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 thatched-roof school building and a setting close to open countryside give this infant school an unusual backdrop for daily routines. Its own history points to a long local presence, with a bicentenary celebrated in 1996, suggesting roots back to 1796.
Leadership is shared, with co-headteachers Nicky Waugh and Amy Douglas, appointed in September 2023. Intake is small, with 25 Reception places each year, which helps the school keep a close eye on pupils’ early reading, behaviour and confidence.
This is a school that leans into routines and belonging. The house system, introduced in Summer 2017, assigns every child to one of four houses, Badgers, Foxes, Hedgehogs, or Squirrels, and turns daily effort into something visible through house points and termly cups. The cups are not just for classroom contribution, they include a lunchtime cup, sports cup, and even a Mile-a-Day cup and a Walk to School cup, which tells you what the school wants to normalise, steady behaviour, movement, and good habits.
The physical setting matters here because it is woven into how the school talks about itself. The website highlights a large field and outdoor features including an adventure playground, pond, vegetable plots, an orchard and a wild flower area, alongside an older thatched-roof building that the school describes as part of its “unique charm”. The building itself is a Grade II listed former first school building, recorded by Historic England as timber-framed and thatched, with later additions.
For families, that combination tends to translate into a particular feel: a smaller site, a clear perimeter, and an ethos where pupils are expected to know the rules and take pride in getting them right. The school’s own language is direct about expectations and punctuality, which usually goes hand in hand with calmer starts to the day for younger children.
A final character note is the deliberate nod to local heritage. The school’s heritage timeline connects the site to the wider Dropmore area and documents changes in school status over time, including becoming an infant school after the local age-of-transfer change. It even points to unusual cultural footnotes, including use as a filming location for the 1952 film **Made in Heaven and a later Thames Television schools programme. None of that affects teaching, but it does signal a school that thinks of itself as rooted in place.
Infant schools do not have the same end-of-key-stage public exam profile as full primary schools, so the most useful “results” lens for parents is how the school is performing against its curriculum intent and early foundations, particularly early reading, writing, number, and behaviour routines.
The February 2024 inspection outcomes provide the clearest external summary of how those foundations are working. The overall judgement was Good, with Outstanding judgements in Early years provision and Personal development, alongside Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, and leadership and management.
What that tends to mean in practice is that parents should expect a school that takes phonics and early literacy seriously, maintains clear behavioural expectations, and puts noticeable emphasis on confidence and personal growth alongside core skills. At infant phase, those “soft” outcomes are often the difference between children who simply cope at junior transfer and children who arrive ready to learn in a bigger setting.
Early reading is a defining priority at this school. The phonics approach is explicitly named, with the school stating that it uses the Twinkl phonics scheme, and it backs that up with parent-facing resources rather than leaving families to guess how to help at home. A published phonics and reading workshop pack also shows a structured approach to building parent understanding of blending, reading scheme progression, and how phonics connects to early writing.
The school day structure reinforces learning habits. The published timetable sets out assembly first thing, two morning lesson blocks with a mid-morning break, a full lunch hour, then afternoon lessons, with “Mile-a-Day” included three days per week. For younger pupils, that kind of predictability reduces anxiety, improves transitions, and makes it easier for staff to spot when a child is struggling with attention, language, or emotional regulation.
Physical education is not treated as an afterthought. The school describes an active-day approach, with structured opportunities at break and lunch and the Mile-a-Day routine as part of the rhythm of the week. For some children, especially those who find sitting still harder, that can be as important as any classroom intervention.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because this is an infant school, the “next step” is typically Year 3 entry to a junior school. The school has shared guidance for junior transfer, including a list of nearby schools noted as opening extra spaces for Year 3 entry within five miles, including St Pauls, Wooburn, St Peters, Burnham, St Nicolas, Taplow, Stoke Poges, and Seer Green.
For parents, the key implication is timing. Year 2 can feel early to start thinking about the next school, but junior transfer has its own application rhythm, and places can still be competitive depending on the specific junior school and year group sizes. It is sensible to treat Year 2 as the planning year, not the last-minute scramble year.
Families shortlisting options should also pay attention to travel practicality. An infant school can work beautifully for daily drop-off in a rural pocket, but the junior school may be in a different direction. Using FindMySchool’s Map Search to sanity-check drive time and walkability for both the current school and likely junior destinations can prevent unpleasant surprises later.
Reception intake is 25 places, with a single annual intake in the autumn term. Demand indicators suggest this is not a walk-in school. In the most recent published application cycle there were 95 applications for 25 offers, which is 3.8 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. That demand profile matters because it means families should not assume that living “nearby” will be enough without understanding the local authority’s oversubscription rules and how they are applied in a given year.
