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.
Henry Hinde Infant School serves children aged 4 to 7 in Bilton, Rugby, with a clear emphasis on early independence, communication, reading and mathematics. It is part of Transforming Lives Educational Trust and works closely with the linked junior school, which matters for families planning the full primary journey from Reception to Year 6.
The school’s most recent Ofsted inspection, dated 29 March 2023 and published 23 May 2023, confirmed it continues to be Good.
For families weighing Reception entry, the practical reality is competition. Recent admissions data shows 68 applications for 28 offers, which equates to 2.43 applications per place and an oversubscribed picture.
Leadership has also shifted over time. The current principal is Mrs Becky O’Neill, described as Interim Principal in school materials; she is in post by September 2025.
This is a school that talks in the language of curiosity, resilience and being ready for the next stage. That matters at infant age because it shapes everything from how Reception children are helped to manage routines, to how Year 2 pupils take on small responsibilities and learn to work alongside others. The school day is structured, with clear start and finish points, and a sense that consistency is part of the culture rather than a bolt-on.
External observations describe pupils as enthusiastic about learning and keen on solving problems, with adults encouraging independence from the start. In infant settings, that usually shows up in practical behaviours, managing coats and bags, moving between carpet and table tasks, taking turns, and making choices in learning time without constant adult direction.
Responsibility is also visible in age-appropriate roles. References to play leaders and buddying for Reception indicate that leadership is framed as service and kindness, not status. For many children, especially those who gain confidence through helping others, this is a small but powerful part of how belonging is built in Key Stage 1.
The school also signals that it thinks beyond the basics. Forest School runs in Year 1 and Year 2 on alternate weeks for each class, with practical activities like den building, natural art and safe fire experiences. That kind of curriculum strand often benefits pupils who learn best through movement, talk and real-world problem solving, and it can be particularly effective at developing vocabulary and teamwork when it is planned tightly.
As an infant school, Henry Hinde’s story is not mainly told through headline end-of-primary measures. The more useful questions for parents are about what children learn by the end of Year 2, how well reading and number sense are established, and whether pupils leave Year 2 ready for the expectations and independence of Year 3.
External evidence points to a curriculum with a clear focus on communication, reading and mathematics, and an emphasis on building essential skills for the next stage of education. For parents, the implication is that the school is positioning itself as a strong “foundation builder”, aiming to send children to junior school with secure early reading habits and the confidence to tackle increasingly demanding work.
Parents comparing schools locally may find it helpful to use FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool to view nearby primary outcomes side-by-side, since infant schools can vary in how their data is presented relative to full primaries.
The curriculum intent is explicit: communication, reading and mathematics are treated as priorities, not background assumptions. In infant education, that usually means systematic early reading, regular practice of number facts, and frequent structured talk. When it is done well, children gain fluency that later reduces stress in Year 3 and beyond.
Forest School adds a distinctive counterbalance to desk-based learning. The details published, alternate-week sessions in Year 1 and Year 2 with class-specific afternoons, suggest it is not an occasional treat but a planned component. Done consistently, this can strengthen attention, language development and confidence, especially for pupils who may not shine first in pencil-and-paper tasks.
The school also frames enrichment as part of its offer. The “Above and Beyond” curriculum list includes experiences such as visiting a working farm, theatre trips, learning an instrument, working with professional artists, and participating in inter-schools sport. The value here is not the list itself, it is that children meet a wider range of contexts early, which helps teachers build knowledge and vocabulary that later supports comprehension and writing.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because Henry Hinde is an infant school, the key transition is into Year 3 at junior school. For many families, the practical route is Henry Hinde Junior School, and the local authority makes clear that transfer to Year 3 is not automatic even where schools share a name. Families should plan that step early and treat it as a separate application decision.
Beyond that, pupils eventually move into the secondary system in Rugby and the wider Warwickshire area. The strongest indicator of future fit at this stage is whether the child is developing secure early reading, positive learning habits, and social confidence, since those traits travel well to any junior and then secondary pathway.
Reception admissions are coordinated through Warwickshire, with a standard countywide timetable for September 2026 entry. The application window opens on 1 November 2025, the deadline is 4.00pm on 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
The school is oversubscribed in the most recent admissions figures available here, with 2.43 applications per place. That does not automatically mean it is impossible to secure a place, but it does mean families should treat application accuracy, deadlines, and realistic preferences as important.
