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 lot of infant schools talk about confidence and curiosity; fewer make it visible in day to day routines. Here, learning behaviours are given names that pupils remember, staff refer to them constantly, and children are praised for sticking with the hard bits. The school calls these its Learning Heroes, and they are used as a shared language from Reception through Year 2.
This is a state infant school for ages 4 to 7, with capacity for 180 pupils, serving local families in Calmore, Southampton. It is not a school with headline national performance tables, partly because infant outcomes are not captured in the same way as Key Stage 2. The best evidence sits in curriculum and teaching practice, and in the latest official inspection narrative, which highlights early reading, mathematics, and a well sequenced curriculum.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (October 2023) confirmed the school remains Good.
The tone is purposeful, warm, and explicitly child centred. Pupils are taught that learning can involve “muddles” and that persistence matters, which is reinforced through the Learning Heroes approach. The characters are not a decorative poster set, they are referenced as cues for behaviour and learning habits, with resilience linked to Toby Tortoise, teamwork linked to Bert Bee, and reflection linked to Emily Elephant.
Pupil voice also has a practical role. The inspection report describes how Friendship Fox was introduced after school council work, a useful detail because it shows an infant school taking participation seriously, not just as a token badge system. That matters for families who want their child to feel heard early, and who value schools that build routines around kindness and relationships rather than relying on sanctions.
In assemblies and shared moments, inclusion appears to be baked in. The report notes children using sign language to greet each other and singing together, which is a strong indicator of communal rituals that even very young pupils can access.
Leadership is clearly identified on the school website. Mrs S Willes is listed as Headteacher and also Designated Safeguarding Lead, which is reassuring for parents who want clear accountability around pupil safety and welfare.
As an infant school, this is not a setting where parents can rely on the familiar Key Stage 2 headline measures to compare progress against England averages. Instead, the most reliable picture comes from what is taught, how it is taught, and how well pupils build secure foundations by the end of Year 2.
External review evidence focuses strongly on curriculum quality and outcomes in practice. The most recent inspection describes pupils excelling academically because the curriculum is well considered, inclusive, and built to support success and wider experiences. It also highlights that subject content is sequenced carefully from early years through Year 2, so knowledge builds in a coherent way rather than being taught as disconnected topics.
Two areas are singled out as particular strengths. Mathematics is described as exceptional, with routines that start in early years and include regular revisiting of prior learning, use of concrete resources, and increasing independence in problem solving. Reading is described as central to the curriculum, with structured phonics teaching from the start of Reception and extra support where needed. For parents, the implication is straightforward: this is a school that prioritises the basics, and does so through repeatable classroom routines rather than hoping children will “pick it up” naturally.
If you are comparing schools locally, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages can still be useful, not for infant headline results, but for building a shortlist using admissions pressure, inspection history, and phase structure before you visit.
A key strength here is the way learning habits, subject knowledge, and intervention support sit together rather than feeling like separate initiatives.
The inspection report gives a concrete example of how topic content grows: early years children walk to nearby shops and a post box to understand their immediate environment, then by Year 2 they compare their local area with places elsewhere in the world using books and online resources. That progression matters because it indicates children are building vocabulary and concepts step by step, which supports later writing, comprehension, and reasoning.
On the school website, early reading is framed as a priority and is linked to a phonics programme, Read Write Inc. The same page explains that some children receive additional “reading for meaning” intervention delivered by trained learning support assistants. For parents, this suggests two things: the school is explicit about its chosen approach, and it expects to provide targeted support when children need something different to move forward.
The inspection report adds an example that brings reading culture to life: Winter Warmers, a bedtime stories event where families share books and children meet the Gruffalo in a cosy setting. This is not just a charming anecdote, it shows the school placing reading in the shared home school space, which tends to correlate with stronger engagement from families.
The learning approach page describes small group, one to one, and “keep up” support for pupils who find early number concepts difficult. This matches the inspection description of mathematics routines that rely on revisiting learning and using resources to build secure understanding. The implication for families is that the school is likely to spot gaps early and act, which is particularly important in Reception and Year 1 where small misunderstandings can quickly become long term barriers.
The school states it has been recognised as an Early Excellence Partner School for 2024/25, with an aim to host events and share practice locally. That is a useful signal for parents because it often goes alongside investment in classroom organisation, early years practice, and staff development across EYFS and Key Stage 1.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school serves Reception through Year 2 only, families need to plan for the Year 3 move into junior provision. A practical advantage is that Calmore Junior School is linked in Hampshire admissions arrangements, and it is referenced directly in the infant school’s admission policy as the linked junior school for sibling priority considerations.
What that means in real terms is that the infant years here can be a stable foundation, but the short term decision is only one part of a longer primary journey. Families who value continuity should look carefully at the junior stage early, ideally at the same time as choosing their Reception preference, so there are no surprises later.
Demand is real rather than hypothetical. For the most recent admissions figures provided, 82 applications were made for 53 offers, which equates to 1.55 applications per place, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed on that basis.
For September 2026 entry into Reception, the published admission number is 60. Applications are coordinated by Hampshire County Council in the normal admissions round. The school’s published admission policy states that applications received by midnight on 15 January 2026 are treated as on time, with offers notified on 16 April 2026.
The oversubscription criteria follow the usual structure for Hampshire community schools. After children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, priority includes looked after and previously looked after children, exceptional medical or social need supported by professional evidence, children of staff in defined circumstances, and catchment area priority including siblings, with distance used as the tiebreaker when criteria are oversubscribed.
