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.
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This is a small-to-medium infant school serving Reception to Year 2 in Cam, close to Dursley. The most recent inspection (3 and 4 June 2025) describes an inclusive, welcoming culture, with a strong emphasis on pupils’ wellbeing and an ambitious curriculum that is taught with secure subject knowledge.
Leadership has stabilised after a period of staff changes, with Mrs Jane Law taking up the headteacher post in September 2024. For parents, the headline is straightforward: strong early reading practice, thoughtful pastoral routines, and a Reception entry route that can be competitive, with more applicants than places in the latest available data.
The school’s day-to-day feel, as described in the latest inspection report, is shaped by relationships. Staff are said to build supportive connections with pupils and families, and pupils feel safe because they trust adults to look after them. That kind of emotional security matters in an infant setting, because it underpins everything that follows, from settling into routines to taking early risks with reading and writing.
There is a clear wellbeing thread running through the school. The inspection report gives concrete examples, including breathing exercises to support pupils to have happy minds, plus calming spaces and emotional language prompts (such as colour monsters) for pupils who find it hard to manage feelings. The implication for families is that this is a school that takes regulation seriously, rather than treating it as an optional extra.
Behaviour expectations are described as high and understood by pupils, with clear rules framed as safe, respectful and ready. At the same time, behaviour and attitudes were graded as requires improvement at the most recent inspection, and the report links this to a minority of pupils who sometimes misbehave and to attendance that is not yet strong enough. In practice, that combination often looks like a school with a positive baseline culture, plus a specific improvement drive around consistency, routines, and family engagement on attendance.
Because the school is an infant school (Reception to Year 2), it does not have the headline Key Stage 2 performance measures that parents may see for primary schools that run through Year 6. In this phase, the most meaningful “results” are typically the strength of early reading and the readiness pupils have for the move into Key Stage 2 at a junior school.
On that front, the inspection evidence is detailed and practical. Early reading is prioritised, with pupils starting to be taught to read as soon as they begin school. The phonics programme is delivered consistently and confidently, and pupils’ reading books are matched to the sounds they are learning, with regular practice supporting fluency for most pupils.
The report also indicates that, across subjects, staff have secure knowledge and explain new learning clearly, with most pupils achieving well. The key “watch-out” in the academic picture is not about ambition, but about depth and checking: in some areas, pupils do not always get enough opportunity to develop secure understanding of the most important knowledge and skills, which can leave gaps that hinder later learning.
For parents comparing local schools, it can help to use FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and the Comparison Tool to weigh up infant settings in the Stroud area on the factors that matter in early years, such as inspection evidence on phonics, behaviour, and inclusion, rather than relying on Key Stage 2 tables that do not apply to an infant school.
Reading is the organising priority, and the approach is structured. The school teaches phonics using Little Wandle Letters and Sounds Revised, a systematic synthetic phonics programme. The inspection report aligns with this, highlighting consistent delivery and well-matched books. The implication is that children who thrive with routine, repetition, and clear steps are likely to find the learning journey predictable in a good way.
Beyond reading, there are signs of careful sequencing. The report gives subject-specific snapshots, including “sticky starters” to help recall in music, and practical exploration in Reception mathematics (for example, comparing quantities using precise language). Those examples matter because they show how knowledge is revisited and secured, not just introduced once and moved on from.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as timely and integrated: needs are identified swiftly, the school works closely with families, and support is planned so pupils can learn the same curriculum as their peers. For many families, that “same curriculum, with the right scaffolding” approach is the difference between a child being included socially and actually accessing learning.
As an infant school, the main transition point is into Year 3 at a junior school. Locally, there is a natural pathway to Cam Woodfield Junior School, which sits at the same postcode according to the Ofsted listing.
Transition preparation appears to start early and be handled gently. The school’s admissions information describes a programme that can include pre-school fun sessions, an induction meeting in June, and home visits, alongside opportunities for children to meet their new class teacher and classmates during the summer term. The implication is a transition model designed to reduce anxiety for pupils and parents, particularly those new to the area or to formal schooling.
For families thinking longer-term, it is worth looking beyond “getting into Reception” and considering the Year 2 to Year 3 move. The most useful question to ask is how the infant school shares information about learning and wellbeing needs with the junior school, and how pupils who need additional support are helped to settle into a larger Key Stage 2 environment.
This is a state-funded school with no tuition fees. Entry for Reception is coordinated through Gloucestershire County Council, and the county publishes a clear timetable for September 2026 intake: applications open from 3 November 2025 and close at midnight on 15 January 2026; allocation day is 16 April 2026, with a reply deadline shortly after.