For 2026 entry (September 2026 start), Buckinghamshire Council sets out a clear coordinated timetable: applications open 5 November 2025, the deadline is 15 January 2026 (11:59pm), and national offer day is 16 April 2026. If an offer is received through the online portal, the council also states that parents must accept by 11:59pm on 30 April.
Open mornings are typically advertised in the autumn term, commonly October and November, and parents should treat the school’s website as the best place to confirm the current year’s dates and booking expectations.
When competition is tight, small decisions make a difference: submitting on time, using realistic preference ordering, and checking that proof-of-address requirements are satisfied where relevant. Parents comparing several local schools can use FindMySchool’s Local Hub Comparison Tool to keep admissions facts, school size, and inspection outcomes side by side rather than relying on memory.
91.7%
1st preference success rate
22 of 24 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
25
Offers
25
Applications
95
For infant-aged children, pastoral strength is usually visible in small operational details: predictable handovers at the gate, clear routines, and staff who know children well enough to spot changes quickly. The school’s published materials emphasise safe collection and the importance of orderly drop-off and pick-up, which supports both safeguarding and calm transitions.
The school also documents its approach to supporting pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, describing practical classroom strategies and the principle that barriers to learning should be identified early and addressed through tailored support. For parents, the implication is that early concerns about speech and language, attention, or sensory needs should be raised sooner rather than later. In infant settings, early action usually has the biggest payoff.
For a small infant school, enrichment often shows up as a series of high-frequency, child-friendly events rather than a long, complex clubs list. Here, the house system sits at the centre of that, not just as a badge but as a mechanism for building shared purpose across year groups. The termly cups include lunchtime, sport, Mile-a-Day, and Walk to School achievements, which creates multiple ways for different personalities to succeed.
On the activity side, the school offers wraparound options and after-school opportunities. It publishes extended care availability after 3:00pm on weekdays, with specific timings that include later provision Monday to Thursday and a shorter Friday session, and it also notes an hourly session cost from September 2025. Alongside childcare-style provision, named clubs and activities referenced include Cookery, Clay Club, and Football, with some sessions handled via external providers and others managed through the school office.
The annual rhythm matters too. The school’s news and curriculum pages reference themed weeks and events such as science week, arts week, walk to school week, and seasonal productions, which are exactly the kinds of experiences that help younger children associate school with enjoyment and confidence rather than pressure.
The published timetable sets the school day around a 9:00am start and a 3:00pm pick-up, with a structured mix of assembly, lesson blocks, breaks and lunch. Wraparound care is available, with breakfast club and after-school care timings published in school materials.
Travel and parking are explicitly addressed. The school’s parking guidance focuses on using permitted roadside areas and avoiding unsafe or restricted spaces, including clear instructions on where not to park. For families driving, this is worth reading closely, because small rural roads can become stressful at peak times.
Lunch is also practical for parents: the school states that hot lunches are made onsite and that children are eligible for free meals under the Universal Infant Free School Meals scheme.
Competition for places. With 95 applications for 25 offers in the most recent cycle, entry is likely to be competitive. Families should treat admissions planning as a process, not a last-minute task.
Infant-only structure. Children will need to transfer at Year 3. Families should consider junior transfer early, including travel practicality and application timelines.
Rural access and parking realities. The school publishes specific parking instructions and restrictions on local roads. If you rely on driving, read the guidance carefully and consider park-and-stride habits early.
Very small scale. Small cohorts can feel supportive, but they also mean fewer peer-group options in each year. For some children that is a benefit, for others it can feel limiting.
This is a distinctive infant school, small, tradition-aware, and organised around clear routines. The mix of a strong house system, structured day design, and an explicitly resourced early reading approach should suit children who do well with predictability and recognition for effort. Best suited to families who value a close-knit infant setting and are prepared to plan ahead for both Reception entry and the Year 3 move.
The most recent inspection outcome is Good, with notable strengths highlighted in early years and personal development. For parents, the most relevant takeaway at infant stage is that routines, early reading, and pupils’ confidence are treated as core priorities, not add-ons.
Admissions are coordinated through Buckinghamshire’s primary admissions process, and place allocation is driven by the local authority’s published oversubscription criteria rather than a simple “everyone nearby gets in” approach. In competitive years, proximity can matter, but it is not the only factor. Families should check the council guidance and the school’s admissions information before relying on a place.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound care timings that include breakfast club and after-school provision, with later sessions on most weekdays and a shorter Friday.
Applications are made through Buckinghamshire Council’s coordinated primary admissions process. The published timetable for September 2026 entry includes applications opening on 5 November 2025, a deadline of 15 January 2026, and national offer day on 16 April 2026.
As an infant school, pupils typically transfer to a junior school for Year 3. The school has shared junior transfer guidance that lists local schools within a stated radius, which can help families begin shortlisting and planning travel.
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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