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.
This is a voluntary controlled Church of England primary in Heckington, serving pupils aged 4 to 11, with a published capacity of 210. A small-school feel comes through in its wraparound offer, its clearly articulated Christian ethos, and a results picture that is better than England averages on the measures families tend to care about most at the end of Year 6.
The most recent published Key Stage 2 outcomes show 75% of pupils reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 21% reached greater depth across reading, writing and maths, compared with 8% across England. Science is also strong, with 93% meeting the expected standard, above the England average of 82%.
Official inspection evidence is recent. The latest Ofsted inspection (07 February 2024) graded the school Good overall, and Outstanding for early years provision.
Headteacher leadership is stable. The headteacher is Mrs Judith Bentley. (A public, dated “appointed” start year is not consistently stated in accessible official pages, so this review does not guess it.)
The school’s Church of England character is not a bolt-on. Its published ethos emphasises Christian principles and a set of values framed as respect, resilience, relationship, reverence and responsibility, which gives parents a clear sense of the moral language children are expected to learn and use.
For families who value a faith-grounded environment, that clarity is a positive. For families who are less religious, the key question is how comfortable you are with a school culture that is explicitly Christian in its framing, even when day-to-day practice feels inclusive. As a voluntary controlled school with local authority admissions, it is not set up like a selective faith intake, but the ethos is still part of identity and daily rhythm.
The most recent inspection provides a helpful snapshot of what “Good with an Outstanding early years” looks like in practice. Teaching and leadership are judged securely positive across the school, with early years singled out as a particular strength. That combination often shows up in a primary as strong start-of-school routines, effective phonics foundations, and a Reception experience that helps children settle quickly, especially when they arrive with mixed starting points.
If you are comparing local primaries, it is worth remembering that village schools can feel different from larger town primaries. With a capacity of 210, year groups are typically smaller than many urban two-form entries, which can mean more continuity of staff-pupil relationships across years, and fewer “new faces” for children to adjust to. The trade-off is that friendship groups are sometimes less broad, and club options can depend heavily on staffing and external providers in a given term.
The school has published Key Stage 2 outcomes that sit above England averages on the headline measures.
Expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined: 75% (England average 62%).
Higher standard across reading, writing and maths: 21% (England average 8%).
Expected standard in science: 93% (England average 82%).
Average scaled scores: Reading 105, maths 102, grammar, punctuation and spelling 102.
These figures point to a cohort that, on balance, leaves Year 6 with secure basics and a meaningful proportion working at greater depth, especially compared to England benchmarks.
Ranked 11,083rd in England and 11th locally (Sleaford area) for primary outcomes. This places performance below the England average band in the FindMySchool distribution, even though the underlying KS2 attainment measures are above England averages, which can happen when the ranking method weights multiple components and local context, or when small-cohort variation affects composite measures.
For parents, the practical way to interpret this is to focus on the actual percentages and scaled scores first, then use rankings as a secondary reference point when comparing similar schools.
If your child benefits from clear structure and strong core-subject teaching, the results picture suggests the school can deliver that through to Year 6. If you are looking specifically for a highly ranked “top percentile” primary, the FindMySchool rank band suggests other schools may score higher on that composite measure, so it is sensible to compare side-by-side rather than relying on one indicator.
(Performance comparisons are for England.)
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
75.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A Good judgement in quality of education, supported by an Outstanding early years grade, usually signals two things parents notice quickly: lessons have clear sequencing, and early reading foundations are taken seriously.
At primary level, the most meaningful questions are not about whether a school “does the national curriculum”, all maintained schools do. The differentiators are how knowledge is sequenced, how assessment is used, and how quickly gaps are identified and closed. The inspection grades indicate these fundamentals are in place.
For pupils who need stretching, the higher-standard figure at Key Stage 2 is a useful proxy. A 21% higher-standard rate (versus 8% across England) suggests the school is not only getting many pupils over the expected line, it is also helping a notable group move beyond it. That matters for children who are ready for more demanding reading comprehension, extended writing, and multi-step problem solving, particularly in Years 5 and 6.
For pupils who find learning harder, the most relevant questions to ask on a visit are practical: how intervention is timetabled (in-class or withdrawal), what happens when a child is behind in phonics, and how the school communicates progress. The school’s assistant headteacher is also named as SENDCo on the staff listing, which often helps coordination when staffing is tight in a small school.
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 village primary within Lincolnshire, most pupils will typically transfer to local secondary schools serving the Sleaford area, with allocation influenced by home address and parental preference under local authority coordination.
What matters most is how well the school prepares pupils for the transition in Year 6: independent organisation, reading stamina, writing fluency, and mathematical confidence. The end-of-Year-6 outcomes provide reassurance on those fundamentals, particularly reading (average scaled score 105) and the proportion reaching the expected standard across the combined measure.