For families considering a September 2026 start, the school’s admissions page also points to open days in the autumn term and uses a registration form for sessions. In practice, this is often the best way to understand the feel of Reception provision and the transition approach.
If you are shortlisting oversubscribed schools, FindMySchool’s Map Search can help you check practical geography alongside catchment context, even when the last offered distance varies year to year and is not always published in a simple headline figure.
95.9%
1st preference success rate
47 of 49 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
53
Offers
53
Applications
82
Pastoral support is unusually well described for an infant school, which helps parents understand what happens when a child is anxious, dysregulated, or struggling socially.
The school runs Rainbows Nurture Group in the Rainbow Room, presented as a bridge between home and school. The description is specific: a space with a snack table, sofa and book corner, role play area, and direct access to outdoor space. This matters because nurture provision is most effective when it is not a vague label, but a structured environment with routines and adult support designed for children who need it.
The nurture group is described as a small class of 8 to 10 pupils, typically for no more than two terms depending on need, with transition back to class when assessments show readiness for independent learning. The clear time limited design should reassure families who want support without long term separation from peers.
Safeguarding is stated as effective in the latest inspection report, and leadership is described as active in maintaining a culture that puts pupils’ interests first. The school’s leadership structure also makes safeguarding responsibility explicit by linking it directly to the headteacher role.
The inspection report notes strong pupil understanding of online safety, including a remembered refrain linked to Smartie the Penguin. For parents, this signals that online safety is taught as repeated routine and language, which is usually how messages stick at this age.
Extracurricular in an infant school needs to be age appropriate and logistically realistic. The school’s own list suggests it is, with a mix of clubs that prioritise movement, creativity, and early problem solving.
The Extra Curricular page names Yogabeans, Tennis, Gymnastics, Lego Club, and Street Dance, plus additional options during the year such as gardening club, athletics, Dodgeball, and recorder club. This kind of menu matters because it gives children low stakes ways to discover interests early, and it supports working families who want enriching activities without a heavy commitment.
There is also a clear emphasis on sport participation and partnerships. The school states it is part of the Testwood Sports College Partnership, and references links with Eastleigh and Saints football clubs, Totton Tennis Club, and Totton Cricket Club to broaden opportunities. For an infant school, those external links can be a positive sign, because they often mean access to coaching expertise and structured festivals that suit younger pupils.
Play is taken seriously as part of development, not as downtime. The OPAL programme, described as Outdoor Play and Learning, is presented as a mentor supported improvement programme focused on better quality play, with the school noting that 20% of children’s school time is spent in playtime. The implication is a deliberate approach to outdoor provision, resources, and play culture, which tends to support social development and behaviour.
The school day is stated as 8.30am to 3.00pm, totalling 32.5 hours per week.
Wraparound care is available through a shared arrangement with the junior school on the same site. The prospectus describes a Breakfast Club run by Calmore Junior School that is open to children from both schools. After school care is provided through Flamingo Club, hosted on site, with two timing options listed: 3.00pm to 4.00pm and 3.00pm to 5.30pm.
For families planning visits, the school encourages prospective parents to see the school in action by arranging an appointment through the office. The office opening hours are stated as 8.15am to 4.00pm.
Competition for places. With 82 applications and 53 offers in the latest data, demand exceeds supply. If you are aiming for a September 2026 start, read the oversubscription criteria carefully and attend an autumn term open day to understand practical expectations.
Catchment matters. The admission policy includes catchment priority and uses straight line distance as the tiebreaker when criteria are oversubscribed. Families outside catchment should treat this as a genuine barrier, not a minor detail.
Short phase, bigger plan needed. This is an infant school, so the decision covers Reception to Year 2. Families should think early about the junior stage and the wider primary journey, especially if continuity is a priority.
Some clubs may involve extra charges. The school notes that clubs include a mix of school run and external providers, and booking can be through the parent app or directly with providers. Parents who want a fully cost free after school routine should ask what is included each term.
Calmore Infant School looks strongest for families who want an infant setting with a clearly articulated approach to learning habits, strong foundations in early reading and mathematics, and practical pastoral structures like Rainbows Nurture Group. It should suit children who benefit from consistent routines and language around resilience and teamwork, and parents who value a well organised transition into school life. The challenge lies in admission rather than what follows, so families should treat the published criteria and deadlines as essential reading before they commit to this as a first preference.
The school continues to be judged Good, with the latest inspection highlighting a well sequenced curriculum, a strong culture of inclusion, and effective safeguarding. Strengths cited include early reading and mathematics, plus thoughtful attention to pupils’ wider development through routines like learning behaviours and pupil voice.
Priority in admissions includes children living in the school’s catchment area, and the admission policy explains that distance is used to prioritise applications when criteria are oversubscribed. Hampshire provides a catchment map service for parents who want to check whether their home address sits in catchment.
Applications are coordinated by Hampshire County Council. The school’s 2026 to 2027 admission policy states that on time applications are those received by midnight on 15 January 2026, with offers notified on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school describes wraparound childcare shared with the junior school on the same site. Breakfast provision is run by Calmore Junior School and after school care is provided through Flamingo Club, with session options stated in the school prospectus.
Reading is treated as central, starting with phonics teaching from early years and additional support for children who need it. The school website references a structured phonics scheme (Read Write Inc) and describes intervention support focused on reading for meaning, delivered by trained learning support staff.
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