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.
Reading is treated as a shared habit here, not just a lesson slot. The most recent inspection describes pupils who enjoy books, including opportunities to read to Star, the school dog, and to use a newer school library as a calm reading space.
Academically, the 2024 Key Stage 2 outcomes sit above England averages on the combined measure that most parents track. 71% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 15% reached greater depth, above the England benchmark of 8%. The scaled scores are also comfortably above 100, with reading at 104 and maths at 103. These numbers point to a school where basics and routines matter, and where pupils are expected to remember and apply learning over time.
Admissions demand is real. For the most recent Reception entry data available, there were 47 applications for 26 offers, around 1.81 applications per place. That oversubscription sits alongside Barnsley’s coordinated admissions timetable for September 2026 entry, with applications opening 01 September 2025, closing 15 January 2026, and national offer day on 16 April 2026.
The tone is purposeful and friendly, with a strong emphasis on children feeling safe and known. The most recent inspection frames the school as a welcoming community where pupils are happy, polite and respectful, and where bullying is described as rare. That matters because it suggests consistency in adult expectations and a culture where pupils trust staff to sort problems quickly.
A distinctive thread is citizenship. Pupils have weekly citizenship lessons and can talk confidently about equality and wider values, which gives the curriculum a social dimension beyond core subjects. The practical implication for families is that this is likely to suit children who respond well to clear behavioural norms and to being given responsibilities, for example the “subject ambassador” roles referenced in the inspection.
Leadership visibility is also clear from public information. The headteacher is Mrs J. Winnard, and the school website presents her as the named headteacher. Public documents show she was in post by spring 2019. (A specific appointment date as headteacher is not clearly published in the sources above, so it is best treated as “in post by 2019” rather than a precise start date.)
Nursery provision is part of the school’s structure, with Foundation Stage described as Nursery (FS1) and Reception (FS2), and an emphasis on a caring and stimulating early years setting. For parents of younger children, this continuity can be attractive, since routines and relationships can carry forward into Reception.
This section reflects official data translated into parent-friendly meaning, plus the FindMySchool ranking context.
Expected standard in reading, writing and maths: 71%, above the England average of 62%.
Higher standard (greater depth combined): 15%, above the England average of 8%.
Scaled scores: Reading 104, Maths 103, GPS 104 (100 is the national scaled-score reference point).
The profile is of a school that gets a high proportion of pupils to the expected standard and also stretches a meaningful minority to higher performance, particularly compared with England averages.
Ranked 10,193rd in England and 40th in Rotherham for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This sits below England average in percentile terms, placing it in the lower national band overall. The key nuance for parents is that local context, cohort size, and the specific year’s profile can pull rankings around, so it is more useful to read this alongside the KS2 outcomes above rather than as a standalone judgement.
The inspection evidence helps explain how these outcomes are pursued. Teaching routines include structured recall and practice, for example “daily practice” at the start of maths lessons, and a phonics approach with books carefully matched to the sounds pupils have been taught. If your child benefits from repetition, clear modelling, and quick identification of gaps, the approach described will likely feel supportive and steady.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
71.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum intent emphasises inclusion and enjoyment, while keeping expectations high. In practice, the inspection describes a well planned curriculum and teachers who build recall and practice into lessons, supported by subject leaders and staff training.
A concrete example is mathematics, where the school describes using White Rose Maths and “daily practice” sessions to consolidate learning and reduce knowledge loss over time. The implication is a classroom experience with frequent retrieval, repeated exposure to core methods, and an expectation that children explain and apply, not just complete worksheets.
Leaders introduced a phonics scheme with staff training and investment in matched reading books. This is the sort of operational detail that tends to matter in early reading, because it helps children build confidence through texts that sit at the right level.
The inspection is clear that early years has been an area for development, noting work to improve equipment, environment organisation, curriculum detail, and vocabulary planning. For parents considering Nursery or Reception, this is worth asking about directly: what has changed since 2022, how staff track language development, and how outdoor learning is structured.
