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 primary where diversity is not a footnote, it is central to daily life. Broadfield describes a community in which families speak 37 different languages, and that multilingual reality shapes how staff communicate, teach vocabulary, and build confidence for pupils new to English.
Academically, the most recent published Key Stage 2 picture is mixed but specific. In 2024, 65.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. The sharper edge is maths and grammar, punctuation and spelling, with average scaled scores of 104 in maths and 106 in grammar, punctuation and spelling. Reading is closer to the national midpoint, with an average scaled score of 101.
For families who need practical support, the logistics are unusually clear. The day is staggered for start and finish times, with breakfast club from 7:45am and after-school club until 5pm, both bookable via the school’s online system.
Broadfield is a community school serving pupils aged 3 to 11, and its early years offer is a real entry route rather than an add-on. The nursery page emphasises hands-on learning and the freedom to explore, create, get messy, and learn through play, while also setting expectations around practical readiness, such as spare clothes for messy play. That combination usually suits families who value a structured setting but want early years to feel like early years, not a mini Year 1.
Leadership is clearly signposted. The headteacher is Mrs R Dardis, with a named senior team and class structure that parents can easily navigate, which tends to reduce friction for families joining mid-year or arriving from abroad.
A notable cultural feature is the emphasis on pupil voice. The School Council runs with a formal process that includes applications and selection, and meetings twice per half term. The council describes fundraising through a Christmas fair stall and a stated plan to raise money for Springhill Hospice, framed as a community cause in memory of a staff member. For parents, that points to a school that wants children to practise responsibility in real, concrete ways.
Broadfield’s 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes sit slightly above the England average on the headline combined measure. In 2024, 65.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with 62% across England. Higher standard outcomes were 10.67%, compared with an England average of 8%.
The component measures show where the strengths and pressure points are likely to be felt at home. Maths is comparatively strong, with 79% reaching the expected standard, and a maths scaled score of 104. Grammar, punctuation and spelling is also a strength, with 75% reaching the expected standard and a scaled score of 106. Reading is more variable, with 56% reaching the expected standard and a reading scaled score of 101. Science, at 72% meeting the expected standard, sits below the England average of 82%, which suggests families may want to understand how the school builds science vocabulary and knowledge over time.
Rankings are best treated as a contextual signpost rather than a verdict. Ranked 10,273rd in England and 26th in Rochdale for primary outcomes, this places the school below the England average overall, and these figures are based on FindMySchool rankings using official data. That context aligns with the mixed attainment profile, where several measures are healthy, but not all are consistently above national benchmarks.
The latest Ofsted inspection on 13 December 2023 judged the school Good overall, and graded Good across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
65.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Early years provision appears intentionally practical and language-rich. The nursery messaging prioritises exploratory play and learning through experience, which is particularly relevant in a community where many pupils may be building English alongside curriculum knowledge.
Key Stage 2 outcomes suggest the teaching approach may be especially effective in maths and spelling, punctuation and grammar, where scaled scores are strongest. For parents, the implication is that home support may be most valuable in reading stamina and comprehension, particularly if a child is not naturally drawn to reading or is still acquiring academic English.
Beyond classroom teaching, the school also uses experiences to anchor learning. Broadfield states it has its own minibus and takes children out to explore the curriculum, listing examples such as museums, castles, places of worship and sports stadiums. That matters because it signals an approach where knowledge is connected to the wider world, which can be motivating for pupils who learn best through context.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a Rochdale community primary, the main transition route is into local state secondary schools via the Local Authority’s coordinated process. The school’s website publishing pattern includes transition letters to families, suggesting a structured approach to preparing Year 6 for the next step, even where the secondary destinations will vary year by year.
For families thinking ahead, it is worth approaching Year 5 and early Year 6 as the time to understand the secondary landscape, including travel time and the pastoral fit, not only academic reputation. In areas with multiple options, children’s wellbeing in the first term of Year 7 often depends on predictable routines, friendships, and the practicalities of the school day.
Broadfield’s reception entry is coordinated by Rochdale Council, and the council publishes a clear timetable for September 2026 entry. The online system opens on Monday 15 September 2025, and the closing date for on-time applications is Thursday 15 January 2026. National offer day is Thursday 16 April 2026.
