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.
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A small infant school can feel deceptively simple, until you look closely at how learning is organised. Here, the picture is of a tightly run, high-expectation setting where children are taught to read confidently from the earliest stages, and where behaviour routines help very young pupils manage themselves well.
The school serves pupils aged 5 to 7, with around 200 pupils on roll and a capacity of 210. Under headteacher Mrs Ginene Riches, the emphasis is on joined-up learning across subjects and a clear values framework that children can actually use in day-to-day situations.
Ofsted graded the school Outstanding in all inspected areas at its most recent inspection (28 and 29 November 2023, published January 2024).
The distinctive feel here comes from two things that do not always coexist in infant settings: ambition for learning, and explicit teaching of self-regulation. The language of values is intentionally simple and memorable, and the school’s BADGER framework (Belonging, Aspiration, Determination, Goodness, Excellence, Respect) is presented as a shared way of behaving and learning, not a poster exercise.
Daily life is structured in a way that helps young children feel secure. Expectations are clear from the start, and routines support calm movement, polite behaviour and consideration for others. In the latest inspection narrative, pupils are described as impeccably polite and compassionate, and this links directly to the school’s values work and wellbeing programme.
On the physical side, the school has invested in named spaces that make its priorities obvious. The library is referred to as Wonder Wood, and reading is consistently described as central to school life. Outdoor learning is also a prominent strand, including a pond and an outdoor reflection and learning area known as The Nest, created as part of a wider project to strengthen outdoor curriculum experiences.
Leadership visibility matters in an infant school, and the headteacher’s communication style gives a sense of hands-on oversight. That does not mean everything is uniform or overly tight; rather, the tone is purposeful, with an emphasis on children building confidence through successful learning experiences, and on families being part of that story.
Because this is an infant school, the headline national measures parents often expect at the end of primary (Key Stage 2 tests in Year 6) do not apply here. The more relevant academic indicators are early reading and phonics, writing development, number sense, and how well children are prepared for Key Stage 2 at the linked junior school.
The most recent official evidence points to strong outcomes by the end of Year 2. The latest inspection states that pupils achieve exceptionally well across the curriculum, with phonics taught from early years and supported through catch-up where needed, so that children learn to decode, then become fluent and ambitious readers.
A useful way to interpret this is through the everyday implications for families. A school that gets early reading right typically reduces frustration, builds confidence in independent learning, and makes the transition into junior school more secure because pupils can access the wider curriculum through texts. The report also highlights careful sequencing of knowledge and vocabulary across subjects, which matters because young children forget quickly unless learning is revisited deliberately.
Parents comparing local options can use FindMySchool’s local comparison tools to check how different schools in the area report early reading approaches, attendance patterns, and wider provision, then shortlist based on what best matches their child.
Teaching here is described as deliberately designed rather than improvised. The curriculum is planned with precise knowledge and vocabulary, and lessons include recall activities so pupils keep hold of what they have learned over time.
Reading is the anchor. Phonics begins in early years, and children who need extra support are given targeted practice with books matched to the sounds they are still securing. That “right book at the right time” discipline is often what separates a school that teaches phonics as a programme from one that embeds it across classroom practice.
The curriculum model is also described as integrated, meaning that writing, reading and wider subject work connect rather than sitting in separate silos. This approach can work particularly well for infants, because it mirrors how children learn best: through repeated exposure, concrete experiences, and purposeful talk. The school’s own descriptions emphasise project-based learning, visitors, and links to the local area as part of making knowledge stick.
Support for pupils with special educational needs is presented as fast and practical. Staff are described as routinely checking for gaps, adapting tasks using visual and language prompts, and reviewing support with parents so pupils can access the same learning as their peers. The named SENDCo on the school’s contact information is Mrs Penny Campone, who is also listed as an assistant headteacher and SENDCo within staffing information.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For an infant school, the key “destination” question is less about university and more about continuity: where children usually go at the end of Year 2, and how well the transition is managed.
The school presents a clear relationship with its linked junior school on the same wider site area, and the junior school is frequently referenced as the natural next step for many families. The most recent inspection also notes that transition work with local pre-school settings is strong, which matters for Reception intake as well as for smooth settling in early years practice.
In practical terms, families should expect a familiar local pathway: infant to junior transfer into Year 3, then onward to local secondary schools later. If you want a clearer sense of the typical junior transfer process and what it implies for long-term planning, it is worth reading the local authority guidance alongside the junior school admissions policy, as the process is coordinated and deadline driven.
Entry pressure is real in Reception, and the demand picture supports that. In the most recent recorded main-round data here, there were 126 applications for 60 offers, which is 2.1 applications per place, and the school is described as oversubscribed. This matters because it frames admissions as a planning exercise rather than a formality.
