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.
Last reviewed: January 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
Ridgeway Primary School, South Croydon is a large, oversubscribed Croydon community primary with nursery provision, and a distinctive emphasis on learning dispositions alongside academic standards. Its stated values are clear and memorable, Creative, Collaborative, Responsible, Resilient, and Reflective, and that language threads through curriculum and behaviour expectations in a way that feels intentional rather than decorative.
Academic outcomes remain a pull, though the current profile is less emphatic than the previous headline suggested. In the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset, 70% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, and 10% achieved the higher standard across that combined measure. Ridgeway also posts solid subject-level attainment, with 80% meeting the expected standard in reading and 80% in mathematics.
Ofsted’s inspection in March 2024 confirmed Ridgeway continues to be a Good school.
Ridgeway’s culture is shaped by an explicit commitment to developing independence and confidence, with the school describing its approach as research-informed and continuously reflective. That matters in day-to-day terms, because it tends to produce a calm, purposeful tone in classrooms and shared spaces, with routines and language that pupils can lean on when learning feels hard.
Leadership is shared. The school’s published materials identify Rebecca Shelley and Suzanne Kelly as co-headteachers, and governance records show Suzanne Kelly’s appointment as co-headteacher from 01 September 2016. The co-head model can work well in large primaries when it is stable and clearly communicated, and Ridgeway’s documentation suggests it is embedded rather than interim.
Nursery and Reception are not treated as an add-on. Early years is positioned as the first step in a whole-school journey, and the school outlines a child-led Early Years Foundation Stage approach grounded in pedagogy and research, with play described as integral to learning. For families, the practical implication is that the transition into full-time primary education should feel coherent, with shared expectations and a curriculum that is designed to build from early language, social development, and curiosity.
Ridgeway's current Key Stage 2 outcomes are solid across the board:
70% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined.
10% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined.
Expected-standard subject outcomes are 80% in grammar, punctuation and spelling, 90% in science, 80% in reading, 70% in writing, and 80% in maths.
Subject attainment remains solid, with 80% meeting the expected standard in reading, 80% in GPS, 80% in mathematics, and 90% in science.
The scaled scores also reinforce the picture of secure attainment, with 109 in reading, 111 in GPS, and 108 in mathematics.
Rankings are still positive, though less emphatic than the previous top-10% wording suggested. Ridgeway is ranked 3,629th of 14,978 in England for primary academic outcomes, with an overall primary rank of 4,629th. In the local primary tables, it ranks 41st in Croydon and 920th in London.
For parents comparing options locally, the point is not simply that results are strong, but that they are strong at scale, in a large community school serving a broad local intake. Using the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tool can be helpful here, because it allows you to compare these indicators side by side with nearby Croydon primaries.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
70%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Ridgeway’s curriculum intent is framed around both knowledge and transferable skills. In early years it follows the Statutory Framework for the Early Years Foundation Stage, and in Years 1 to 6 it is built around the National Curriculum, with subject progressions published to show how knowledge and skills develop over time.
A notable feature is the way the school describes “learning to learn” as an explicit strand of its work, focusing on dispositions and mindsets that help children manage challenge and become more self-directed. The practical implication for families is that children who need structured support to build resilience, organisation, and self-regulation may find that the language and routines are designed to help them improve steadily, not just perform in tests.
Early years provision adds further definition. The nursery brochure sets out a clear offer for ages 3 to 4, including funded session models for eligible families, and defines the Foundation Stage as a place where children are given time and freedom to explore ideas and learn through play. For children who thrive on exploration and talk-based learning, that can be a strong fit. For those who prefer tighter structure from the outset, it is worth asking how routines evolve from nursery to Reception and into Key Stage 1.
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 Croydon primary, Ridgeway’s pupils progress into a wide secondary landscape that includes a mix of comprehensive, faith, and selective options across Croydon and neighbouring boroughs. The school’s published guidance for families emphasises the Pan-London coordinated admissions process, and notes that applications typically open in September of Year 6, with families able to name up to six schools in preference order.
Transition support is especially important for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), and Ridgeway’s SEND information explains that it may arrange additional induction days and visits, additional planning meetings with families and secondary staff, and careful information transfer to support a smoother move into Year 7.
Demand is a defining feature at Ridgeway, so families should treat Reception entry as competitive and compare the latest intake pressure with realistic backup options. The published admissions information also signals that nursery admissions are handled by the school using local authority criteria, prioritising looked after and previously looked after children, siblings, medical grounds, then distance.
Reception admissions are coordinated by Croydon Council. Families should use Croydon's current primary admissions timetable for the relevant September entry, including the application deadline, National Offer Day and any offer acceptance deadline.
For families considering a visit, Ridgeway publishes school tour information for prospective nursery and Reception families. Check the current tour calendar and booking details before making plans.
