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.
Westvale Park Primary Academy is a newer state primary in Horley, Surrey, opened in September 2020 and still growing into its full Year 6 intake. That matters for families comparing results, because long-run Key Stage 2 patterns take time to establish. What is already clear is the school’s direction and culture. The latest Ofsted inspection (June 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding for personal development, and confirmed safeguarding as effective.
Daily routines are intentionally structured, with an emphasis on reading and language from the earliest years, and a strong wellbeing thread running through the personal, social and health education programme. There is also a practical family-friendly offer, including wraparound care via an external provider and a clubs programme that mixes free staff-led activities with paid specialist options.
The school presents itself as explicitly values-led, with six core values, Family, Gratitude, Curiosity, Responsibility, Diversity, Excellence. These values show up in multiple places across school communications, and they also appear repeatedly in official reporting.
The school’s age gives it a particular feel. Families joining now are still helping to shape norms, traditions, and the rhythm of events. That can suit parents who like being part of something that is still building momentum, and who value responsive leadership and a sense of collective ownership. It can be less attractive to those who want long-established patterns for everything from school productions to Year 6 end-of-year traditions.
Leadership is clearly visible. Mrs Susan Kelly is listed as head teacher and Designated Safeguarding Lead, supported by a deputy head who is also SENDCo, and assistant heads with pastoral and teaching and learning responsibilities. That structure is helpful in a growing school because it allows for clear ownership of behaviour, inclusion, and curriculum consistency.
This is not a school where parents can rely on a long archive of published end-of-primary results yet. The school opened in September 2020, and it is still maturing into a full primary roll. For families who want to benchmark performance in a traditional way, the most reliable public evidence at present comes from inspection and curriculum detail rather than years of published Key Stage 2 trend data.
Reading is positioned as a priority and is treated as foundational, not simply a discrete subject. The school’s approach to phonics and early reading is framed as systematic, and support for pupils who struggle is described as targeted and timely. That is important for parents of children who need structure early on, including those with speech, language, or wider learning needs.
For parents comparing local schools, the best approach is to use a mixed evidence set, inspect the curriculum plan, understand how assessment is used day-to-day, and ask specific questions about how the school identifies gaps and responds to them. FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools can help you shortlist nearby options, then you can dig into what is distinctive about teaching and inclusion here.
Curriculum design is described as carefully sequenced, with an emphasis on building vocabulary and connecting new learning to what pupils already know. The key question for any school is whether that sequencing lands consistently in everyday classroom practice. Here, the central improvement point identified in official reporting is about using assessment information more sharply, so that learning activities reliably build on prior learning and address gaps quickly.
In practical terms, that is a useful prompt for prospective parents. Ask how teachers check understanding during lessons, how misconceptions are caught, and what happens when pupils need re-teaching. Also ask how leaders support consistency across year groups as the school continues to add cohorts and recruit staff.
The early years offer matters, because children can join from age two. The school describes Nursery learning in close relationship to older pupils, and places emphasis on language development and an enabling environment. For families considering Nursery as a route in, it is important to understand progression, transition arrangements, and the fact that Nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary, the main transition is into local secondary schools at the end of Year 6. Parents should expect most pupils to move on to a mix of local comprehensive secondary schools and, for some families, selective routes where relevant. The best evidence on transition quality is usually the school’s own processes, how it prepares pupils for the move, and how it communicates with receiving secondaries.
One practical advantage of joining a newer school is the potential for highly intentional transition design. Ask how Year 6 transition will be structured as cohorts mature, including how study habits, independence, and emotional readiness are taught in the final years of primary. Families who want before-and-after care continuity should also check how wraparound arrangements work for older pupils as clubs and fixtures increase.
The headline point is demand. Reception entry is oversubscribed in the available admissions data. For Reception 2026 entry, applications are made through Surrey’s coordinated admissions process, with a published closing date of 15 January 2026.
The school’s published admissions information also highlights open mornings scheduled for September 2026 for prospective families. This is a helpful signal that the school expects continued interest and is actively managing visits and tours.
For Nursery, the school provides separate nursery admissions information, but families should keep one crucial rule in mind. A Nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place. If your child attends Nursery, you still need to apply for Reception through the local authority route.
