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 child starting Reception here joins a school with deep local roots and a strong sense of identity. The site began life as a Board School in the late 19th century, and the current school still frames itself as a close-to-home option for Southsea families.
Leadership has stabilised after a period of change. Mrs Rebecca Holmes is the current head teacher; the most recent inspection recorded that she was newly in post at the time, which matters because it helps explain the school’s current push to tighten consistency across the curriculum.
This is a state infant school, so there are no tuition fees. It is also oversubscribed, with recent admissions figures showing significantly more applications than places, so practicalities around catchment and deadlines deserve early attention.
The school’s tone is shaped by two things that show up repeatedly in its published material: a community focus and a deliberate approach to personal development. The inspection report describes pupils feeling safe and cared for, and it also highlights an emerging reset in expectations and routines after staffing turbulence.
A child’s day is structured and predictable. Gates open at 8:30am, doors at 8:40am, and lessons end at 3:15pm. That clarity tends to suit young pupils, particularly those who benefit from consistent transitions.
There are also visible pupil-responsibility roles. The school runs Southsea Ship Captains (its school captains structure), with named class captains across the school, signalling that pupil voice and leadership are taken seriously even at infant phase.
Because this is an infant school (up to age 7), the most useful evidence tends to be about foundations rather than headline exam tables. The most recent inspection puts early reading and mathematics at the centre of current improvement work, describing a more precise approach to early reading from Reception, matched books for phonics practice, and greater emphasis on checking what pupils remember in maths and encouraging them to explain their thinking.
The same inspection is also clear that standards have not been where leaders want them in recent years, particularly around reading pace and writing outcomes. That is important context for parents. It suggests a school that is actively addressing core learning, but also one where consistency, especially beyond English and mathematics, is still being built.
For families comparing local schools, this is the point to look beyond slogans and ask practical questions at a tour: how phonics is taught day to day, how children who fall behind are identified, and how subject knowledge in foundation areas is developed across Year 1 and Year 2.
Early reading is the clearest priority. The inspection describes a systematic start from Reception and additional support that is tailored to pupils who are not keeping up, alongside deliberate encouragement of reading for pleasure through shared books sent home.
The wider curriculum is a work in progress. The inspection indicates that curriculum plans have been redesigned from Reception to Year 2, but also that guidance and implementation in some foundation subjects has been variable, with leaders needing a sharper picture of what is happening in classrooms outside English and maths.
For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your child is keen on story, number, and routines, the current direction should feel aligned. If you are looking for particularly strong topic teaching in every foundation subject, it is sensible to probe how the school is supporting staff with sequencing, resources, and subject leadership.
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 an infant school, the main transition is to junior provision after Year 2. The practical questions here are about continuity: how learning records are transferred, how children with additional needs are supported through the move, and whether friendship group planning is part of transition.
A distinctive feature is the school’s specially resourced provision for pupils with speech, language and communication needs, with places described as up to eight. For children who may later move into mainstream junior settings, transition planning and consistent specialist support can be as important as academic progress.
Demand is a central feature. Recent admissions figures show 171 applications for 48 offers, which is consistent with an oversubscribed local school. For families, that typically means catchment, siblings, and deadlines matter more than preference alone.
For September 2026 entry, Portsmouth’s coordinated primary admissions deadline is Thursday 15 January 2026, with the national offer day on Thursday 16 April 2026.
The school’s own admissions page also signposts open sessions and school tours for September 2026 starters, which is usually the best route to understand day-to-day routines and expectations before you apply.
Parents trying to shortlist realistically should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check how their home address sits against the school’s admissions priorities, particularly if you are close to the boundary of any defined catchment.
Applications
171
Total received
Places Offered
48
Subscription Rate
3.6x
Apps per place
Safeguarding is a baseline question for any parent, and the latest inspection states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Beyond compliance, the school’s published behaviour approach emphasises a restorative model, focusing on repairing relationships and building emotional literacy rather than relying only on sanctions. For infant-aged pupils, that can translate into calmer classrooms and more consistent adult responses when friendships wobble or routines break down.
The inspection also notes that pupils learn to manage feelings and that classrooms are calm and conducive to learning. That combination often matters as much as pure attainment at this age, especially for children who are anxious, easily dysregulated, or new to a full-time school day.
Infant schools rarely run a huge clubs programme in the way juniors and secondaries do, but there are still signs of enrichment and wider experience.
One pillar is pupil leadership. Southsea Ship Captains create a formal structure for representing peers and practising communication and decision-making skills, even within a very young age range.
A second pillar is experience-led learning beyond the classroom. The school calendar and year-group information pages show planned events such as curriculum-linked visits and sharing learning outcomes with families, which can make topics feel real and help pupils build vocabulary and confidence.
The inspection also references fundraising and design work tied to an environmental area, pointing to an emerging eco strand, even if not all details are fully published yet.
The school day runs from 8:45am (gates close) to a 3:15pm lesson finish, with a 32.5-hour week stated.
Wraparound care exists because the inspection notes the school runs its own before- and after-school provision. The school site also signposts a breakfast and after-school club leaflet, but detailed timings and costs should be confirmed directly with the school office.
For travel planning, the setting is in Southsea with a typical urban pattern of walking, pushchairs, and short car drop-offs. If you are driving, it is worth asking at a tour how the school manages drop-off safety and late arrivals, since punctuality is treated as a priority in the most recent inspection narrative.
Curriculum consistency is still developing. The latest inspection highlights stronger practice in English and maths than in some foundation subjects, and it signals that a graded inspection is expected next.
Competition for places is real. Recent figures show far more applications than offers, so families should treat admissions criteria and deadlines as the practical constraint.
Leadership reset takes time. The head teacher was newly appointed at the time of the January 2024 inspection, and the school is rebuilding after staffing turnover, which can mean policies and practice are being tightened year by year.
Southsea Infant School suits families who want a local, community-rooted infant school with clear routines, an explicit focus on early reading, and a behaviour approach built around relationships. It is also a school in active improvement mode, particularly around curriculum breadth and consistency, so it best suits parents who value transparency, regular communication, and a steady trajectory rather than a fully “finished product” feel.
The school is currently graded Good, and the latest inspection (23 to 24 January 2024) confirmed the overall judgement remains Good, while also signalling that the next inspection will be graded. It presents a clear focus on early reading and calm classroom routines, alongside improvement work needed in parts of the wider curriculum.
Applications are made through Portsmouth’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the published deadline is Thursday 15 January 2026, and national offer day is Thursday 16 April 2026.
Yes. Recent admissions figures show 171 applications for 48 offers, indicating demand materially exceeds available places.
Gates open at 8:30am, classroom doors open at 8:40am, and lessons finish at 3:15pm.
Yes, the school runs its own before- and after-school provision. Precise session times and charges are best checked with the school’s published leaflet or by speaking to the school office.
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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