The school is oversubscribed in the latest available intake data: 71 applications for 40 offers, a ratio of 1.78 applications per place. Competition is real, although outcomes vary year to year depending on local demographics and how many families apply to multiple schools.
The school’s own information also confirms the practical constraints typical of infants: class sizes are capped at 30 in Foundation Stage and Key Stage 1, and the published planned admission number is 60. If you are deciding between several local options, this is a good moment to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand journey time from your front door at peak traffic, then compare that with your preferred school’s admissions criteria and the county timetable.
Visits are encouraged. The school notes that families are welcome to arrange an appointment to get a feel for the setting. Past schedules show open mornings for Reception intake running in the autumn term, with sessions listed in October and November, plus an early December date in one recent school calendar.
100%
1st preference success rate
36 of 36 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
40
Offers
40
Applications
71
The wellbeing offer is unusually concrete for an infant school. Pupils are supported to practise breathing exercises, and pupils who find emotions difficult can access calming spaces and tools that help them name how they feel. This matters because early intervention around regulation often reduces low-level disruption and helps pupils access learning without shame.
Family partnership is also a stated strength, with supportive relationships across staff, parents and carers. That is particularly relevant in the current improvement context, because the report explicitly flags attendance as an area where the school is working closely with families but impact is not yet consistent for all pupils.
Ofsted’s June 2025 inspection graded personal development as good and confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular life at infant level is less about elite performance and more about participation, curiosity, and confidence. The inspection report notes that pupils take part in clubs such as football, gymnastics and cricket, alongside enhancement experiences including trips (for example, museums and a zoo). The implication is a school day that extends beyond phonics and number work into experiences that build vocabulary, background knowledge, and social confidence.
Pupils also have structured ways to contribute to school life. Roles such as playground pals and happiness heroes are highlighted as positions of responsibility. In an infant setting, those roles can be powerful because they give children a reason to practise kindness and leadership, not just hear adults talk about it.
There is evidence of cultural enrichment, including participation in an African dance workshop and listening to a performance by a concert pianist. Music is treated as more than a once-a-week singalong: the report also notes opportunities to learn an instrument, with examples including ukulele or guitar.
The school day runs 8.55am to 3.25pm, with doors opening from 8.45am; the published week is 32.5 hours. Wraparound care is provided via an external provider, and the linked out-of-school club advertises breakfast and after-school provision from 7.30am to 6.00pm.
Behaviour and attendance focus. Behaviour and attitudes were graded as requires improvement at the June 2025 inspection, with attendance also flagged as not yet strong enough for a number of pupils. If your child needs highly predictable routines to feel settled, ask what has changed since that inspection and how consistency is being embedded.
A period of staffing change. The report describes an unsettled period due to staffing changes, with stability improving after new senior leaders were appointed. That can be positive, but it is worth asking about staff continuity in your child’s year group.
Depth and checking in some subjects. In some areas, checks do not fully identify what pupils know, leading to gaps for some children. If your child learns best through mastery and overlearning, ask how teachers spot and address early misconceptions.
Transition planning matters. This is an infant school, so the move to Year 3 is a key moment. Ask how learning and wellbeing information is shared with the junior school, particularly for pupils with SEND.
Cam Woodfield Infant School offers a structured, reading-first start with a clear wellbeing toolkit and a curriculum that aims high for young children. The strongest fit is for families who want early reading taught systematically, plus a school culture that takes regulation and emotional language seriously.
Who it suits: pupils who benefit from routine, clear expectations, and adults who actively teach the habits of learning, alongside families who value a close working relationship with staff. The main question for parents is not whether the school cares, it does, but how quickly improvements in attendance and behaviour consistency continue to land for every child.
The most recent inspection (June 2025) graded the quality of education as good, personal development as good, leadership and management as good, and early years provision as good. Behaviour and attitudes was graded as requires improvement, so it is a school with clear strengths but also a specific improvement focus.
Applications are made through Gloucestershire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 intake, the county timetable shows applications opening from 3 November 2025 and closing at midnight on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The inspection report states that the school uses an external provider for before and after-school care. The associated out-of-school club advertises wraparound care, including breakfast and after-school provision.
Early reading is a stated priority. The school’s phonics information says it uses Little Wandle Letters and Sounds Revised, and the inspection report describes consistent delivery and well-matched reading books, which helps most pupils become fluent readers.
As an infant school, pupils leave after Year 2 and typically transfer into a junior school for Year 3. There is a natural pathway locally to Cam Woodfield Junior School, and the school’s own admissions information describes induction and transition activities designed to make the move into formal schooling, and later transitions, as smooth as possible.
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