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The first few years of schooling set the tone for everything that follows, not just academically, but socially and emotionally too. Eling Infant School and Nursery is built around that idea, serving children through Nursery to Year 2, and pairing classroom learning with structured habits that help very young pupils manage attention, emotions, and routines.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (13 and 14 May 2025) judged all five key areas as Outstanding, including early years provision, leadership and management, and behaviour and attitudes.
For families balancing childcare with work, the practical offer matters. On-site wraparound runs from 7.30am to 6.00pm, with both breakfast and after-school options, and the school publishes its session times and charges clearly.
Small infant schools can feel either tight-knit or cramped, depending on how well routines and relationships are managed. Here, the tone is shaped by an emphasis on belonging, independence, and calm. Ofsted describes a community where pupils feel safe and happy, with adults guiding children to make choices and ask for help, and where staff know pupils well enough to support independence in lessons.
A distinctive feature is the school’s explicit language for learning behaviours. The Learning Friends approach uses animal characters to help children practise the habits that underpin good learning, such as focus, persistence, and reflection. This kind of shared vocabulary can be genuinely useful at infant stage, because it gives pupils a simple, consistent way to describe what they are trying to do, even before they have the words for more abstract ideas.
The ethos that runs through Nursery and the main school is framed around Enjoy, Learn, Inspire, Nurture and Grow. That matters less as a slogan and more as a practical signal that early years is integrated rather than bolted on. The Nursery was established in September 2015, with provision expanding over time from mornings to full days.
Leadership is clear and visible in published information. Trina Sillence is named as headteacher, and the school also sets out wider staff responsibilities such as safeguarding leadership and curriculum leads, which helps parents understand who holds which remit day to day.
This is an infant school, so the usual headline public metrics parents see for primary schools, such as Key Stage 2 test results, do not apply. The most meaningful external benchmark is therefore inspection evidence and what it implies about readiness for junior school.
The latest inspection report places particular weight on language, reading, writing, and early mathematics, describing high expectations and strong support that helps pupils keep up, especially in reading. For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your priority is a strong grounding in decoding, vocabulary, and sentence construction before Key Stage 2 begins, this is the right phase to get it.
The school is not currently presented with published FindMySchool England rankings for primary outcomes so this review does not use ranking or percentile language for attainment. Parents comparing local infant and primary options can instead use the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tool to view performance and context side by side where data is available for a like-for-like key stage.
Infant teaching succeeds when it is both structured and playful. What stands out here is a deliberate focus on how children learn, not only what they learn.
One example is the whole-school use of myHappymind, described by the school as a programme grounded in science that helps children understand how their brains work and builds resilience, confidence, and self-esteem, alongside practical strategies for self-regulation. The value for parents is that emotional regulation is treated as a teachable skill rather than a vague expectation. That can be particularly helpful for children who arrive at Reception still developing speech, attention, or social confidence.
Another defining strand is Philosophy for Children (P4C). The school sets out a structured approach in which pupils explore concepts such as fairness, friendship, right and wrong, and difference, using stimuli like stories, pictures, or objects, then joining a teacher-facilitated discussion based on pupils’ questions. For infant pupils, that kind of guided talk supports both language development and social understanding. In practical terms, it creates regular opportunities for children to practise listening, turn-taking, and giving reasons, all of which strengthen classroom learning across subjects.
Early literacy is positioned as central. The inspection report describes reading as being central to the curriculum, with daily support to help pupils keep up and become fluent readers who enjoy a range of texts. The implication is that this is likely to suit children who respond well to routine and repetition, as well as those who benefit from timely, targeted support when gaps begin to show.
Because the school educates pupils through Year 2, transition planning is about Junior school entry at Year 3 rather than a single primary-to-secondary jump.
The admissions information for the area identifies a linked junior school, Foxhills Junior School, and attendance at a linked infant school can assist with priority admission to that junior school under local arrangements. In practice, many families will consider Foxhills as the default pathway, then weigh alternatives in Totton and the surrounding area based on catchment, travel, and the child’s needs.
Hampshire’s published admissions timetable also makes clear that infant-to-junior transfer is a distinct application process, with its own main round and deadlines. The key implication is that parents should not assume Year 3 is automatic. Even where pathways are common, the administrative step still matters.
Competition for places exists, and the numbers support that. The most recent admissions data available shows 88 applications for 43 offers, 2.05 applications per place applications per place, and an oversubscribed status. This is the pattern parents experience on the ground, it is popular, and demand can exceed capacity.
Admissions for Reception are coordinated by Hampshire County Council, not handled as a direct school allocation. For September 2026 entry, the school’s published admission number is 45, and the admissions policy specifies a deadline of midnight on 15 January 2026, with notifications issued on 16 April 2026. Hampshire’s published key dates align with this timetable, with applications opening on 1 November 2025 for Reception entry.
Oversubscription criteria are also clearly set out. 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 (with evidence), and children of staff under defined criteria, followed by catchment-based criteria and sibling links, including sibling links to the linked junior school. The policy also includes a school-specific criterion giving priority to out-of-catchment children attending the on-site, school-run nursery over other out-of-catchment children.
