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.
This is a small, in-demand community primary in Fleetville, St Albans, with a clear emphasis on both academic achievement and wellbeing. Results at Key Stage 2 are exceptionally strong for a state school, and the school also offers something genuinely distinctive: an integrated Deaf Unit supporting deaf pupils across Reception to Year 6.
The latest inspection judged the school Good overall, with Personal Development rated Outstanding. For families looking for a calm, organised school day with wraparound care available, Maple’s routines and partnerships are practical strengths, but competition for places is the real pressure point.
Maple’s public-facing language is unusually straightforward. The values presented most prominently are “Mindful, Aspirational, Resilient, Kind”, which gives a good sense of what the school is trying to grow in children, not just what it wants them to achieve.
Leadership stability matters in primaries, and Maple has it. Mrs Shanti Johnson is the headteacher, and the school records show her in post from April 2021. The welcome message places equal weight on academic ambition and mental and physical wellbeing, plus an explicit focus on inclusion and diversity, which fits the profile of a central St Albans intake.
A defining feature is the Deaf Unit. It supports 10 deaf children across the school, and is positioned as integral rather than separate. Practical accessibility features are not left vague: the school describes soundfield systems in every classroom and the use of Phonak Roger radio aids, alongside specialist teaching, in-class support, and speech and language therapy. For hearing children, those systems can also improve listening conditions and attention, so the inclusion work potentially benefits the whole cohort, not just pupils in the Unit.
Maple’s Key Stage 2 picture is strong across the board, and particularly striking in the combined measures that parents tend to care about most.
In 2024, 91% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 41.33% reached greater depth, far above the England average of 8%. Reading, maths, and GPS (grammar, punctuation and spelling) scaled scores are also high at 109, 110, and 111 respectively. These are the sort of numbers usually associated with the very top end of state primary performance.
Rankings reinforce that picture. Maple is ranked 461st in England for primary outcomes and 5th in St Albans, based on FindMySchool proprietary rankings using official data. This places it well above the England average, in the top 10% of schools in England.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
91%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A results profile like this is rarely accidental. It usually comes from three things working together: clear curriculum sequencing, consistent teaching routines, and strong subject leadership.
Maple makes its subject leadership structure explicit, listing named coordinators across key areas such as mathematics, English, phonics, computing, music, and physical education. For parents, the practical implication is that curriculum development is not left to chance or to individual classrooms; it is actively managed across the school.
Early reading and writing matter disproportionately in primary outcomes. Maple’s approach in Reception includes a clearly staffed team, including teachers supported by teaching assistants. The school also sets out a structured induction for new Reception pupils, including a gradual build-up to full-time attendance, which can help children settle while keeping routines predictable for families.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a St Albans primary, Maple feeds into a mix of popular local secondaries, with the precise pattern varying year by year depending on family moves, preferences, and admissions outcomes. For most families, the practical question is less “Where do pupils go?” and more “How strong is the preparation for transition?”
The evidence base here is the school’s outcomes and its curriculum leadership structure. High attainment at the end of Year 6 usually translates into strong readiness for a wide range of Year 7 settings, including academically demanding comprehensives and selective routes where families choose to pursue them.
If you are building a shortlist, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool are useful for looking at nearby secondaries side by side, then mapping likely transition routes from your exact location.
The admissions context is the headline challenge. Maple is oversubscribed, with 157 applications for 30 offers in the most recent admissions results, around 5.23 applications per place. First preference demand is also high relative to offers, which reinforces the idea that many families are not treating Maple as a backup choice.
For Reception entry in September 2026, the school publishes specific tour dates and makes clear these are aimed at prospective parents and carers applying for that intake. At county level, Hertfordshire sets out a clear timetable: applications open on 03 November 2025 and the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026. Allocation day is 16 April 2026, with a deadline of 23 April 2026 for accepting the offered place.
77.8%
1st preference success rate
28 of 36 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
157
Maple’s most recent inspection judgement is a useful anchor, especially where it goes beyond classroom teaching into how children develop as people. The latest Ofsted report rated Personal Development as Outstanding.
On the operational side, wraparound provision also plays into wellbeing for many families, because reliable childcare reduces stress at home and gives children stable routines. Maple’s wraparound partner, Re:play, describes provision for breakfast, after-school, and holiday sessions, with stated supervision ratios and staff training claims, positioned as a structured childcare offer rather than an informal add-on.
For children with additional needs, the integrated Deaf Unit is the most distinctive part of the pastoral and inclusion offer, because it combines specialist teaching and equipment with mainstream participation across the school.
Maple is explicit that enrichment is not left to chance. The school lists a broad clubs programme delivered by external providers and school staff, and it goes beyond the typical “sports and art” headline. Examples include fencing, French, chess, karate, construction, and a school choir.
A practical detail parents often miss is how clubs operate across a term. Maple publishes a term structure for clubs, including start and finish weeks and specific dates when clubs do not run, which can be helpful for planning. The school also states that free places are offered to children receiving free school meals, which matters if you are weighing enrichment access as well as the existence of clubs.
Music is another clear pillar. The headteacher’s welcome references music lessons (including guitar, violin, cello, and recorder), plus choir and ensembles. For many children, consistent music tuition at primary age can be the difference between later participation and opting out entirely, so it is meaningful when it is embedded into the school’s offer rather than treated as occasional.
The school day uses a soft start. Children are welcomed into classrooms between 8.40am and 8.45am, with gates closed at 8.45am, and end-of-day collection at 3.15pm. The school also states that the weekly taught time totals 32.5 hours.
Wraparound childcare is available via the school’s partner provision. Breakfast sessions are described as running from 7.30am, with breakfast service finishing at 8.15am, and holiday provision offered across school holidays.
Fleetville is a walkable part of St Albans with established residential streets. In practice, many families manage the school run on foot or by short local drives, and the wider city links make it workable for commuting households, but parking and congestion can still be an issue at peak drop-off times.
Competition for places. With 157 applications for 30 offers demand is intense. If you are relying on entry as part of a housing plan, check criteria carefully and keep contingency options.
High attainment can bring pressure. Very strong Key Stage 2 outcomes often correlate with high expectations. For many children this is motivating, but some families prefer a less outcome-driven feel.
Inclusion needs vary. The Deaf Unit is a significant strength for the right child, but families should still clarify how support works day to day, particularly where needs go beyond hearing support.
Maple Primary School combines genuinely high academic outcomes with a clear wellbeing and inclusion message, and the specialist Deaf Unit makes it stand out in the local market. It suits families who want a state primary with ambitious results, structured routines, and access to clubs and wraparound care. The limiting factor is admission, not the quality of education once a place is secured.
Maple has strong academic outcomes at Key Stage 2, including 91% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in 2024, well above the England average of 62%. The latest inspection judged the school Good overall, with Personal Development rated Outstanding.
Admissions are competitive and criteria-driven, and the precise practical reach can change year to year depending on who applies. The safest approach is to read the current admission rules in full and plan with at least one realistic alternative school in mind.
Applications are made through Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions process. The county timetable shows applications opening on 03 November 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026 for on-time submissions, with allocations on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Wraparound childcare is available via the school’s partner provision, including breakfast sessions from 7.30am and after-school childcare, plus holiday sessions described as running across school holidays.
Yes. The school has an integrated Deaf Unit supporting 10 deaf children across Reception to Year 6, and it describes specialist teaching, in-class support, and hearing-support systems such as soundfield systems and radio aids.
Get in touch with the school directly
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