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 small detail tells you a lot here, the first formal session of the day is early reading, scheduled to start promptly after registration. That priority aligns with the most recent inspection profile, which rated early years provision as Outstanding and behaviour and attitudes as Outstanding, alongside Good judgements for quality of education and leadership and management (inspection 17 and 18 June 2025).
This is a maintained infant school for ages 3 to 7, serving local families in Rotherham. The published roll at inspection time was 289 pupils. With nursery provision on site and Reception to Year 2 in the main school, it suits families who want a single setting for those early years, then a planned transition to a junior school for Year 3.
There is a strong sense of pride and belonging across the early years and Key Stage 1, with pupils excited to begin the day and relationships between staff and pupils established early. Expectations are high, including for pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities, and the day-to-day culture is described as calm and considerate, with routines embedded from the start.
A particularly distinctive feature is the pupil leadership language used for behaviour and inclusion. The report describes a pupil group called the kindness crew, supporting other pupils to make good choices when needed. Alongside this, the school places clear emphasis on diversity, tolerance and inclusivity, with pupils learning about these themes in depth and showing respect to visitors and each other.
Leadership continuity matters in infant schools because so much of the experience is about consistent routines and shared language. The headteacher is Nicola Kitchen, who took up the substantive post in 2022. That time frame is relevant because the current inspection is the first routine inspection since the COVID-19 period, so it captures how the school is operating now, not how it performed under older frameworks.
Because this is an infant school ending at Year 2, it does not publish Key Stage 2 outcomes, and there is no standard “headline” exam set that fairly represents performance in the same way it would for a full primary. In practice, what matters most for parents is whether early reading is taught systematically and whether children leave Year 2 with secure foundations in language, number, and learning habits.
The school’s inspection profile points to several concrete indicators of that foundation-building:
Early reading is a priority, phonics is taught consistently, and pupils who need additional support receive it promptly, which helps children become fluent readers.
In early years, children develop language and listening skills through songs, rhymes and stories, with strong engagement in shared reading activities.
Across subjects, the curriculum is ambitious and broad, with careful sequencing of what pupils learn and in what order.
An honest nuance for families is that the report also flags an improvement point: in some subjects, for a small group of pupils, teaching does not always build securely on what pupils already know, which can limit how confidently they practise and apply learning. That is a useful prompt to ask, during a visit, how leaders check curriculum “stickiness” beyond English and maths, and how they support children who need extra practice to keep up.
The school’s stated aims focus on high quality learning and teaching, a relevant and inclusive curriculum, and helping children understand rights and responsibilities through British values. That intent translates into an approach that is very structured where it counts, especially around reading, routines, and daily classroom expectations.
Early reading is positioned as a core organising principle. Read Write Inc is explicitly named as the first lesson of the day, starting at 9.00am, which is a practical signal of priority rather than a slogan. The inspection evidence supports that consistency, describing phonics as taught well and pupils enjoying reading. For parents, the implication is straightforward: if your child responds well to predictable routines and systematic teaching, this environment is likely to suit.
In mathematics, the school describes a “small steps” approach with short cycles of demonstration, questioning, and tasks, repeated through a lesson, using practical apparatus, pictorial representations, and then abstract methods when children are ready. In an infant context, that kind of lesson architecture is often what prevents quieter children from slipping behind unnoticed, because checks for understanding are frequent and immediate.
Children leave at the end of Year 2 and families must apply for a Year 3 place at a junior school for September 2026, rather than assuming an automatic transfer. The local authority application deadline published for these junior transfer applications is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
For many local families, practical continuity matters as much as school name. Breakfast club provision described for this school operates via Herringthorpe Junior School in a flexible space behind the junior school’s main reception, then children are escorted to their classroom for the start of the infant school day. That operational link is relevant if you are weighing up junior options and want the simplest routine for a working week.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Admission is primarily about eligibility and availability, not affordability.
The demand picture for Reception entry is competitive. In the most recent admissions cycle captured there were 112 applications for 69 offers, which is about 1.62 applications per place. The entry route is recorded as oversubscribed. (These figures are a single-year snapshot and demand can change year to year.)
For September 2026 starting primary school entry, Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council publishes the coordinated admissions timeline as: apply by 15 January 2026, with offers on 16 April 2026. In practical terms, families should plan backwards from that January deadline, especially if you want to visit, confirm wraparound arrangements, or understand how priority rules apply in your particular circumstances.
Nursery (Foundation 1) admissions run differently. The school publishes a nursery application form for families applying for three and four year old places.
For parents who want a more data-driven shortlisting process, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for checking how viable “distance-based” options may be in a given year, even when published last-distance figures are not available for a specific school.