Given the competitiveness, parents often benefit from two practical checks early on:
reading the Croydon admissions criteria carefully for the relevant entry point, and
using the FindMySchool Map Search to understand local proximity patterns before relying on a place.
Applications
259
Total received
Places Offered
90
Subscription Rate
2.9x
Applications per place
Pastoral support at Ridgeway is framed as part of daily practice, not a separate bolt-on. The school publishes a detailed behaviour policy that explicitly references support strategies for children who find behaviour regulation difficult, including clear language, visual supports, and structured routines.
The inclusion offer is unusually detailed for a mainstream primary. Ridgeway outlines targeted supports such as nurture provision, Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA) work, Drawing and Talking, and other structured interventions, with short programmes often running over six weeks and more specialised approaches extending longer where needed. This can be reassuring for families who want to see clear thinking about emotional development and wellbeing, particularly for pupils who need help with friendships, anxiety, or transitions.
Safeguarding documentation is current and specific, with named safeguarding roles and clear expectations about reporting concerns.
Ridgeway’s enrichment offer has two strong anchors, structured clubs and purposeful spaces.
Clubs are presented as a varied programme for Years 2 to 6, mixing school-led and external provider options. The school lists a wide menu of past clubs, including coding, choir, chess, cookery, clay modelling, sewing, and board games, alongside sports and performing arts. External providers named on the school’s extracurricular page include iBall (basketball), AM Soccer (football), MDL Coaching (short tennis), Le Club Francais (French club), and Spanishtastic (Spanish club). The implication is that children with specific interests, languages, STEM, arts, or sport, can usually find at least one structured option that suits them, although the exact menu will vary term to term.
Wraparound care is a further part of the broader offer. Acorns is the school’s before and after school provision, staffed by school employees, with breakfast club from 07:30 and after school club running until 18:30 on school days. This is valuable for working families because it provides consistent childcare with familiar adults, rather than relying on separate third-party provision.
Facilities help the programme land. Ridgeway’s Inspiring Spaces page describes a library that opened in summer 2022, designed to deepen reading culture and equipped with a large display screen used for classes and training events, including parent workshops. On the physical activity side, the school reports installing a Daily Mile rubber mulch track on the field in summer 2019 following a successful National Lottery funding bid.
School day timings are clearly published. For Reception and Key Stage 1, the official start time is 08:45 with pick-up at 15:10; for Key Stage 2, pick-up is 15:15. Nursery sessions run 09:00 to 12:00 or 12:00 to 15:00.
Wraparound care is available through Acorns, with breakfast club from 07:30 and after school care to 18:30 during term time (excluding INSET days and bank holidays).
For travel, this is a South Croydon school on Southcote Road, and many families will approach on foot for the school run. If you are driving, it is sensible to check local parking restrictions and allow extra time around drop-off and pick-up, especially given the school’s size and local demand.
Competition for entry. Reception should be treated as competitive. Families should plan a realistic set of school preferences and check the latest local admissions picture before applying.
Large-school experience. With a published capacity of 708 pupils, Ridgeway offers social breadth and a wide adult team, but children who prefer very small settings may find the scale more demanding.
Early years structure. Nursery is presented as child-led and play-centred. This suits many children very well, but parents who want a more formal early start should ask how daily routines and learning expectations shift between nursery and Reception.
Clubs vary by term. The school lists a strong range of clubs and providers, but the exact programme changes. If a particular club matters to your child, it is worth checking what is running in the term you are applying for.
Ridgeway Primary School, South Croydon combines a clearly articulated learning culture with outcomes that indicate pupils are leaving Year 6 academically well prepared. The school’s distinctive feature is how openly it explains its approach, from values and curriculum intent through to wellbeing and inclusion supports, which can give parents confidence that the daily experience is thoughtfully designed. Best suited to families who want a high-performing Croydon community primary with structured wraparound care, and who are comfortable with a larger school setting. Entry remains the primary hurdle.
Ridgeway's current Key Stage 2 results are solid, with 70% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined in the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset. The school was inspected by Ofsted in March 2024 and it continues to be judged Good.
Reception applications are made through Croydon Council as part of the coordinated admissions process. Families should check the current primary admissions timetable for the relevant September entry, including the application deadline and offer day.
Nursery admissions are completed by the school using local authority criteria, prioritising looked after and previously looked after children, siblings, medical grounds, then distance. The school also explains that funded nursery provision is available for eligible families, and encourages parents to follow the school’s nursery application route for the correct intake year.
Yes. The school’s Acorns provision runs breakfast club from 07:30, and after school care until 18:30 during term time (excluding bank holidays and INSET days).
Yes. The school publishes a broad menu of extracurricular options, including coding, choir, cookery, chess, and creative clubs, as well as sports, with some activities run by external providers such as iBall (basketball) and Le Club Francais (French club). The programme can vary by term.
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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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