in the early years with consistency across the school. For families with younger children, that matters because it usually translates into predictable classroom habits: phonics practice that builds week by week, and number work that is repeated and extended rather than constantly reset.
The school also frames itself as inclusive, with adjustments and scaffolds used to help pupils access learning. Support is described as practical and classroom-based, rather than removing children from learning for long periods.
Because this is an infant school (nursery to Year 2), it does not publish the standard Key Stage 2 outcome data used to rank many primary schools nationally, and there is no FindMySchool ranking position available provided for this school.
What parents can rely on instead is the quality of curriculum and classroom practice described in the latest official inspection materials: early reading is systematic and consistent, books are matched to pupils’ phonics knowledge, and staff encourage regular reading at school and at home. The mathematics sequence is described as carefully mapped from nursery, with key knowledge identified and taught in a structured order so pupils can explain their methods by Year 2.
If your child thrives on clear routines, repetition, and incremental mastery, this is the style of practice that tends to suit them well.
Reading is positioned as a core engine of the curriculum. The school’s approach is described as consistent across classes, with home reading books aligned to the sounds pupils are learning and a renewed focus on reading for pleasure through the library. The implication is straightforward: children are less likely to be given books that are too difficult too soon, which can protect confidence in the early stages.
Mathematics is another anchor. The report describes a sequence that begins in nursery and is tailored to learning needs, with essential knowledge made explicit and taught in a well-ordered way. For many pupils, that “mapped-out” approach means fewer gaps and less reliance on parents having to reverse-engineer what the child missed.
Not every subject is equally specified. In particular, the report flags that some foundation subjects had less precise definition of key knowledge and skills at the time, which can reduce how much pupils retain over time in those areas. That is not unusual in infant settings, but it is relevant if you want a particularly strong early computing or humanities thread.
For pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, the picture is practical and integrated. Teachers adapt their delivery, use scaffolds and knowledge organisers, and leaders engage external agencies so support is specific rather than generic.
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 key transition is from Year 2 to Year 3. In Wakefield Council, families moving from an infant school into a junior or primary school for Year 3 must make an application; it is not an automatic transfer. The online portal for September 2026 transfer opens on 01 November 2025, and the national closing date for on-time applications is 15 January 2026.
Practical implication: even if your child is settled and you assume the next school is “the obvious one”, it is worth treating the Year 3 move as a proper admissions decision. Families who want to compare local options can use FindMySchool’s map tools to check travel time and practical routines, then match those to admissions criteria and availability.
Demand is real. For the main entry route provided, the school was oversubscribed, with 82 applications for 50 offers, a ratio of 1.64 applications per offer. This is enough competition that timelines and accurate paperwork matter.
For Reception places in Wakefield Council for September 2026, the online Parent Portal opens on 01 November 2025; the on-time application deadline is 15 January 2026; offers are released on 16 April 2026 (from 12:30am online).
Nursery entry is handled differently. The school’s admissions information directs families to contact the school directly for nursery admissions rather than applying through the same route as Reception. If you are considering nursery with an eye on continuing into Reception, ask explicitly how progression is handled and whether any assessment or priority criteria apply.
Distance data for “last offer” is not available provided for this school, so families should focus on the published admissions criteria and the local authority’s coordinated scheme, then validate practical feasibility using official catchment tools and the school’s guidance.
100%
1st preference success rate
47 of 47 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
50
Offers
50
Applications
82
The strongest indicators here are about safety, relationships, and the consistency of expectations. Pupils are described as feeling safe and enjoying school, with adults acting quickly if bullying concerns arise. That does not mean difficulties never happen, but it suggests there are clear systems and adult visibility.
The school also builds personal development through small responsibilities, including playtime buddies and school council roles. In infant schools, these roles are less about prestige and more about social learning: waiting your turn, modelling kindness, and learning to speak to a group.
Safeguarding is treated as a culture rather than a checklist, with staff training and leaders checking understanding of key messages.
For a young setting, the offer is surprisingly structured. Breakfast club runs five mornings a week in term time, and the school also runs after-school clubs, typically as short sessions after the main day rather than full wraparound childcare.
The most concrete examples of enrichment are the clubs and trips that appear in school materials:
Multi-Sports club, offered as an after-school activity for Year 2 in the published clubs letter.
Choir, also listed in the same after-school clubs letter.
Year 2 seaside leavers’ trip to Bridlington, presented as an end-of-year day out.
Music is also explicitly supported through a choir that meets weekly, with the intention of involving as many children as possible and performing on occasions through the year. That matters because infant music can easily become sporadic; a weekly choir implies routine, rehearsal habits, and confidence-building performance opportunities for children who enjoy singing.
Breakfast club is clearly defined: it runs Monday to Friday from 8.00am to 8.45am in term time, breakfast service ends at 8.25am, and there is a published maximum of 30 places per day.
After-school clubs appear to run as short sessions (for example, 3.15pm to 4.00pm is referenced in transition materials and clubs letters). The local authority’s directory entry for the school records wraparound provision as “No”, so families who need childcare to 5.30pm or 6.00pm should check current options directly rather than assuming a later after-school provision exists on site.
Transport-wise, this is a local infant serving the immediate area around Nunns Lane in Featherstone, so many families will be looking at walking routes, drop-off timing, and whether siblings are at nearby settings. For admissions planning, use the local authority catchment tools and confirm any changes annually.
Oversubscription is material. With 82 applications for 50 offers in the provided admissions results, entry can be competitive even for a small infant. Ensure you understand the admissions criteria and meet deadlines.
Wraparound childcare may be limited. Breakfast club is clear and well-specified, but the council directory lists wraparound provision as not offered, and after-school activity appears to be club-based sessions rather than extended childcare. This matters for working families who need longer cover.
Foundation subjects may vary in precision. The most recent inspection materials highlight strong curriculum work in reading and mathematics, but also flag that some subjects had less clearly defined knowledge and skills at the time. If computing and humanities depth is a priority, ask how these areas are now structured across nursery, Reception, Year 1, and Year 2.
Year 3 transfer is a separate admissions step. If you plan ahead for junior school early, you reduce stress later. The local authority’s portal and deadlines are clear for September 2026 transfer applications.
This is a Good infant and nursery setting with a clear emphasis on early reading, structured mathematics, and consistent routines from nursery upwards. Families who value steady classroom habits, explicit teaching of basics, and a community feel are likely to find it a good fit. Who it suits best: local families in Featherstone who want a focused, well-organised start to school, and who can work within competitive admissions timelines and practical childcare constraints. The biggest decision point is not the education itself, it is whether the on-site hours and wraparound options match your family’s working day.
The most recent inspection outcome is Good, and the evidence points to clear strengths in early reading, a carefully sequenced mathematics curriculum, and a culture where pupils feel safe and supported.
Applications are made through Wakefield’s coordinated admissions process. The Parent Portal opens on 01 November 2025, the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Nursery is part of the school’s age range, and early years is referenced as the starting point for structured learning such as mathematics sequencing. For nursery admissions, the school directs families to contact the school directly.
The school runs breakfast club and after-school clubs that vary by term. Examples in school materials include Multi-Sports and Choir, and Year 2 pupils also have end-of-year trips such as a seaside leavers’ day.
Families need to apply for a Year 3 place at a junior or primary school, it is not automatic. For September 2026 transfers, Wakefield’s portal opens on 01 November 2025 and the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026.
Get in touch with the school directly
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