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.
Woodlands Primary School sits in south Sheffield, serving the Norton and Gleadless community and operating as part of Mercia Learning Trust. The current leadership leans hard into a simple idea: any child can succeed, but only if the basics are nailed early and habits are built deliberately.
This is a primary with nursery provision, with Tiny Seeds Nursery spanning ages 2 to 4 and Reception following on as the first year of primary. In the latest full inspection cycle, Ofsted judged the school Good across every headline area, including early years.
On performance, the school’s 2024 Key Stage 2 combined reading, writing and maths figure was 58%, a little below the England average of 62%, while the higher standard measure was stronger than England. Parents weighing Woodlands should read that as a school that can stretch pupils into greater depth, but still has work to do to lift the whole-cohort expected standard.
The tone is purposeful and practical, with a clear emphasis on routines, language and belonging. The school’s own messaging sets the ambition plainly, pairing academic success with celebrating personal success. That balance also shows up in how enrichment is framed, as structured opportunities during the week rather than optional extras reserved for a small group.
A distinctive feature is the site-based Forest School element referenced in the most recent Ofsted report, giving pupils regular outdoor, practical learning that complements classroom work. This matters for fit: children who learn best with hands-on tasks and fresh-air time often do well in settings where outdoor learning is not treated as a once-a-year event.
Leadership is clearly identified and visible, with Mark Bennett named as headteacher on the school website and government records. Trust communications confirm he took up the headship in September, following an earlier period of leadership under a different headteacher at the time of inspection.
Woodlands is a state primary, so the most useful published academic snapshot for parents is Key Stage 2, as pupils complete Year 6.
58% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%.
10.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%.
Average scaled scores were 103 in reading and 103 in maths, with 105 in grammar, punctuation and spelling.
These figures show a slightly split picture: expected standard is below England, but higher standard exceeds England, suggesting some pupils are being stretched successfully into deeper attainment.
Woodlands is ranked 10,419th in England for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data) and 91st within Sheffield. This corresponds to performance below England average when viewed as a national distribution, within the bottom 40% of schools in England.
The practical implication for families is that Woodlands looks best suited to children who respond well to structured teaching and who will take advantage of the school’s wider support and enrichment, rather than families seeking a consistently high whole-cohort expected standard profile.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
58%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Early reading is an explicit priority. The school sets out its approach clearly, using Read Write Inc for phonics, with staff trained for consistent delivery and an expectation that most pupils become fluent readers by Year 2. For parents, the useful question is not simply whether a programme is named, but whether the system is consistent across adults. The school’s stated model points to that consistency.
In maths, Woodlands describes a deliberate dual structure: daily fluency sessions in addition to Power Maths lessons, with Number Sense used to help pupils see and internalise number facts. That combination typically suits children who benefit from repetition and automaticity, especially in Key Stage 1, while still supporting reasoning and problem-solving as pupils move through Key Stage 2.
One genuinely distinctive curriculum choice is languages. Rather than a modern spoken language as the sole focus, the school explains a deliberate decision to teach Latin, presented as a way to reinforce vocabulary, grammar, and pattern recognition after phonics, with links into history and geography. That is unusual for a state primary and may appeal to families who value etymology, structure and cultural links.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Within school, the enrichment and personal development strands are designed to build independence and readiness for the move to Year 7, including transition activities referenced within the school’s enrichment planning.
Woodlands is oversubscribed on the most recent published application snapshot: 66 applications for 40 offers, which is 1.65 applications per place, with first preference demand matching offers on a 1.0 ratio. This suggests meaningful competition for places, but not the extreme pressure seen at some inner-catchment primaries.
For Reception entry, applications are made via Sheffield City Council, not directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, Sheffield’s published timetable states:
Applications close on 15 January 2026
Offers are issued on 16 April 2026, or the next working day
Woodlands also promotes open mornings running in October, November, December and January, starting at 10am, with no booking required, which gives families a low-friction way to see early years areas and ask questions.
Nursery admissions are handled directly with the school, with termly start points tied to a child’s birthday window. The published timings indicate applications open in late June for September starts, late October for January starts, and late January for April starts. Nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place; families still apply through the council route.
A practical tip for competitive years is to use the FindMySchool Map Search to sense-check your likely distance position alongside your preferred alternatives, rather than relying on a single option.
100%
1st preference success rate
36 of 36 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
40
Offers
40
Applications
66
The most useful public evidence here sits inside safeguarding and trust documentation and in the inspection narrative. The school is part of Mercia Learning Trust, and trust-wide safeguarding structures are documented through published policies, including named safeguarding leads and roles.
Pastoral support also shows up in practical, day-to-day choices. Wraparound care is staffed by the school team and runs to 6pm, which can be a major factor for working families and can reduce the stress that often sits behind attendance and punctuality issues.
Woodlands does best when you look at extracurricular as a system, not a single club list. The school links after-school activity to Children’s University hours, with formal award thresholds (for example, Bronze at 30 hours, Silver at 65, Gold at 100, continuing upwards), and presentations at civic venues for higher awards. That creates a clear incentive structure for steady participation.
The after-school programme itself is concrete and varied, with named options such as football, tennis, street dance, athletics, basketball, cycling, gymnastics, musical theatre, arts and crafts, plus S14 choir and S14 Voices.
During the school day, enrichment planning references Forest School, fieldwork studies and visits, plus cycle-related activities (including Bikeability in Year 6). This breadth is a genuine strength for children who gain confidence through doing, performing and competing, not just through written work.
Wraparound care is clear and parent-friendly:
Breakfast club runs 7.30am to 8.40am.
After-school club runs from the end of the school day until 6pm, with outdoor time when weather allows.
For Tiny Seeds Nursery, published opening hours run 8.30am to 3.30pm in term time, with morning and afternoon sessions available.
Whole-cohort attainment is a work in progress. In 2024, 58% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, below the England average of 62%. This may matter for families who want a consistently high expected-standard profile.
Competition for places is real. Recent demand data shows more applications than offers (66 applications for 40 offers). Have at least one realistic alternative in your preference list.
Nursery is not a back door to Reception. Sheffield’s admissions guidance is clear that nursery attendance does not give priority for Reception places, so families still need to plan for the council route.
Curriculum choices are distinctive. Latin as the chosen language will delight some children and families, but it is not the same experience as a spoken modern language focus.
Woodlands Primary School is a Good-rated Sheffield primary with a clear early reading model, a structured approach to maths fluency, and unusually distinctive curriculum choices such as Latin alongside practical outdoor learning through Forest School. It suits families who value routine, language-rich teaching and a busy enrichment culture, and who will engage actively with the admissions process. The main challenge is that whole-cohort expected-standard outcomes sit below England, so it is worth looking closely at how the school supports pupils who need steady consolidation.
Woodlands was graded Good by Ofsted in February 2022, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. Academic outcomes are mixed, with higher-standard attainment above England in 2024, but the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined below England.
Applications are made via Sheffield City Council for the normal admissions round. For September 2026 entry, the published closing date is 15 January 2026, with offers made on 16 April 2026 or the next working day.
Yes. The school’s early years includes Tiny Seeds Nursery with provision for ages 2 to 4, followed by Reception as the first year of primary. Nursery admissions are handled directly with the school and are linked to termly start points based on date of birth.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 7.30am to 8.40am and the after-school club runs until 6pm, with outdoor time used when weather permits.
The programme includes named clubs such as football, tennis, street dance, athletics, basketball, cycling, gymnastics, musical theatre, arts and crafts, plus S14 choir and S14 Voices, with participation linked to Children’s University hour awards.
Get in touch with the school directly
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