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 for ages 3 to 11 in Higher Broughton, Brentnall Academy is part of United Learning and opened as an academy on 01 October 2023.
Leadership is a prominent feature of the current chapter. Mrs Claire Woolley is Head of School and, in a September 2025 parent newsletter, she describes stepping into the role at the start of the 2025 to 2026 academic year after 13 years in the school community. Alongside her, the website lists an Executive Principal, Mr Paul Graham, reflecting a trust-led leadership model.
Families will care most about trajectory. The predecessor school on the same site, Brentnall Primary School, was judged Inadequate at its most recent published Ofsted inspection in September 2022, and placed in special measures. Since academy conversion, the Ofsted page for the current URN shows no published report yet, which is common for newer academies and recent conversions.
For day-to-day life, the practicalities are unusually clear. Breakfast Club runs 8.00am to 8.45am, the school day ends at 3.15pm, and After School Club runs to 4.30pm, with a mix of sports activity clubs and a paid session option.
Brentnall presents itself as a school working hard to stabilise expectations and rebuild routines. That theme appears in the practical messaging to families, including attendance targets and tightly scheduled celebration assemblies and information meetings early in the year.
The academy’s context matters because it explains why parents will see a lot of structure. The September 2022 inspection of the predecessor school described an unsettled period in leadership, weaknesses in curriculum ambition, and inconsistency in behaviour and classroom focus, especially for younger pupils. A school coming through that sort of diagnosis typically prioritises clarity, routines, and staff training before anything else can stick.
There are also signs of a broad intake and high need. The published pupil premium strategy for 2025 to 2026 states that 52% of pupils are eligible for pupil premium, and it identifies early language, early reading, writing, and attendance as key challenges. For parents, the implication is straightforward. This is a school where inclusion and attendance are likely to be front-and-centre in communications, and where consistency in teaching methods matters more than novelty.
Nursery provision is part of the school’s identity, with entry from the September after a child’s third birthday. The school day page also notes that Nursery, Reception and Year 1 have continuous access to outdoor provision rather than a single fixed break time, which is a useful indicator of how early years routines are organised.
What can be said with confidence is that improvement priorities are explicit in current published documents. The pupil premium strategy highlights early language, phonics, writing attainment, and attendance as focus areas for the current planning cycle. That is helpful for parents because it signals where leadership attention is going, and what will likely be reinforced in classrooms and in homework patterns.
If you are comparing local options, use the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool to place published outcomes side-by-side once the next confirmed results set is available, rather than relying on general impressions.
The most useful clues about teaching approach come from the school’s statutory and curriculum documentation. The SEND information report states that the curriculum is delivered through Rosenshine’s Principles of Instruction, which usually means tightly sequenced explanations, frequent checks for understanding, guided practice, and deliberate retrieval. For pupils, the implication is lessons that aim to reduce guesswork and increase routine, an approach often chosen when consistency is a priority across a staff team.
Curriculum breadth appears to be taken seriously. The curriculum subject list includes computing and swimming alongside the usual core offer. Long term planning documents show a structured, knowledge-led approach in foundation subjects, with sequencing explicitly discussed in published plans.
Early years planning is also unusually visible, with separate nursery and Reception curriculum materials and stated curriculum goals. For parents of three and four year olds, that level of transparency often makes it easier to reinforce vocabulary and routines at home.
Quality of Education
Inadequate
Behaviour & Attitudes
Inadequate
Personal Development
Requires Improvement
Leadership & Management
Inadequate
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
What is worth looking for when you visit is transition practice, especially for pupils with additional needs or attendance histories. Schools in an improvement phase often put extra emphasis on Year 6 routines, reading stamina, and behaviour consistency to smooth the move into Year 7.
Admissions for nursery and Reception are handled by Salford City Council, not directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, Salford’s portal information states that applications open 01 September 2025 and close 15 January 2026, with offers visible on 16 April 2026 for nursery and Reception.
Nursery entry is available from the September after a child’s third birthday, with priority given to children resident in Salford where places are limited.
Demand signals are modest but real. The latest available admissions cycle data indicates 18 applications for 13 offers in the Reception entry route, which is consistent with an oversubscribed school where places can still sometimes emerge via movement and waiting lists. If you are trying to judge chances, the most practical step is to use FindMySchool Map Search to check your home-to-school distance and then compare it to the latest local authority allocation information once published.