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 Barnsley-area primary serving children up to age 11, most pupils will transfer to secondary schools through the usual local authority process at the end of Year 6. The school does not publicly publish a destination list for specific secondaries, so families should plan on the normal pattern of applying for secondary places based on home address, criteria and preferences.
Two practical steps help here:
Look at the likely secondary options for Bolton-on-Dearne and surrounding areas, including travel time and transport.
If you are comparing several primaries, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub and comparison tools to weigh outcomes and context side by side, rather than relying on impressions alone.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority. For September 2026 entry (children born 01 September 2021 to 31 August 2022), Barnsley’s published timeline is: applications open 01 September 2025, close 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026.
Demand indicators from the latest available entry-route data show 47 applications for 26 offers, which supports the “oversubscribed” label. This is not extreme compared with some urban hotspots, but it does mean families should treat it as competitive rather than automatic.
100%
1st preference success rate
26 of 26 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
26
Offers
26
Applications
47
Pastoral signals are strong. Pupils are described as feeling safe, and staff are seen as approachable and kind. There is also a clear structure for safeguarding information and points of contact, with designated safeguarding roles published.
SEND identification and support is described as early and systematic, with the special educational needs coordinator working closely with class teachers and parents and pupils with SEND achieving well against targets. For families who need clarity on support, that is a helpful baseline, and worth exploring further for intervention style, communication with parents, and how needs are met within class.
Extracurricular life is presented as a mix of staff-led and provider-led opportunities across the year. The most useful detail for parents is the specific flavour of what children actually do.
A good example is “Drawing Club” in Reception (FS2), described as running multiple times per week to support confidence in writing through drawing and captioning. The implication is that creative activities are being used deliberately to strengthen literacy, not treated as a separate add-on.
The school has run multi-sports after-school clubs (led by a named provider) and participation opportunities such as Young Voices, which typically involves large-scale choir rehearsal and performance experiences. These kinds of activities suit children who gain confidence from team contexts and performing with peers.
The reading strand is also an “extra” in the best sense. Star the school dog is used as a motivator for reading, and the school library is singled out as part of pupils’ reading enjoyment. For some children, that kind of low-pressure reading incentive can be the bridge from decoding to genuine habit.
For travel, Bolton-on-Dearne is served by rail via Bolton-upon-Dearne station, which can be relevant for families commuting across the Dearne Valley. Day-to-day, most primary journeys will still be walking, cycling, or local bus and car drop-off patterns, so it is worth checking the immediate approach roads and parking expectations with the school.
Early years development focus. The most recent inspection highlights that early years curriculum detail and vocabulary planning needed strengthening at the time, with improvement work underway. Parents of Nursery and Reception children should ask what has changed since 2022 and how language development is tracked.
Competitive Reception entry. Recent data indicates 47 applications for 26 offers, so admission is not guaranteed. Families should read the latest admissions arrangements carefully and plan a realistic back-up option.
Heather Garth Primary School Academy is at its strongest when you look at the lived curriculum details behind the numbers: a reading-centred culture, structured maths practice, and a clear emphasis on pupils feeling safe and supported. The KS2 outcomes are above England averages on the core combined measure, even if the overall national ranking sits lower. It suits families who want a steady, routine-led primary experience with visible investment in reading habits and clear expectations around behaviour and belonging. The main hurdle is admission demand at Reception, so shortlisting should be pragmatic as well as hopeful.
The school’s most recent full inspection judged it Good, and official data shows Key Stage 2 outcomes above England averages on the combined reading, writing and maths measure. Together, that points to a school with consistent expectations, a strong focus on core skills, and a positive culture around reading.
Barnsley’s admissions process is coordinated by the local authority and does not operate traditional catchment areas in the way some councils do. In practice, places are allocated using published oversubscription criteria, so families should read the current admissions arrangements carefully and consider how their circumstances match the criteria.
For Barnsley applicants, the published closing date is 15 January 2026, with applications opening 01 September 2025 and offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school runs Nursery (FS1) and Reception (FS2) within its Foundation Stage, aiming to provide a stimulating early years environment as children start school life. Nursery fee details should be checked on the school’s official information, since early years funding and charging arrangements vary.
Get in touch with the school directly
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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