If you are planning around proximity, use FindMySchool’s Map Search tools to check your practical distance and to sense-check whether your address typically sits inside realistic allocation ranges in similar Surrey admissions patterns. Even when distance is not the only criterion, being clear-eyed about local competition can prevent unpleasant surprises.
Applications
145
Total received
Places Offered
58
Subscription Rate
2.5x
Apps per place
Pastoral culture is a visible strength. The school’s personal development judgement is particularly strong, and wellbeing is described as embedded through a structured personal, social and health education programme with a strong emphasis on mental health. This is likely to suit families who want emotional literacy treated as part of everyday schooling rather than a bolt-on.
There are specific capacity signals too. The staff list includes an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA), and senior leaders include a dedicated pastoral assistant head. That tends to matter most when a school is growing quickly, because new cohorts can bring wide variation in need, and consistent pastoral routines are what keep behaviour calm and classrooms focused.
Safeguarding arrangements are confirmed as effective, with a described culture of vigilance, detailed record-keeping, and regular training.
The clubs programme is not just a generic list. Timetables show a broad mix of staff-led and specialist-run activities, with many internal clubs offered free of charge for pupils. Examples across the published timetables include Lego club, Chess, Book Club, Choir, Storytelling, Times Table Rockstars, Recorder, Ukulele, Yoga, Keep Fit, Netball, and themed sports options such as girls’ football and boys’ football for older year groups. There are also more playful offerings that help build belonging, including Board Games and even Quidditch for Years 4 and 5.
Outdoor learning has a distinctive place in school life. Forest School is presented as a regular part of provision, and there is also an after-school Forest School club option for older pupils who want to extend those skills.
The school’s wider enrichment includes practical experiences. Official reporting references trips and clubs as a meaningful part of the offer, including a Year 2 residential to High Ashurst, and sustainability learning tied to caring for the school’s chickens. For many families, that mix of outdoor responsibility, structured clubs, and early residential experience will be a strong fit.
The core school day is clearly structured, with an 8:40am start and registration closing at 8:50am, and a 3:20pm collection time for the published phases. Lunchtimes are described as a family dining model, with table service in younger years to support routines, conversation, and manners.
Wraparound care is available via an external provider, with published hours that start from 7:30am and run until 6:00pm, including provision for nursery children as well as primary pupils. If wraparound care is central to your working week, check term-time booking patterns, holiday coverage, and how handover works for Nursery versus Reception.
A newer school still building track record. Opened in September 2020, so families should expect fewer years of published end-of-primary outcome trends than at long-established local schools.
Assessment use is an improvement priority. External reporting highlights the need for teachers to use assessment information more consistently to address gaps quickly; ask how this is being embedded across year groups.
Demand for places. Reception entry is oversubscribed in the available admissions data; families should plan early and understand Surrey’s coordinated admissions timeline.
Nursery does not guarantee Reception. This is a common misunderstanding; Nursery families still need to apply separately through the local authority for a Reception place.
Westvale Park Primary Academy suits families who want a modern, growing state primary with a clear values framework, strong personal development, and an intentional focus on reading and wellbeing. The school also has a practical offer for working parents, with wraparound care and a notably varied clubs timetable for a primary setting. Best suited to parents who are comfortable joining a school still building its long-run results story, and who are willing to engage actively with admissions timelines in an oversubscribed context.
The school was rated Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection, with personal development judged Outstanding. Safeguarding arrangements were confirmed as effective, and the school is described as calm and orderly with a strong culture of wellbeing.
Reception applications are made through Surrey’s coordinated admissions process. The published closing date for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, and families should also check the school’s open morning arrangements for tour opportunities.
No. Nursery attendance does not guarantee a place in Reception. Families must still apply for Reception through the local authority admissions route.
The published school day starts at 8:40am, with registration closing at 8:50am, and collection at 3:20pm for the listed year groups. Families should confirm the exact timings for their child’s phase, particularly as the school grows.
Yes. Wraparound care is available via an external provider, with hours starting from 7:30am and running until 6:00pm, including provision for nursery children as well as primary pupils.
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