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.
A school for the earliest stage of education lives or dies on the details: how quickly children settle, how well language develops, and whether routines feel calm rather than rushed. Here, the emphasis is on belonging and confidence, with a strong thread running from two-year-old provision through Nursery and into Reception and Key Stage 1. The stated ethos, Enjoy, Learn, Be Proud, gives a simple framework that is easy for young children to grasp and for adults to reinforce consistently.
Leadership continuity matters in infant schools because the approach is so system-dependent. Mrs Andrea Charlton has been head teacher since 01 January 2015, long enough to embed a coherent culture and maintain consistency through staffing changes and policy shifts.
This is a state-funded community school, so there are no tuition fees. Places are allocated through the local authority admissions process, and demand has been higher than supply in the most recent admissions data available for Reception entry.
The atmosphere is designed to be child-friendly without becoming loose. The day-to-day experience leans on clear expectations, familiar sequences, and adult support that helps young pupils feel safe enough to take learning risks. Formal checks describe strong relationships between staff and pupils, with children confident to seek help when something worries them. One practical feature stands out because it is genuinely age-appropriate: children are encouraged to signal concerns using simple classroom tools (including a worry box approach), which gives staff a low-friction way to spot anxieties early and respond quickly.
The school’s published ethos is direct and readable, and it aligns well with what younger children can internalise. Enjoyment is treated as part of the learning engine rather than an add-on, which matters in Reception and Key Stage 1 where attention, language, and self-regulation are still developing rapidly.
A second defining feature is the priority placed on play and outdoor time. The school works with OPAL (Outdoor Play and Learning), and the programme is presented as a structured effort to improve physical activity, cooperation, and imaginative play. The school’s communications also reference developing themed outdoor areas (including a beach-style play space), which signals that outdoor provision is being actively curated rather than left to chance.
Because the school educates children up to the end of Year 2, the most meaningful “results” indicators for parents are readiness for junior school, early reading fluency, and a secure number sense. External review evidence places reading and mathematics at the centre of the academic strategy.
Reading is treated as a whole-school priority, supported by a recently introduced phonics programme and consistent adult practice in teaching sounds and blending. The practical implication is straightforward: when all adults use the same phonics routines and pronunciation, children receive fewer mixed messages, and the early stages of decoding become more secure. Extra support is also described for pupils who need to catch up.
Mathematics is described as carefully sequenced from two-year-old provision through to Year 2, with consistent lesson structures that help pupils know what is coming next. In an infant setting, this predictability is not dull; it reduces cognitive load and lets children put their energy into mastering ideas rather than working out the rules of the lesson each time.
The curriculum intent described by the school focuses on first-hand experiences, vocabulary development, and a text-led approach to English using Talk for Writing. The point is not the branding, it is the practical method: children hear, retell, and internalise language patterns before being asked to write independently, which can be especially effective in early years where oral language is still developing.
A strong infant curriculum also depends on adult skill in adapting without lowering expectations. Formal review notes that teachers build on what pupils already know and adjust plans to address gaps, including those linked to disrupted learning periods, with most pupils catching up quickly. That matters for families deciding between settings, because it signals that support is integrated into classroom practice rather than being purely bolt-on intervention.
Physical education is treated as an area being actively strengthened. The review evidence describes updates to planning so that pupils are taught the full programme, and it links this to a broader push to increase activity levels. For parents, the implication is that movement is being taken seriously as part of learning readiness, not just as “extra playtime”.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Most pupils at infant schools move on locally at the end of Year 2. In Sunderland’s admissions guidance, Grindon Infant is listed as the named feeder infant school for Broadway Junior School, which provides a clear default pathway for families planning beyond age seven. Importantly, feeder status supports transition planning, but it does not remove the need to apply through the normal process when moving to junior school.
For families who value continuity, this feeder relationship is useful because it anchors expectations early: you can explore the junior-stage curriculum and routines while your child is still in Nursery or Reception, and you can plan childcare, travel, and after-school commitments with a longer horizon.
Reception entry is coordinated by Sunderland City Council, and the timing for the September 2026 intake is published clearly: applications ran from 29 September 2025 to 15 January 2026, with National Offer Day on 16 April 2026.
Competition for places is real. The most recent admissions figures available show more applications than offers for the main entry route, which usually means the oversubscription criteria become decisive rather than optional. Within Sunderland’s community school criteria, priority typically runs through looked-after children, sibling links, and exceptional medical or psychological reasons; ties within categories are then broken by distance measured via the shortest safest walking route using the local authority’s mapping system.
