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Hindhayes Infant School is a two year infant setting for pupils aged 5 to 7 in Street, serving families who want a focused start to primary education before moving on to junior provision. The tone is warm but purposeful, with an explicit emphasis on early reading, core number sense and social development, alongside lots of time outdoors.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (1 to 2 October 2024) graded the school Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, leadership and management, and early years provision, with personal development graded Outstanding.
With places oversubscribed for the most recent Reception intake the practical reality is that admission planning matters. In the latest admissions snapshot provided, 87 applications resulted in 59 offers, which equates to around 1.47 applications per place. That is not extreme by Somerset standards, but it does mean families should treat Hindhayes as competitive rather than automatic.
The school’s identity is rooted in strong links with the local community and a long-standing relationship with the Clark Foundation, alongside a clear statement of heritage. The school’s own history notes that it was founded by Roger and Sarah Clark, and that the site includes extensive grounds dating from 1928, described as being centred around an attractive quadrangle.
Daily life is designed around younger pupils, so the priorities are predictable routines, clear expectations, and lots of guided talk. Formal documentation and external review evidence point to a school that takes relationships seriously. The personal development grade in 2024 sits alongside an explicit school programme, Curriculum for Life, which covers healthy relationships, equality, environmental care, and managing emotions.
Outdoor learning is not treated as a once-a-term add-on. The 2024 inspection report describes a well-provisioned forest school in the grounds where pupils climb trees, learn to make fires, and use natural materials to create their own artwork. The point for parents is not the novelty, it is the way these sessions build language, confidence and self-regulation at the age where those traits are still forming.
Because Hindhayes is an infant school, it does not publish the same end of primary Key Stage 2 outcomes that parents may be used to comparing for 4 to 11 primaries. there are no ranked England or local outcome positions for the school, and no published performance metrics to compare against England averages. That makes external quality indicators more important than usual.
The most recent inspection evidence gives a balanced picture. Across the wider curriculum, staff subject knowledge is described as strong, and examples of curriculum thinking include history work where pupils interpret paintings of the Great Fire of London as historical sources.
The main academic improvement area highlighted in 2024 is phonics delivery consistency. The report indicates that practice can vary, and that staff do not always check pupils have secure understanding of the sounds taught before moving on, which contributes to weaker end of Year 1 phonics screening outcomes than leaders intend. For families, the key question to explore on a visit is how the school has tightened day-to-day phonics routines since the inspection, especially around assessment checks and targeted catch-up.
It is also useful to look at trajectory. The June 2023 visit described reading as sitting central to the curriculum with consistent approaches in place at that time, and with book matching to the sounds pupils already know. The shift between 2023 and 2024 is not necessarily a contradiction, it can reflect staffing changes, implementation challenges, or a higher bar applied in a graded inspection. Parents should ask what has changed, and what has now been standardised across classes.
For an infant school, the quality marker is not subject breadth, it is how well the basics are taught and how confidently pupils are moved from learning to decode towards enjoying books and writing for meaning.
The 2023 inspection report points to deliberate vocabulary development, including targeted adult modelling in places such as the literacy shed and the pond area outside, plus structured speech and language support that helps pupils who struggle with speaking and listening to catch up quickly. That kind of practice matters in Reception and Year 1 because language development has a direct line into early writing quality and comprehension.
In 2024, the inspection team also notes that assessment practices are still developing in some subjects and that learning activities are not always adapted well enough to meet all pupils’ needs. For parents, the practical implication is to ask how teachers check understanding in the moment, how quickly misconceptions are picked up, and what adaptations look like for pupils who are ahead or who need more scaffolding.
A distinctive feature is that the school website highlights specialist leadership across the staff team, including roles such as maths specialist, music specialist, computing specialist, and a named Forest School specialist. This suggests an intentional approach to subject expertise even within a small age range, which can improve consistency and raise ambition in what pupils experience day to day.
Transition matters more for infant schools than many parents expect, because the move at the end of Year 2 can feel like a bigger step than it looks on paper. Hindhayes explicitly states it works closely with Elmhurst Junior School, described as the main feeder school for pupils leaving at the end of Year 2.
For families, the sensible approach is to treat Hindhayes and the likely junior destination as a combined pathway. Ask how curriculum sequencing aligns across the two schools, what transition visits look like, and how pupil information is handed over, particularly for pupils receiving additional support. If you are not aiming for Elmhurst, you will want to understand how widely Hindhayes pupils disperse across other local junior options, and whether there is structured transition support for those alternative routes.
Hindhayes is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Entry is via local authority coordinated admissions.
The school’s results profile indicates Reception demand above capacity, with 87 applications and 59 offers, and the demand level recorded as oversubscribed. Put simply, there were more applicants than places, so not every family who applied received an offer.
