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A brand-new primary on the former Woodford Aerodrome site, this school opened in September 2022 and is growing year-by-year from its founding cohorts. That newness matters for parents, because it affects everything from published results to the feel of the community; there is a clear sense of a school still defining its traditions, routines, and signature events.
The headline quality signal is already unusually strong. The March 2025 inspection judged every area Outstanding, including early years. The school is also part of the Laurus Trust, which gives it a broader organisational spine than many new primaries, with trust-wide approaches visible in areas such as personal development and curriculum language.
For admissions, demand is real. Reception entry has been oversubscribed, with 97 applications for 30 offers in the most recent admissions results supplied here. That pattern makes planning important, especially for families relying on a place as part of a house move.
The most distinctive thread is the setting and narrative. The school explicitly links itself to Woodford Aerodrome, and it is not treated as a throwaway historical detail. It works as a local identity anchor for pupils, and it provides a ready-made context for topics, trips, and assemblies that feel rooted in place rather than generic.
Because the school is new, the culture is still being “made” rather than inherited. That tends to produce two parallel experiences. For many families, it feels fresh, organised, and purposeful, with consistent routines across classes and a shared language that staff and pupils learn together. For others, it can feel like the school is still settling into its long-term rhythm, with policies, committees, and annual events maturing each year as cohorts move up. The upside is that parents can shape that trajectory through PTA activity, volunteering, and a governance structure that is clearly set out.
Leadership is presented in a way that is typical of Laurus Trust primaries: a trust-wide executive head role alongside a head of school role focused on the daily life of the school. The school’s opening communications name Lisa Woolley as Executive Head and Elise Drake as Head of School, and governance listings also identify Elise Drake in that head of school capacity from the school’s opening phase.
Values and personal development are unusually prominent for a young school. Rights Respecting language and explicit reference to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child are integrated into curriculum and behaviour information, rather than being relegated to posters. In practice, that typically shows up as pupils learning the vocabulary of rights, respect, and responsibility early, and adults being consistent about “why” as well as “what” when correcting behaviour.
Unlike many newer primaries that add early years later, nursery provision has been part of the story from the start. The school opened with Reception and Pre-School cohorts, and pre-school has its own admissions process with published guidance for September 2026 entry.
The practical implication is continuity. Children can start in the setting before Reception, build familiarity with routines and staff, and then transition into statutory school. Parents should still treat pre-school entry and Reception entry as separate pathways, with separate application routes and decision timelines.
This is a school where families need to read “results” slightly differently. As a new primary opened in 2022, published end-of-key-stage performance data may be limited or not yet established in the way parents expect for long-standing schools, and does not include Key Stage 2 metrics or rankings for this school.
What can be said with confidence is that the curriculum intent is explicitly ambitious. The school’s own curriculum statement emphasises essential knowledge across subjects alongside a progressive enrichment curriculum, with an aim to broaden pupils’ understanding of creativity, achievement, and the wider world.
The strongest external signal is inspection. The March 2025 inspection judged quality of education Outstanding, alongside Outstanding judgements for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. That combination matters for parents because it suggests the school is not relying on one strong area to compensate for weaknesses elsewhere; it points to coherent systems and consistent expectations across the school.
The school frames teaching through two connected strands: an academic curriculum grounded in the national curriculum, and an enrichment curriculum that aims to build character, curiosity, and broader knowledge.
In early years and Key Stage 1, the website materials strongly emphasise text-rich provision and carefully selected books to shape topics, vocabulary, and imagination. The practical implication is that reading is not only taught as a skill but used as a driver of wider learning, with stories and non-fiction texts acting as the “spine” of topics.
Outdoor learning is another clear pillar. Forest School is not positioned as an occasional treat; it is presented as a planned series of sessions for every class each academic year, with activities spanning creative work and bushcraft, including den building and bug hunting. For many pupils, this has a concrete learning impact: resilience, teamwork, language development through shared tasks, and a different route to confidence for children who do not always shine first in a classroom chair.
A final strand is personal development taught explicitly, through PSHE and citizenship, and through a Rights Respecting approach. The implication for parents is that the school is likely to take a structured approach to relationships, online safety, and wellbeing education, rather than leaving it to assemblies alone.
As a growing school, the “destination” story is still emerging. Families should expect the cohort pattern to change annually as year groups are added and as the local area’s housing development matures.
For pupils moving on at Year 6 in future years, secondary transfer is typically shaped by home address and local authority arrangements. In this part of Greater Manchester, families often consider a range of Stockport secondaries as well as options in neighbouring areas depending on travel and catchment. The school does not currently publish a long-established feeder pattern, which is normal for a new primary.
For pre-school children, the next step is usually Reception, but it is important to treat progression as an aspiration rather than an automatic entitlement. Pre-school admissions and Reception admissions are described as separate processes, and Reception applications are made through the local authority route rather than through a pre-school place.
Parents looking to plan ahead can use the FindMySchool Map Search to sanity-check practical logistics such as travel time at drop-off and pick-up, and to compare nearby primary options if you are weighing more than one school while waiting on offers.
Reception admissions are local-authority coordinated. The school’s admissions guidance for 2026 to 2027 entry points parents to the local authority application route and highlights the closing date of 15 January 2026. Stockport’s published timeline for primary entry confirms applications opening in mid-August and National Offer Day for Reception places on 16 April 2026.
Demand indicators show the school as oversubscribed for its Reception entry route, with 97 applications and 30 offers, which equates to 3.23 applications per place. First preference demand also exceeds first preference offers (ratio 1.13). This is not the sort of oversubscription that guarantees disappointment for most families, but it does mean you should not treat a place as automatic.