If you are choosing between primaries partly on secondary transfer, it is sensible to look at likely routes from your address and check transport realism as well as school preference, especially if you are considering options that are not walkable. FindMySchool’s comparison tools can help you shortlist nearby alternatives and keep a record of what you have seen and asked, so your decision is based on evidence rather than first impressions.
Admissions are local-authority coordinated and, according to the most recent demand data the school is oversubscribed, with 37 applications for 28 offers in the relevant year, a ratio of 1.32 applications per place offered.
The school’s own admissions page directs families to apply via Lincolnshire County Council, which fits the maintained-school route. Lincolnshire’s published timetable for primary applications for September 2026 entry is specific and worth diarising:
Applications open: 17 November 2025
National closing date: 15 January 2026
Lincolnshire final closing date for late applications and changes: 12 February 2026
National offer day for primary: 16 April 2026
Oversubscription criteria (as published by Lincolnshire for this school) prioritise, in order: looked-after and previously looked-after children; siblings; children for whom this is the nearest school; then distance from home to school. That “nearest school” criterion can be a decisive detail in rural areas, because it can operate differently from a simple distance-only model.
No “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure is available for this school, so this review does not quote one.
100%
1st preference success rate
27 of 27 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
28
Offers
28
Applications
37
In a primary of this size, pastoral strength often looks like small, consistent routines rather than large specialist teams. The inspection grades indicate behaviour and personal development are securely Good, which suggests consistent expectations and a culture where pupils generally know what good behaviour looks like.
Practical pastoral questions to ask, particularly if your child is anxious or has additional needs, include: the transition process into Reception, how lunchtime is supervised and structured, and what happens if friendship issues arise. A named School Council is part of school life, which can be a useful vehicle for pupil voice in a smaller setting when it is taken seriously rather than treated as tokenistic.
The school publishes a straightforward clubs offer, which helps parents see what “after school” actually means week to week. Clubs listed include Choir, Craft, Cooking, Eco Club, Football, and Netball, among others.
Two details matter here.
First, the range includes both creative and sport options, plus an Eco Club, which often aligns well with a Church school ethos around stewardship and community responsibility.
Second, the school has run activity strands that can be quite distinctive for a primary. For example, an earlier Ofsted report references an after-school club led by a visiting African drummer, which signals that enrichment has sometimes included specialist cultural workshops rather than only the usual sports rotations.
If clubs are a priority for your family, ask how the timetable changes termly, how places are allocated when numbers exceed capacity, and whether there are charges for external providers.
The school runs on-site wraparound care under the name Little Windmills. Breakfast club starts at 7:30am, and after-school club runs until 6:00pm.
A published welcome pack indicates the school day ends around 3:25pm for some year groups and 3:30pm for others, which is a helpful detail if you are planning childcare.
As a village setting, many families will walk or drive. When you visit, pay attention to drop-off and pick-up practicalities (parking pinch points, safe walking routes, and whether wraparound users have a separate routine). This review does not list address or contact details because these are typically displayed separately on school profile pages.
Competition for places. The school is oversubscribed year, with more applications than offers. If you are applying for Reception, treat it as competitive and put realistic alternative preferences on your local authority form.
Faith character is real. The Church of England identity is explicit in the published ethos and values. Families who prefer a fully secular environment should think carefully before choosing a school where Christian principles are part of the everyday language.
Clubs depend on staffing. The school lists a good spread of clubs, but small primaries can see provision vary term to term. If this matters for childcare or your child’s interests, ask what is scheduled for the coming term, not only what ran last year.
Ranking context. Although KS2 measures are above England averages, the FindMySchool primary rank band sits below England average. If you are using rankings to shortlist, make sure you compare the underlying attainment measures and ask how the school supports both high attainers and those who need catch-up.
A Good primary with an Outstanding early years judgement and a results profile that is reassuring on the key end-of-Year-6 measures. Wraparound care from 7:30am to 6:00pm strengthens its practicality for working families, and the published clubs programme adds breadth beyond core lessons.
Who it suits: families who want a Church of England primary with clear values, a village-school feel, and evidence of strong Key Stage 2 outcomes, and who are prepared for the reality that admission can be competitive.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (07 February 2024) graded the school Good overall, with Outstanding early years provision. Published Key Stage 2 outcomes show 75% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%, and 21% reaching the higher standard compared with 8% across England.
Applications are made through Lincolnshire County Council. Lincolnshire’s published timetable states that primary applications open on 17 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026 (national closing date), with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Yes, the admissions demand data classifies the school as oversubscribed for the relevant year, with 37 applications and 28 offers, which is roughly 1.32 applications per place offered.
Yes. The school’s wraparound provision, Little Windmills, lists breakfast club starting at 7:30am and after-school club running until 6:00pm.
The school lists a range of lunchtime and after-school clubs including Choir, Craft, Cooking, Eco Club, Football and Netball.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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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