For September 2026 starters, the school advertised an Open Morning on Monday 20 October at 9.30am, beginning with a talk from the principal followed by a tour. If you are shortlisting, this is often the best moment to test the feel of routines, behaviour expectations, and how staff talk about early reading and pupil support.
Parents who are weighing proximity factors should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check their precise distance from the school gate and understand how this compares with typical local patterns, since small differences can matter in oversubscribed settings.
100%
1st preference success rate
23 of 23 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
28
Offers
28
Applications
68
Pastoral work in infant schools is frequently about relationships, routines, and early help. External commentary describes pupils feeling safe and well looked after, with staff dealing quickly with any bullying incidents. That is the baseline parents should expect, and it matters particularly for children who are anxious about starting school or who need clear, calm adult responses to social conflicts.
The staffing structure published by the school shows multiple designated safeguarding leads and a named SENDCo, which signals a safeguarding culture that is embedded across leadership rather than sitting with one person. For families of children with additional needs, clarity about who coordinates support is often more valuable than glossy promises.
Support for pupils with SEND is described as effective, with teaching adapted so pupils can access the same learning as classmates, and teaching assistants helping pupils well because they know them. In infant education, this often looks like carefully scaffolded phonics practice, structured talk support, and consistent routines that reduce cognitive load.
Clubs at this age should be genuinely child-friendly and low barrier, with an emphasis on fun, movement, creativity and confidence rather than early specialisation. The school has clear evidence of that type of offer.
External material references pupils enjoying after-school clubs such as dodgeball and craft club, which fits an infant setting where social play and coordination are as important as the activity itself.
Published club letters show a wider spread across sport and creativity, including Dodgeball, Drawing Club, Gardening Club, Computing Club, Musical Theatre, Tae Kwon Do, and dance. The implication for families is choice, but also that clubs are being used as an extension of learning habits, listening, turn-taking, and confidence in groups.
Wraparound care is also part of the picture. The school publishes a structured wraparound offer with breakfast and after-school sessions, including a breakfast club running 7:30 to 8:40, and afternoon options from 15:15 to 16:45 or 15:15 to 18:00, with pricing set out in the same place.
The school day starts at 8.40am when doors open and closes at 8.45am; the day finishes at 3.15pm, with lunch from 12.00pm to 1.00pm.
Wraparound care is published with clear session times before school and after school, and it is positioned as activity-based rather than pure supervision.
For transport, the school is in Bilton, Rugby. Many families will consider walkability and short car journeys; those commuting more widely often anchor around Rugby’s transport links and then plan the last-mile journey accordingly.
Oversubscription is real. Recent figures show 68 applications for 28 offers, which means competition and the possibility of not receiving a preferred offer.
Infant to junior transfer requires attention. If you are aiming for Year 3 at the linked junior school, treat it as a separate admissions step rather than an automatic progression.
Leadership roles are described as interim. The principal is listed as Interim Principal in school materials, which can be neutral, but some families will want to understand leadership continuity when they visit or ask questions.
Enrichment is broad, which may not suit every child every week. Forest School and an “Above and Beyond” offer are strengths, but children who prefer tight predictability may need careful preparation for varied activities.
Henry Hinde Infant School looks best suited to families who want a structured, confidence-building start to primary school, with clear emphasis on communication, early reading, and learning habits, plus a strong layer of enrichment through Forest School, clubs and wraparound care. Admission is the obstacle; the day-to-day offer is thoughtful and child-centred. The best fit is for children who respond well to routines, enjoy practical learning, and will benefit from early opportunities to take responsibility and build independence.
The school continues to hold a Good judgement from its most recent Ofsted inspection (dated 29 March 2023, published 23 May 2023). The report describes pupils as enthusiastic learners who feel safe and are well supported, with leaders placing strong emphasis on communication, reading and mathematics.
Applications are made through Warwickshire’s coordinated process. The deadline for on-time applications is 4.00pm on 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Recent admissions figures indicate more applications than offers, with 68 applications and 28 offers, which is about 2.43 applications per place.
Doors open at 8.40am and close at 8.45am; the school day finishes at 3.15pm, with lunch from 12.00pm to 1.00pm.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound care session times (including breakfast club and after-school options) and runs a programme of clubs across sport and creative activities, including options such as dodgeball, drawing, gardening, computing, and dance.
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