100%
1st preference success rate
13 of 13 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
13
Offers
13
Applications
18
A rebuilding school lives or dies on safeguarding clarity and attendance habits. The predecessor school’s September 2022 Ofsted report stated that safeguarding arrangements were effective. Since then, current documentation keeps wellbeing and protective education prominent, with PSHE described as supporting identity, confidence, and help-seeking around safeguarding issues.
Operationally, the site lists an Attendance and Safeguarding lead and a SEND lead, plus named safeguarding leads in the published contact information, which tends to correlate with clearer escalation routes for families.
For parents, the implication is that you should expect frequent communication about attendance and routines. If your child needs structured support, ask how the school tracks attendance interventions and how quickly plans are reviewed when attendance drops.
Clubs and activities matter, particularly in a school aiming to improve engagement and attendance. Brentnall’s published SEND information report lists a wide set of clubs, including choir, cooking club, reading club, craft club, drama club, dance, gardening club, and forest school, alongside multiple sports options.
Wraparound and enrichment are also used as practical support for working families. The After School Club page lists sports activity clubs such as handball and hockey for Year 4 to Year 6, plus a paid after-school session offering board games, crafts, and iPads with snacks and a drink. The implication is that provision is not only enrichment, it is also a stability tool for families who need consistent childcare.
If your child is younger, it is worth asking how clubs are adapted for Nursery and Reception, since the published lists lean towards older year groups. The SEND report notes that additional support needed to make clubs accessible is discussed with families, which is a reassuring inclusion signal when it is implemented well.
The timings are clearly published. Breakfast Club runs 8.00am to 8.45am, gates open 8.30am, registration is at 8.45am, and the school day ends at 3.15pm, with After School Club running until 4.30pm.
Cost is also explicit for some wraparound elements. The After School Club page lists £4.00 per day for the general after-school session option, while some activity clubs are shown as free.
Transport information is not detailed on the pages reviewed. For most families, the practical reality will be walking from Higher Broughton, short car drop-offs, or local bus routes. If you are new to the area, check drop-off arrangements, safe walking routes, and any restrictions on parking near the school.
Inspection context and improvement journey. The most recent published inspection for the predecessor school, in September 2022, judged the school Inadequate and placed it in special measures. The current academy does not yet have a published Ofsted report under its new URN. This makes a visit and a detailed conversation about progress essential.
Attendance will be a major theme. Current published planning identifies attendance as a key challenge area. If your child has medical needs or anxiety-related absence, ask how attendance work is balanced with pastoral support.
Wraparound is helpful, but ends mid-afternoon. Breakfast provision is early, and after-school provision currently runs to 4.30pm. Families needing later childcare should ask what local options exist beyond that time.
Brentnall Academy reads as a primary in active rebuild mode, with clear routines, visible leadership, and practical wraparound arrangements that will suit many working families. The key question is momentum, how consistently curriculum and behaviour expectations are now delivered, and how quickly attendance is improving. Best suited to families who want a structured school day, clear communication, and an inclusive approach, and who are prepared to dig into evidence of progress during visits rather than relying on headline judgements.
It is a school in transition. The predecessor school received an Inadequate judgement at the most recent published inspection in September 2022, while the current academy does not yet have a published Ofsted report under its new URN. The most helpful way to judge fit is to visit, ask what has changed since conversion, and look for clear evidence of improved curriculum consistency, attendance work, and classroom routines.
Primary places are coordinated by Salford City Council, using the local authority’s admissions arrangements. If you are considering Reception entry, review Salford’s published criteria and check how distance and any priority rules apply to your address.
Yes. Nursery entry is available from the September after a child’s third birthday, and applications are made through Salford’s process rather than directly to the school.
Yes. Breakfast Club runs 8.00am to 8.45am, and After School Club runs from 3.15pm to 4.30pm. Some after-school activity clubs are listed as free, and the general after-school session option is listed at £4.00 per day.
Applications for September 2026 entry open 01 September 2025 and close 15 January 2026 through Salford’s online portal, with offers shown on 16 April 2026 for nursery and Reception.
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