Pre-school admissions run separately, with the Laurus Trust as the admissions authority and coordination undertaken directly by the school. For September 2026 pre-school entry, the school states eligibility by birthdate and indicates that the admissions form is available from November 2025 to March 2026, with offers shared by the end of April 2026. Tours for prospective pre-school families are described as running from September until the end of November.
A practical tip for families is to separate the two planning tracks in your diary. Reception deadlines are local authority deadlines with fixed dates; pre-school operates to its own published window and can have different decision timings.
88.2%
1st preference success rate
30 of 34 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
97
Pastoral strength is one of the most consistent messages across the school’s published materials. Behaviour guidance frames expectations around relationships, high standards, and positive reinforcement, tied into rights and respect language. That tends to suit pupils who respond well to clear boundaries explained in child-friendly terms, and it can also help families who value consistent approaches across classrooms.
Safeguarding information is published as a formal policy, including clarity on designated safeguarding leadership responsibilities and the expectation that safeguarding and online safety systems are maintained day to day. For parents, the key implication is that safeguarding is treated as a structured professional system, not an informal pastoral add-on.
For younger pupils, settling and transition are addressed explicitly in pre-school FAQs, including the use of visits and shorter settling-in sessions before full days. That approach is often particularly valuable for summer-born children and those who have had limited prior nursery experience.
New schools sometimes struggle to offer breadth early on. Here, enrichment is presented as core to the model rather than a “nice to have”. The curriculum statement puts enrichment alongside academics, with an explicit mission language that pupils are encouraged to internalise.
Forest School is one of the clearest distinctive offers because it is planned for every class annually. The examples given are practical and child-centred, combining creative tasks with outdoor exploration and simple bushcraft, and finishing with familiar rituals such as hot chocolate. The educational payoff is not only “outdoors is fun”, it is the development of independence, language, and problem-solving under mild pressure, all in a setting that suits many children who learn best through movement and shared tasks.
There are also signs of the school building signature events early. A summer highlights post describes the first Sports Day, framed through a house competition with named houses mentioned in the write-up. For parents, house structures often matter more than they sound, because they create identity across year groups, and they can be a gentle way to build belonging in a school that is still growing.
Music and performance opportunities appear in planning documents such as the annual planner, which references choir activity including a Young Voices concert. This is the sort of detail that often signals a school taking arts participation seriously even while cohorts are small.
Finally, pupil voice is made concrete through structures such as Pupil Parliament, with published materials that link it to Rights Respecting ethos and pupil-led initiatives. The implication is that leadership opportunities are designed to be accessible, not reserved for a small group of older pupils, which is particularly useful in a school that has been expanding year by year.
The school publishes a consistent school day timing for both pre-school and Reception onwards: 08.45am to 3.15pm, described as 32.5 hours per week.
Wraparound care is available through Kids Club, with breakfast provision running from 7.30am until the start of the school day and after-school provision from home time until 5.30pm. Published 2025 to 26 pricing for Reception to Year 3 lists breakfast club at £6.50, after school club at £11.75, and before-and-after at £18.25. Places are described as limited and allocated annually, so families who need wraparound consistently should treat early planning as part of the admissions process, not an afterthought.
For pre-school fee information, the school directs families to its charging policy and starting pre-school information. Specific pre-school fees should be taken from the school’s published policy rather than assumed.
For travel, practicalities will depend heavily on where you are in Woodford and surrounding areas. For families deciding between nearby schools, mapping the door-to-door route at the exact times you will travel can be more informative than straight-line distance.
High demand for places. With 97 applications for 30 offers in the supplied admissions results, competition is meaningful. Families should use all available preferences in the local authority application and plan contingencies.
A growing school means change year by year. Opening in September 2022 makes this a young school with systems still evolving. Many families enjoy being part of that; others prefer the predictability of a long-established primary with settled traditions.
Wraparound places may be the pinch point. Wraparound exists and published pricing is clear, but places are described as limited and allocated annually. If you need breakfast and after-school care as a non-negotiable, check availability early and plan for waiting lists.
Woodford Primary School has done something rare for a new school: it has established a strong quality signal early, while also presenting a coherent identity rooted in the aerodrome site and a rights-and-responsibility culture. The education offer leans towards structured ambition, broad enrichment, and clear expectations, with outdoor learning positioned as a planned part of the experience rather than a one-off.
Best suited to families who like the idea of a growing school with a clear narrative and strong systems, and who are prepared to plan ahead for admissions and wraparound logistics. The main constraint is demand for places, which is already evident in the application numbers.
The school has a very strong early quality signal, with the March 2025 inspection judging all areas Outstanding, including early years. As a newer school opened in 2022, longer-term published results patterns may still be emerging, so families often weigh the inspection evidence, curriculum clarity, and day-to-day routines alongside any performance data as it becomes available.
Reception applications are made through the local authority coordinated route. For Stockport, the application window opens in August and the deadline for 2026 to 2027 entry is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Pre-school admissions are a separate process from Reception. The school describes a direct pre-school application route with its own admissions form window (November 2025 to March 2026 for September 2026 starts) and offers shared by the end of April 2026. Reception still requires a local authority application even if your child attends pre-school.
Yes. Kids Club runs before school from 7.30am and after school until 5.30pm, with published 2025 to 26 session pricing for Reception onwards. Places are described as limited and allocated annually, so it is sensible to plan early if you will rely on wraparound care.
Two features stand out in the school’s own published material. First, a structured enrichment curriculum sits alongside academic learning, with explicit emphasis on wider knowledge and character development. Second, Forest School is presented as a planned series of sessions for every class each year, linking outdoor learning to practical skills and confidence.
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