Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
This is a small, community primary in Murdishaw, serving pupils from Reception to Year 6 with a clearly stated ethos: CARE, meaning Collaborate, Achieve, Respect and Enjoy. That language is not just branding. It threads through day-to-day routines, from expectations around behaviour to how adults talk about learning goals.
Academically, the latest published Key Stage 2 picture is mixed. The core combined measure is below the previous profile’s description, and the higher-standard combined figure is 0% in the current dataset. This is not a headline-results school, so families should look closely at the subject detail and the wider school experience.
Admissions data points to demand being higher than supply. With 26 applications for 16 offers in the most recent intake data, families should assume competition for places, even if the school remains approachable and rooted in its local community.
CARE is the organising idea here. Collaborate and Respect speak to the social tone families often look for in a mainstream primary, while Achieve keeps academic expectations on the table. Enjoy matters too, because it usually signals a school that does not treat primary years as a purely exam-driven runway.
Leadership is a notable part of the current story. The headteacher is Mrs V. Edwards, and Ofsted notes she joined the school in September 2022, which matters for parents assessing trajectory and consistency.
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.
Safeguarding culture is described as strong, with regular staff updates, clear record-keeping and appropriate escalation when concerns arise. Pupils are also taught how to keep safe locally and online, which is a practical indicator of a school taking real-world risks seriously rather than treating safety as a poster.
For a community primary, the most useful question is whether pupils leave Year 6 with secure basics, and whether the most able are pushed beyond “secure”. The 2025 Key Stage 2 outcomes suggest a mixed picture.
In the 2025 dataset, 50% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. At the higher standard, 0% reached greater depth across reading, writing and mathematics. This matters because it points to a more cautious current outcomes profile than the previous version described. (FindMySchool analysis of official data.)
Other indicators point in the same direction. Average scaled scores were 105 in reading and 104 in mathematics. Grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS) averaged 105, with 70% reaching the expected standard in GPS. Science is also 70% reaching the expected standard, which may reflect cohort variation and should be read cautiously in a small school. (FindMySchool analysis of official data.)
Rankings are best treated as context, not destiny. On FindMySchool’s primary outcomes ranking, the school is ranked 11,717th out of 14,978 schools for academic performance and 17th locally within the Runcorn area. This places performance in the lower national band overall, and it is a reminder that families should consider the full school experience, not only the rank.
Parents comparing local options can use the FindMySchool local hub comparison tools to view these outcomes side by side, especially helpful when small-cohort variation can make single-year figures look jumpy.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
53%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum intent on the school website emphasises breadth and balance, including creative and practical elements alongside academic skills, and frames learning through the CARE values.
The 2023 inspection focus areas included early reading, mathematics and history, which signals where external reviewers looked most closely at sequencing and subject delivery. For families, the practical implication is that phonics and early literacy, as well as maths foundations, should be clearly structured in the early years and lower key stage 2.
A useful “watch item” is the improvement point about checking pupils’ prior learning before introducing new concepts, because that can be the difference between confident mastery and gaps that only show up later. In a small school, consistent assessment routines matter disproportionately, since staffing changes or mixed-experience teams can have a larger effect than in larger primaries.
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 primary school, the main transition is into local secondary provision at Year 7. Most families in Halton move into a mix of local comprehensives and faith schools depending on distance, sibling links and admissions criteria.
What this school can do well, when systems are tight, is produce pupils who are independent learners and socially settled, which tends to ease the jump to a larger setting. The CARE language, particularly Collaborate and Respect, is a good fit for that transition, since secondary schools often cite organisation, resilience, and peer relationships as the big adjustment points.
If you are shortlisting primaries with an eye on secondary routes, it is worth looking at Halton’s secondary admissions timelines at the same time as Reception admissions, because planning two steps ahead can save stress later.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Halton Borough Council. The school’s published admissions description is straightforward: pupils are admitted in the September after their fourth birthday, with the planned admission number stated as 30. Oversubscription is handled via the local authority criteria, prioritising children in care, then siblings, then distance measured as a straight-line from home to school.
Demand data indicates the school is oversubscribed, with 26 applications for 16 offers and a subscription ratio of 1.63 applications per place in the most recent entry route figures available. That is not extreme compared with some urban primaries, but it does mean families should avoid assuming availability.