Nursery admissions do not follow the same process as Reception entry, and the school’s Reception admissions policy explicitly states that it does not apply to nursery provision. Nursery places typically involve direct contact and an early years-focused discussion about hours, funding, and the child’s needs. For nursery fee details, use the school’s published information, as early years pricing should not be relied on second-hand.
90.7%
1st preference success rate
39 of 43 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
43
Offers
43
Applications
88
Infant wellbeing is mostly about routines, language, and early intervention, and this school appears to take that seriously.
The school publishes named leadership roles linked to wellbeing and inclusion. The staff list includes a Mental Health and Wellbeing lead, and also an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant (ELSA) lead within the teaching assistant team. For parents, that signals two things, emotional support is not a one-off add-on, and there is a planned structure for helping children who need extra help with confidence, friendships, or behaviour.
The SEN Information Report reviewed in January 2026 describes liaison with external professionals such as speech and language therapy, occupational therapists, and educational psychology, and it frames the first layer of support as class-based, with targeted interventions in small groups where appropriate. This tends to suit families who value early identification and consistent communication, particularly in the Nursery and Reception years where needs can emerge quickly.
Safeguarding is treated as a core expectation rather than a compliance line. Inspectors reported that pupils feel safe and very happy, supported by skilled staff who help children manage feelings and behaviour from early years onwards.
Extracurricular life in an infant setting is less about prestige and more about breadth, confidence, and habit building. The school’s offer is unusually specific for this age group, with named clubs and a mix of sport, creative work, and structured novelty.
A clear example is the after-school club timetable that includes Multisports and Football club on Mondays, led by coaches from the Chelsea FC Foundation. The implication is access to well-structured coaching, which can be a strong fit for children who need clear rules and repetition to build coordination and confidence.
The week continues with Try it: Tuesday, a rotating programme that has included yoga, science experiments, cooking, table tennis, drama, and Indian dance, then Art: Wednesday, plus Taekwondo: Thursday run by a named local provider. For working parents, these clubs can also function as a bridge between the school day and later childcare arrangements. For children, they offer low-stakes experiences that help reveal interests early.
Outdoor learning is another signature feature. The Forest Schools pages show a sustained programme of sessions and themed activities, with an emphasis on confidence-building, collaboration, and practical tasks. For some pupils, this is where learning clicks, particularly those who find seated classroom time more challenging.
The school day structure is clearly published. Children are welcomed into classrooms from 8.30am, learning time starts at 8.45am, lunch is at 12.00pm, and the school day ends at 3.00pm.
Wraparound is a meaningful part of the model. Penguins Breakfast Club opens at 7.30am, and Penguins After School Club runs after 3.00pm through to 6.00pm, with set session lengths and published charges. If you rely on wraparound, it is worth checking how regular versus ad hoc bookings work and which sessions include food.
Travel and drop-off arrangements are not always fully detailed in public-facing pages. Families should check current guidance directly with the school, especially if you plan to drive at peak times, as local road conditions and parking norms can change over time.
Competition for Reception places. Recent admissions data shows the school is oversubscribed, with around 2.05 applications per place. If you are planning a move, do not assume availability, and treat application timing as a priority.
Year 3 transfer is a separate application. Because pupils leave after Year 2, families must plan for junior school admissions. The linked junior school route can help, but it is still a process with deadlines, rather than an automatic rollover.
Wraparound is a strength, but it is still a paid extra. Breakfast and after-school provision is clearly structured and practical, yet it adds cost over time. Families should check which sessions they need and build that into budgeting.
Eling Infant School and Nursery is a high-performing early years and infant setting, with Outstanding judgements across every key area in the most recent inspection and a clear emphasis on reading, language, and self-regulation. Wraparound provision from 7.30am to 6.00pm is a genuine operational advantage for many families, and the extracurricular offer is unusually well defined for this age group.
Best suited to families who want a structured, ambitious start to schooling, value explicit support for behaviour and wellbeing, and prefer an infant model that pairs strong classroom routines with practical childcare options. Entry remains the primary hurdle.
The school was judged Outstanding across all five key areas in its most recent inspection in May 2025, including quality of education and early years provision. For an infant setting, that combination usually signals strong routines, effective teaching, and a well-embedded safeguarding culture.
Reception applications are coordinated by Hampshire County Council. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 1 November 2025, the deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes, the school has an on-site nursery. Nursery entry is not governed by the same admissions policy used for Reception, so parents should use the school’s published nursery information and discuss hours, funding, and suitability directly with the school.
The school day ends at 3.00pm, with learning time starting at 8.45am. Wraparound is available through Penguins Breakfast Club and Penguins After School Club, with published session times extending from 7.30am to 6.00pm.
Families apply for a junior school place at Year 3. The local admissions information identifies Foxhills Junior School as a linked junior school, which can be relevant for priority criteria in the admissions process.
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