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.
Springfields First School is a small, community first school in Yarnfield, serving pupils from age 3 to 9. The village setting matters here, the most recent inspection describes the school as integral to local life, with pupils feeling a strong sense of belonging.
For families, the main practical headline is demand. For Reception entry, the most recent admissions shows 45 applications for 32 offers, which is around 1.41 applications per place, and indicates the school is oversubscribed.
This is a school that leans into the advantages of being small. External review describes a caring and safe environment, with pupils confident that adults will resolve problems quickly if needed.
Behaviour expectations are made concrete through a simple shared code, Ready; Safe; Respect, alongside classroom recognition boards that reward pupils for meeting expectations. The effect is described as calm, orderly classrooms where pupils can concentrate.
Belonging is also built deliberately across ages. Older pupils buddy up with younger pupils for reading practice, which reinforces fluency for the younger child and responsibility for the older one.
For this school, the published attainment and ranking fields are not available for primary outcomes, so this review does not quote Key Stage 2 percentages, scaled scores, or England ranking positions.
What can be evidenced from official review is the quality of the day to day academic picture. Teaching is described as clear, with staff who understand what they teach and explain content in ways pupils grasp. Checks on learning are described as routine, with misconceptions addressed and key learning revisited to strengthen recall.
Reading is a stated priority, and the inspection evidence supports that focus. Children begin with stories, rhymes and songs in pre-school, move into daily phonics in Reception, and most pupils are described as fluent readers by the time they enter Year 3.
The curriculum is described by the school as knowledge rich and creative, with an emphasis on building knowledge over time and using enquiry questions as a basis for investigation. Maths in Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2 is taught using White Rose and INSPIRE, with Numicon also referenced for Early Years.
A useful detail for parents is that curriculum design is treated as a living project. Leaders are described as having mapped what pupils should know and remember across most subjects, but also being asked to make curriculum content more precisely set out in a small number of areas. That is the clearest improvement point identified in the latest inspection.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as well targeted, with accurate identification, appropriate additional resources, and adults who expect pupils to participate fully rather than being sidelined.
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 a first school, transition is part of the school’s core work, pupils leave at age 9 for the next stage in Staffordshire’s local system.
Academically, the focus is on leaving pupils ready for the step up in curriculum breadth and independence. External review notes that pupils study a broad range of subjects and are well prepared for the next stage by the time they leave.
The school’s Year 4 residential is also positioned as a preparation milestone. The school’s own materials reference Standon Bowers as the residential venue, with activities such as archery, low ropes, bridge building, orienteering, fire making, caving and den building. For many families, this is the first significant “away from home” experience and can be a strong indicator of confidence building and independence.
Reception entry is coordinated through Staffordshire, with the school noting that applications close in mid-January each year.
For September 2026 Reception entry, Staffordshire confirms the national closing date of 15 January 2026 for primary applications, with applications typically opening in the autumn term.
The national offer day for primary places is 16 April 2026 (or the next working day if that falls on a weekend or bank holiday).
Competitiveness matters. In the provided admissions results for the primary entry route, there were 45 applications and 32 offers, and the school is marked as oversubscribed, which implies families should treat admission as competitive rather than routine.
For pre-school places, the school uses a direct registration approach, with a waiting list if sessions are full. It also states capacity as up to 26 children each morning and 26 each afternoon.
Tip for shortlisting: families who are deciding between several nearby options can use FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools to keep application criteria and practicalities clear across the shortlist, especially where local systems involve multiple transition points.
100%
1st preference success rate
31 of 31 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
32
Offers
32
Applications
45
Pastoral care is described as more than a generic promise. External review notes a programme of pastoral care for pupils who need it, intended to help children understand and manage emotions, and described as making a positive difference for pupils and families.
Safeguarding is described as a strong culture with staff who understand their role and act quickly when concerns arise, including working with external agencies and families when needed. The inspection confirms safeguarding arrangements as effective.
The school’s enrichment is best understood through three strands.
The inspection references a range of clubs and activities, including after-school sports events and creative clubs arranged by staff. While the school does not list club names consistently in accessible public pages, the description indicates regular opportunities beyond lessons.
School development planning highlights the role of recognition boards, and references a developing Rights Respecting School approach alongside school council activity. In a small setting, these structures can give pupils visible leadership roles earlier than they might access in larger schools.
Standon Bowers is the distinctive named element, and the practical programme described (from archery to orienteering) is unusually specific for a first school, suggesting the trip is a significant part of the Year 4 experience rather than an add on.
The school day is listed as 8.45am to 3.15pm, Monday to Friday in term time.
Wraparound care is offered through Springfields Care Club, but detailed session times and prices are contained in a separate contract document rather than clearly summarised on the main public page. Families should check the latest Care Club contract for session availability and booking rules.
Competition for Reception places. The most recent indicates oversubscription, with around 1.41 applications per place for the primary entry route. That does not mean every year will look identical, but it does suggest families should apply on time and include sensible preferences.
Limited published attainment figures. This review does not quote KS2 percentages or England ranking positions because those figures are not present in the supplied performance results.
Curriculum precision is an improvement focus. The latest inspection identifies that a small number of subjects need more precisely defined content and sharper checks of what pupils remember.
First school transition at age 9. Families who want a single school through to age 11 should factor in the local three tier structure and plan for the Year 4 exit point.
Springfields First School suits families who want a smaller, community-rooted first school where early reading is clearly prioritised and behaviour expectations are simple and consistently understood. The atmosphere described is warm and secure, with pupils who feel they belong and adults who resolve issues promptly.
Best suited to children who will thrive with clear routines, steady expectations, and a strong start in phonics and reading. The main practical challenge is admission pressure for Reception in an oversubscribed year.
The latest inspection (7 March 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Good grades across education quality, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. The report describes a caring, safe environment with calm classrooms supported by clear expectations.
Reception applications are coordinated through Staffordshire. The school notes the closing date is mid-January each year, and Staffordshire confirms the national closing date for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026.
In the most recent admissions for the primary entry route, the school is marked as oversubscribed, with 45 applications and 32 offers, which is around 1.41 applications per place.
Yes. The school has a pre-school for three and four year olds, described as two classrooms with a secure outdoor area and a mix of structured phonics, maths and literacy activities alongside topic-based play.
Yes, through Springfields Care Club. Details on booking and terms sit in the Care Club contract document rather than being summarised on the main Care Club page, so families should check that document for the latest arrangements.
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