For September 2027 entry in Halton, the primary application deadline is 15 January 2027, and the timetable published by the local authority shows offers on 16 April 2027. For families applying late, Halton directs parents to a late application route.
If you are trying to judge your practical chances, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for checking your precise home-to-school distance, then sanity-checking it against how distance is used locally for allocation, bearing in mind that allocations shift each year.
Applications
26
Total received
Places Offered
16
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Applications per place
Safeguarding is positioned as a whole-school responsibility. The school website explicitly identifies the headteacher as the senior designated safeguarding person, and also references Operation Encompass, which is designed to support pupils following domestic incidents.
The 2023 inspection report also highlights leaders working well with parents and using outside agencies when needed, which is often the practical difference between a policy that exists and a system that actually supports families.
One wellbeing-related improvement area is punctuality. Ofsted notes that too many pupils arrive late at times, which can lead to missed curriculum content. For parents, this is a reminder that routines matter here, and the school may be actively pushing attendance and punctuality as part of improvement work.
In smaller primaries, enrichment is often less about an enormous club list and more about getting the fundamentals right, then layering in structured extras that widen experience.
Several named learning platforms and programmes are signposted through the school’s own pages, including Times Table Rockstars, Accelerated Reader, Scratch, Micro:bit work, and Hour of Code style activities. These are not “clubs” in the traditional sense, but they are concrete enrichment mechanisms that can make practice feel purposeful rather than repetitive, especially for pupils who respond well to feedback loops and progress milestones.
Food and readiness-to-learn are also treated as part of the learning system. The school highlights Magic Breakfast provision, and positions nutrition and hydration as enabling pupils to access the curriculum effectively.
The school day starts at 8:50am and finishes at 3:20pm, with registration from 8:50 to 9:00. Morning break runs 10:40 to 10:55. Lunch is 11:55 to 12:55 for younger pupils and 12:20 to 12:55 for older pupils.
Wraparound care is clearly laid out. Breakfast club runs 7:45am to 8:50am, booked via School Gateway, at £1 per session. After-school care runs 3:20pm to 6:00pm at £8 including snack, with an optional hot meal add-on of £2.50.
Small-school variation. With a smaller roll, year-to-year results can move more sharply than in large primaries. Focus on multi-year patterns and on curriculum and assessment routines, not a single headline figure.
Competition for places. The most recent admissions demand indicators show more applications than offers. If you are not a sibling priority and do not live close, treat entry as uncertain and have realistic back-ups.
Science outcomes. The published science expected standard figure is below the England benchmark. Ask how science knowledge is sequenced and revisited across the school, and how gaps are identified early.
Punctuality focus. The inspection improvement point on lateness suggests the school may be tightening routines. That is positive, but it also means families need to be ready to support punctuality consistently.
This is a grounded community primary with a clear values framework, structured routines, and practical wraparound that will suit many working families. Academic outcomes are mixed in the current dataset, with 50% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined and 0% reaching the combined higher standard, while the wider composite ranking picture sits in the lower national band.
Best suited to families who want a local, mainstream primary with explicit behaviour and culture expectations, and who value wraparound care that is fully specified and operational. The limiting factor for some families will be admission competition rather than day-to-day quality once a place is secured.
It is rated Good by Ofsted following the inspection on 7 March 2023, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. In published 2025 Key Stage 2 data, 50% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, and 0% reached the higher standard.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Halton Borough Council. The school’s admissions criteria prioritise children in care, then siblings, then distance from home to school. For September 2027 entry, Halton’s deadline is 15 January 2027, with offers released on 16 April 2027, and late applications directed to a separate route.
Yes. Breakfast club runs 7:45am to 8:50am and costs £1 per session. After-school care runs 3:20pm to 6:00pm and costs £8 including a snack, with an optional hot meal add-on of £2.50.
In the 2025 dataset, 50% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The higher standard across reading, writing and maths was 0%.
The CARE ethos is central, and families who value clear behaviour expectations and consistent routines tend to find that reassuring. Because the school is relatively small, it is also worth asking how assessment checks are used to prevent gaps in learning as pupils move through year groups.
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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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