Admissions are coordinated through Hampshire County Council for state schools in the area. For September 2026 entry, the published main-round key dates show:
Applications open: 1 November 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
National offer day: 16 April 2026
Because oversubscription can be sensitive to very small changes in where families live and how many apply in a given year, it is sensible to treat school choice as probabilistic. If you are relying on proximity, use FindMySchool Map Search to check your likely distance and to sense-check your shortlist against previous allocation patterns. Distances vary each year, and a shorter walk does not automatically guarantee a place.
The school’s own site messaging suggests families should keep an eye on application windows and speak to the local authority if they move into the area after the main round, which is consistent with a busy local admissions context.
88.1%
1st preference success rate
59 of 67 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
126
Wellbeing is not treated as a separate bolt-on, it is woven into routines and language. The school’s “healthy hearts and minds” work is framed as a way for children to understand feelings, build calm, and make better choices, which is exactly the developmental sweet spot for 5 to 7 year olds.
A specific feature is the Trickbox programme, presented around an ABCD framework (Accept, Be, Choose, Do). The stated intention is to help children recognise emotions, build mindful awareness, and set positive goals, with staff training to support consistent use of the approach.
For parents, the implication is that the school is likely to suit children who benefit from predictable routines and clear language for behaviour and feelings. It may be particularly reassuring for families whose child needs structured support to settle, make friends, and develop confidence in speaking and listening, because the approach is designed to be explicit rather than assumed.
For infant pupils, extracurricular strength shows up as short, well-run clubs and varied experiences that build confidence without exhausting children.
The school publishes a set of structured after-school clubs, typically running from 3:20pm to 4:15pm or 4:20pm, with examples including:
TaeKwonDo (Year 1 and 2)
Football (Year 1 and 2)
Dance Kidz
Treasure Gymnastics
There is also a music option through Rocksteady Music School, which points to a practical route into group music-making for children who enjoy performing and rhythm based learning.
Lunchtime clubs broaden participation without adding late pick-ups. A good example is the school’s Lego Club, described as a weekly lunchtime activity where children build creatively, sometimes with themed challenges, sometimes through free building. Ofsted also notes lunchtime clubs including art, sewing, construction and choir, plus enrichment such as theatre experiences and author visitors.
The EEI pattern here is clear. Example: a club offer that includes movement, creative arts and construction. Evidence: named clubs and structured times. Implication: children get low-pressure opportunities to try new interests, practise teamwork, and build confidence, which can be especially valuable for quieter pupils who do not always volunteer first in class.
The published school day times are clear: drop-off at 8:50am (with the gate closing at 9:00am) and pick-up at 3:10pm.
Wraparound care is available in two common ways. First, the school runs an Early Bird provision with drop-off between 8:00am and 8:30am, with children taken to classrooms for the normal start. Second, after-school wraparound care is provided through CM Sports, with sessions from 3:10pm to 6:00pm, and shorter session options.
For travel, the school encourages walking and reports that over 70% of children walk with a parent where possible. For drivers, the guidance is to park and stride, with the nearest suggested public car park at Hoe Road Recreation Ground. Public transport links in the wider area are typically bus-led, including services operated by Stagecoach.
Competition for Reception places. With 126 applications for 60 offers in the latest available snapshot, admission can be the limiting factor. Families should keep deadlines front of mind and treat plans as contingent on outcomes.
A strong values and routines culture. BADGER values and the ABCD framework are used consistently. This suits children who respond well to shared language and structure, but families who prefer a looser approach should check the fit.
Wraparound costs. This is a state school with no tuition fees, but childcare around the school day is paid for. For example, wraparound care sessions run up to 6:00pm with published per-session pricing.
Drop-off and parking discipline matters. The school asks families to walk where possible and to park considerately, including using park-and-stride options. If you need to drive daily, factor in the local traffic pinch points and plan for a short walk.
Bishops Waltham Infant School stands out for the combination of early reading focus, precise curriculum planning and a wellbeing model that teaches young children practical habits for managing emotions and behaviour. It is a strong choice for families who want high expectations from the start, and who value clear routines, a well-defined ethos, and structured enrichment in music, sport and creative clubs. Best suited to local families who can plan carefully around admissions timelines and who want a disciplined, child-centred start to primary education.
Yes. The most recent inspection graded the school Outstanding across all areas, and describes strong early reading, exemplary behaviour, and a carefully planned curriculum that supports pupils, including those with additional needs.
Applications are made through Hampshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 1 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school runs an Early Bird provision with drop-off between 8:00am and 8:30am, and after-school wraparound care is offered through an external provider with sessions running up to 6:00pm.
Many families look to the linked junior school locally for Year 3, and the infant school explicitly references its relationship with the junior school as a key part of the local pathway.
After-school options listed include TaeKwonDo, Football, Dance Kidz and Treasure Gymnastics, with lunchtime activities such as Lego Club also described.
Get in touch with the school directly
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