Nursery admissions operate differently. The school states that nursery names can be registered after a child’s second birthday, and that Nursery offers part-time places plus some 30 hours childcare. Applications for nursery are handled via local authority nursery admissions forms obtained through the school, and families are invited to an information session in the summer term to meet staff and understand starting arrangements.
If you are comparing several local options, FindMySchool’s Map Search can help you sense-check practicalities such as walking distance, especially where distance is used as a tie-breaker.
100%
1st preference success rate
34 of 34 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
35
Offers
35
Applications
57
Wellbeing provision is unusually detailed for an infant school website, which is helpful for parents who want to understand what “support” means in practice. The school describes a whole-school nurture approach aligned with Nurture UK, and it outlines structured nurture groups and interventions aimed at emotional regulation, confidence, and relationships.
Mindfulness is also presented as a daily routine, supported by training delivered through a partnership that includes University of Sunderland and Blue Jay Wellness. The practical benefit for younger children is consistency: short daily sessions can help children learn the language of feelings and calm-down strategies before problems escalate into behaviour issues.
Formal review evidence reinforces the pastoral picture: pupils are described as safe and well looked after, with systems for reporting concerns and staff who know families well enough to follow up quickly when needed.
Infant-school extracurricular only matters if it is realistic for working families and developmentally appropriate for young children. Here, the programme is presented as termly and varied, with both lunchtime and after-school options.
The strongest examples are practical and physical. Balance Bikes and Scooter Club fit the age range well because they build coordination and confidence while still feeling like play. Swimming appears as an option in some terms, and OPAL links directly to improved outdoor play and social development rather than being a generic “sports club” label.
Creative and enrichment clubs are also visible. Dance features regularly, and themed clubs such as Cooking Club and seasonal activities (for example Christmas-themed clubs) signal that the offer shifts across the year rather than repeating the same menu.
For communication with parents, the school references MarvellousMe as a way to share news about children’s learning and development. That matters because in infant settings, the school-home loop is part of the educational model, not a nice-to-have.
The published school day varies by age group, which is typical for settings that include two-year-olds and Nursery alongside Reception and Key Stage 1. The school publishes separate start and finish times for two-year-old provision, Nursery sessions, and the main school day, with Key Stage 1 finishing at 3:20pm.
Breakfast Club is explicitly mentioned and is positioned as a routine option for families. The school states it runs daily from 8:15am and costs £1.50, with a short admission window, which is useful detail for parents coordinating work starts and drop-offs.
Wraparound beyond breakfast is less clearly defined in the published information, aside from the termly after-school clubs offer. Families who need consistent after-school childcare (rather than rotating clubs) should clarify current arrangements directly with the school.
Competition for Reception places. The latest admissions figures show more applications than offers, and Sunderland’s community-school criteria use distance as a tie-breaker within priority groups. If you are relying on a place, check how the criteria apply to your situation and keep realistic backup preferences.
A wellbeing programme that is structured, not optional. Nurture groups, daily mindfulness, and emotional regulation frameworks can be a major positive for many children. For some families, it is worth asking how this is balanced with curriculum time and how staff decide who receives targeted interventions.
Clubs change termly. The variety is a strength, but it also means favourite activities may not run every term. If you need a predictable weekly pattern, ask what is planned for the next term rather than relying on last term’s list.
For families who want an infant school that takes early reading, vocabulary, and emotional development seriously, this is a strong fit. The combination of structured phonics, carefully sequenced mathematics, and a clearly articulated wellbeing model suggests a setting that is organised and purposeful rather than purely childcare-led. It suits children who benefit from consistent routines and adults who actively teach social and emotional skills. The main challenge is admission competition at Reception, so families should plan early and keep a practical shortlist.
The most recent formal inspection, in November 2021, confirmed the school continues to be rated Good. The evidence highlights strong relationships, good behaviour, and a clear academic focus on early reading and mathematics, with safeguarding judged effective.
Reception applications are made through Sunderland’s coordinated admissions process rather than directly to the school. For the September 2026 intake, the published application window ran from late September 2025 to mid-January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
No. Sunderland’s admissions guidance is clear that a Nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place in the associated infant or primary school. Families must still apply through the normal Reception admissions route.
Sunderland’s published guidance lists Broadway Junior as the named feeder junior school for Grindon Infant. Families should still expect to apply for junior transfer through the usual process.
The club programme changes termly and includes options such as Balance Bikes, Scooter Club, Dance, Swimming (in some terms), Cooking Club, and OPAL-linked outdoor play activities. The rotating model keeps the offer fresh, but it is best to check the current term’s list if you are planning childcare around clubs.
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