100%
1st preference success rate
60 of 60 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
69
Offers
69
Applications
112
Pastoral support in an infant setting is often about routine, relationships, and early intervention, and the evidence points to all three. Behaviour expectations are clear and applied consistently, contributing to a calm and orderly environment. Playtimes are also described as structured well, with plenty of opportunities for pupils to play different games together.
The school puts explicit focus on wellbeing approaches through its published resources, including trauma and mental health informed practice and a positive playtime strategy that aims to create purposeful outdoor provision for Key Stage 1, drawing on early years principles such as mud kitchens, large scale construction, and small world play. That matters for children who regulate best through movement and play, and for families who want wellbeing work to be visible in daily routines rather than kept for a single “PSHE slot”.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and or disabilities is described as a strength in the inspection evidence, with the school diligent in identification and using defined pathways of support. A distinctive in-school element is “The Hive”, described on the website as a School Enhanced Provision enabling increased personalisation of the curriculum, and referenced within the SEND offer structure.
Safeguarding is reported as effective.
For a school of this age range, enrichment works best when it is concrete and hands-on, and the school provides multiple examples that fit that bill.
A Year 2 STEM club is described as working with a STEM ambassador and in collaboration with STEMazing, using interactive sessions that focus on ideas such as how shape affects design and real-world function. The implication is that STEM is introduced as curiosity and problem-solving, not as “mini GCSE science”.
Several enrichment clubs have published examples:
Cooking Club content includes food hygiene and safety routines, careful use of utensils, and teamwork while sharing ingredients and equipment.
Art Club examples include learning about Wassily Kandinsky and creating work inspired by his style, with attention to colour, shape, and painting technique.
Playdough Club includes themed creations and making playdough by following instructions, supporting fine motor skills and sequencing.
Construction Club examples include large-scale building linked to transport themes, such as roads, tracks, boats, and bridges, emphasising resilience and planning.
The Grey to Green Club links to the National Education Nature Park programme, positioning nature recovery and curriculum-linked outdoor learning as an ongoing project rather than a one-off event. Combined with Eco-Warriors and school council activity listed on the site navigation, it suggests pupil voice is taken seriously even at infant age, in age-appropriate formats.
The core school day runs 8.45am to 3.15pm, with doors opening at 8.45am and morning registration at 8.55am.
Breakfast club is available from 7.30am at the junior school site and costs £4.00 per day, with breakfast served until 8.15am before children are escorted to class. After-school wraparound care is described as a pilot supported by a Department for Education grant, planned to open from 03 March 2025, with working parents prioritised for places and the ability to use childcare vouchers.
For travel planning, this is a residential area setting, so most families will prioritise walkability and short car journeys. If you rely on wraparound, it is worth confirming pick-up points and handover routines between the infant and junior sites, as breakfast provision explicitly involves escorted transfer.
** With 112 applications for 69 offers snapshot, admission is competitive. Make sure you understand the local authority’s priority rules and deadlines well ahead of 15 January 2026 for September 2026 entry.
Inspection improvement point in curriculum security. The inspection highlights that, in some subjects for a small group of pupils, learning does not always build as securely on prior knowledge, which can affect practice and application. Ask how leaders are addressing this beyond early reading, and how progress is checked across foundation subjects.
Infant-to-junior transition needs active planning. Year 2 is not the end of “primary” for most families, you must apply for Year 3 at a junior school, with the same January deadline and April offer date.
Wraparound is evolving. After-school provision is described as a grant-supported pilot; availability and eligibility priorities can change, so confirm details early if childcare is central to your decision.
This is an infant school with a clear identity: strong early years, calm routines, and a well-developed approach to behaviour and personal development. The best fit is for families who want systematic early reading, structured days, and practical enrichment through hands-on clubs. It is also well suited to children who benefit from predictable routines and clear expectations, including those needing additional support, with in-school structures such as The Hive. The key challenge is securing a place in an oversubscribed context and then planning the junior transfer smoothly.
For an infant setting, the key signals are early reading, behaviour, and how well children are prepared for the next stage. The latest inspection profile is strong in those areas, with Outstanding judgements for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and early years provision, plus Good for quality of education and leadership and management (June 2025).
Applications are coordinated through Rotherham’s local authority process. The published deadline for September 2026 primary entry is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Nursery places use a school application form. The school describes 15 or 30 funded hours across five days in term time, with morning and afternoon sessions, and eligibility evidence required for 30 hours. For nursery fee details beyond funded entitlement, the school directs families to the relevant official guidance.
Families need to apply for a Year 3 place at a junior school for September 2026. The published timeline is the same, apply by 15 January 2026 with offers on 16 April 2026.
Breakfast club starts at 7.30am and runs via the junior school provision, with a stated cost of £4.00 per day. After-school wraparound is described as a grant-supported pilot planned to open from 03 March 2025, with working parents prioritised for places and childcare vouchers accepted.
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