For September 2026 entry in Somerset, the primary admissions guide states that the closing date for applications is 15 January 2026, with outcome letters or emails issued on 16 April 2026.
Hindhayes also signposts that applying is done through Somerset admissions, and notes that siblings are not automatically guaranteed a place, families must still apply.
Open events often follow an annual pattern. The school website news feed referenced an October open morning during the 2026 application window, with a simple approach described as no booking required and families turning up on the day. Dates change each year, so treat that as typical timing rather than a standing date, and check the school’s current announcements when you are applying.
If you are comparing options, FindMySchool’s Map Search is a useful way to sense-check travel practicality and likely daily routine, even when an explicit furthest distance at which a place was offered figure is not available for the school.
100%
1st preference success rate
59 of 59 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
59
Offers
59
Applications
87
The pastoral picture is one of the school’s clearer strengths. Curriculum for Life is a concrete example of how personal development is taught explicitly rather than assumed, covering kindness, equality, relationships and emotional management in age-appropriate ways.
The 2024 inspection report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Attendance also appears to be treated as a relationship issue as well as a compliance issue, with the report describing action taken to improve attendance and trust-building work with families to remove barriers.
Hindhayes is unusually specific about outdoor play and outdoor learning for an infant school, which helps it stand out from settings that rely on generic after-school club lists.
Forest School is positioned as a core strand. The inspection report describes pupils learning practical skills such as building fires and creating artwork from natural materials, in a dedicated forest school space within the grounds.
The OPAL programme is another differentiator. The school states it achieved the highest OPAL Platinum award for play in 2019, and frames this as a whole-school approach to improving play quality and the use of outdoor space. For parents of younger children, high-quality play is not just recreation, it supports language, negotiation, risk assessment and independence.
The school also places visible weight on reading environment. It features a dedicated library page, and the 2023 inspection report emphasises reading as central, with matching books to pupils’ phonic knowledge and deliberate vocabulary work.
The 2024 inspection report gives concrete examples of enrichment visits, including trips to the beach to learn about coastlines and local walks linked to community history. These are developmentally appropriate experiences that connect knowledge to the real world, which tends to deepen recall for younger pupils.
This is a state infant school with no tuition fees.
Wraparound provision exists. The 2024 inspection report states that there is a before- and after-school club, which will matter to working families. The school’s public pages viewed did not clearly publish start and finish times for the school day or the operating hours for wraparound care, so families should confirm timings directly when planning childcare.
As an infant school in Street, most families will plan around walkability, short car trips, or local bus routes depending on where they live. If parking and drop-off logistics are a deciding factor for you, treat that as a visit priority, because day-to-day flow matters far more at infant age than many parents anticipate.
Phonics consistency. The 2024 inspection report flags variability in phonics delivery and gaps that can follow if understanding checks are not consistently tight. Ask what has changed since October 2024, and how the school assures consistency across classes.
Limited published outcomes data. As an infant school, there is less comparable public attainment data than a full primary. Your decision will lean more heavily on inspection evidence, curriculum detail, and what you learn from visits and conversations.
Oversubscription reality. With more applications than offers in the most recent snapshot, admission is not guaranteed. Build a plan with realistic alternatives, and submit on time through Somerset’s process.
Transition at the end of Year 2. The move to junior provision is a major part of the pathway. If your preferred junior school differs from the main feeder relationship, ask how Hindhayes supports that transition.
Hindhayes Infant School looks like a caring, structured start to primary education with a strong emphasis on personal development and outdoor learning. Forest School and OPAL give it a distinctive feel for families who value active play and confidence-building experiences in the early years, and the most recent inspection grades reinforce a broadly positive quality picture alongside a clear phonics improvement priority.
It best suits families who want an infant-only environment in Street, value outdoor learning and reading culture, and are ready to engage with the admissions process early. The main challenge is securing entry in an oversubscribed year and satisfying yourself that phonics delivery is now consistently strong across all classes.
The most recent inspection in October 2024 graded key areas as Good, with personal development graded Outstanding. The report also highlights strong enrichment and outdoor learning, while identifying phonics consistency as the main improvement priority.
Applications are made through Somerset’s coordinated primary admissions process. For September 2026 entry, Somerset’s primary admissions guide lists 15 January 2026 as the closing date, with outcomes issued on 16 April 2026.
In the latest admissions snapshot provided, there were 87 applications and 59 offers, and the school is recorded as oversubscribed. That indicates demand exceeds places for the entry round measured.
Outdoor learning is a clear feature. The 2024 inspection report describes a well-provisioned forest school where pupils climb trees, learn to make fires and create artwork using natural materials. The school also describes achieving OPAL Platinum for play in 2019.
The headteacher’s welcome notes close work with Elmhurst Junior School, described as the main feeder school for pupils leaving at the end of Year 2. Families should confirm transition arrangements for their child’s cohort when applying.
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