Demand data indicates competition for places. For the relevant entry route, there were 72 applications for 34 offers, which is 2.12 applications per place. The first-preference pressure is significant, with first-preference demand matching first-preference offers, which usually means families should treat it as a first-choice application only if they would genuinely accept the offer.
The school also signals readiness for in-year movement. Its admissions policy notes that children transferring during the school year, including those arriving from abroad, are invited with parents to a welcome meeting with the headteacher to discuss prior experience and ensure appropriate support. This is a practical plus in a highly mobile community.
Parents who want to sanity-check their address and how it may be treated under local criteria can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand their proximity and local alternatives before submitting preferences.
100%
1st preference success rate
31 of 31 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
34
Offers
34
Applications
72
Wellbeing is framed through both adult systems and pupil leadership. The School Council explicitly describes representing pupils’ views and feeding issues to senior leaders and governors where appropriate, which is a meaningful mechanism if it is taken seriously in day-to-day decisions.
Physical wellbeing and behaviour at social times is addressed through structured pupil roles. The Sports Leaders programme enrols Year 6 pupils, meeting every two weeks to plan lunchtime activities and contribute their views on sport across the school. The stated intent includes improving playground behaviour through organised, inclusive games. For parents, that implies supervision is supplemented by structured peer leadership, which can reduce low-level lunchtime issues for some children.
Broadfield’s enrichment offer is not left vague. Forest School is a named, developed programme, described as regular outdoor learning in a natural environment that the school has developed on its field into a woodland-style area. Sessions are led by trained Forest School leaders and emphasise confidence, teamwork, creativity and problem-solving.
Pupil leadership groups form a second strand. The School Council meets twice a half term, and the Sports Leaders programme is explicitly timetabled and targeted at Year 6, shaping activities at lunchtimes. That combination often suits children who like responsibility and social roles, and it can also help quieter pupils find structured ways to contribute.
The school also runs after-school activities that change each half term, and places are allocated via the same online platform used for wraparound care, which reduces admin complexity for families managing multiple children and clubs.
Start and finish times are staggered, and the school explicitly links this to safer roads and traffic flow, with children using different gates at arrival and collection. Breakfast club begins at 7:45am and after-school club finishes at 5pm, with booking managed online.
Reception timings are also published separately, with reception running 8:30am to 3:00pm. For transport, families typically want to check walking routes and the safest gate for their child’s year group, since the staggered model means routines can differ by age.
Performance is uneven by subject. Maths and grammar, punctuation and spelling look like strengths, while reading and science are more variable. For some children, that means extra focus on reading practice at home can make a disproportionate difference.
Admission is competitive. With 72 applications for 34 offers on the relevant entry route, families should assume competition and use all available preferences strategically.
Early years matters here. Nursery and reception messaging strongly supports exploratory learning and messy play. This suits many children, but some families prefer a more formal early years style.
A highly diverse intake can be a plus and a challenge. The school’s multilingual context is a strength for inclusion, but children who struggle with language acquisition may need careful support and patience over time.
Broadfield Community Primary School suits families who want a diverse, community-rooted primary with clear wraparound care and a strong emphasis on practical systems, pupil voice, and outdoor learning through Forest School. The academic picture suggests solid combined outcomes with particular strength in maths and spelling, punctuation and grammar, but with some variability in reading and science. Best suited to families who value inclusion and structure, and who are ready to support reading habits consistently at home.
Broadfield was judged Good at its latest inspection in December 2023, including a Good grade for early years. The 2024 Key Stage 2 combined outcome was slightly above the England average, with particular strength in maths and grammar, punctuation and spelling.
As a community primary, admissions are coordinated by Rochdale Council and places are allocated using the council’s published criteria. Because distance criteria and patterns can change, families should check the Local Authority guidance for the current year and verify how their address is assessed.
Yes. The school provides nursery and reception, and its early years information emphasises learning through play, exploration, and practical readiness for school routines. For current nursery session options and eligibility, families should check the school’s published early years information.
Yes. Breakfast club begins at 7:45am and after-school club runs until 5pm, with bookings managed through the school’s online system.
For September 2026 entry, Rochdale Council’s timetable shows applications opening on 15 September 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
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