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.
Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
Morning drop off here is deliberately calm. Gates open at 8.30am and pupils are encouraged to drift in until 8.45am, which tends to set the tone for an organised start.
For a state primary with nursery provision in Hendon, Sunderland, the academic picture is notably strong at the end of Year 6. In the 2025 dataset, 80% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The higher standard figure is 10%, so depth is more modest than the older wording suggested, while the headline expected-standard outcome remains strong. (All performance metrics and national ranks quoted in this review use the current FindMySchool dataset.)
Leadership is established. Rebekah Bowman is the headteacher and has been recorded in post since 2022.
The latest Ofsted inspection (18 and 19 October 2022) confirmed that Valley Road Academy continues to be a good school, and that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
There is a consistent thread across the school’s own messaging, curriculum decisions, and pastoral structures, high expectations paired with inclusion. The stated motto, Success for All, is presented as a practical organising principle rather than a slogan, with emphasis on feeling welcome, safe, valued and included.
In daily life, this shows up in how adults structure support and how pupils are expected to talk about relationships. Respect and tolerance are framed as learned habits, not just rules. That matters for families choosing a larger primary (capacity 420) because scale can either dilute culture or make it more intentional. Here, the emphasis is on routines and consistency, from arrival gates through to end of day collection arrangements by yard and phase.
Nursery and Reception are not an afterthought. Early years are explicitly referenced in the school day structure, with separate collection timing and sessions. The early years experience is described in official reporting as a mix of indoor and outdoor learning, with themed areas that link communication, language and early maths to children’s play.
A distinctive feature is the visible blend of mainstream and specialist support. The school has a specially resourced provision for pupils with SEND, including speech, language and communication needs, and there is also a Language Provision and Rainbow Room referenced through the school’s class structure and wider activities.
The headline measure at Key Stage 2 is the combined expected standard in reading, writing and maths. In the 2025 dataset, Valley Road Academy recorded 80% meeting the expected standard. A higher standard rate of 10% shows a smaller group working beyond the basics than the previous wording suggested, while still sitting alongside a strong headline pass-line measure.
On the scaled score measures, reading is 109, maths is 108, and grammar, punctuation and spelling is 109. These are strong indicators of secure fundamentals and a reading curriculum that is working.
Rankings add context for parents comparing options across Sunderland. Valley Road Academy is ranked 1,035th out of 14,978 primary schools in England for academic outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). The Sunderland local hub lists it 10th locally, with an overall England rank of 2,297th.
It is worth translating that band into plain English. A top-10% academic rank is not the tiny handful of ultra selective primaries, but it is clearly above the middle, and it usually correlates with consistent classroom routines, explicit teaching of core knowledge, and a culture where reading and mathematics are treated as daily priorities.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
85%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Ranking figures update automatically as our data refreshes and are the definitive source. Any rankings quoted in the review text were accurate when it was written and may since have changed.
Reading is positioned as a core engine rather than a bolt on intervention. The external evidence describes well trained staff delivering a structured reading programme, with phonics taught systematically from Reception and continued into Key Stage 2 for a small number of pupils who need it. Regular checks are used to identify pupils who require extra help, and the stated expectation is that gaps are closed quickly rather than carried forward year on year.
Curriculum thinking also appears mature. Leaders have reviewed and adjusted subject sequencing, including history, to ensure new learning builds logically on what pupils already know. That can feel abstract to parents until you see the implication, pupils are more likely to remember key ideas because teachers deliberately connect new content to prior learning, rather than treating each unit as self contained.
The early years approach matters because the school serves children from age two. In practice, the value for families is continuity. Children who start in pre school or nursery are already learning the routines and language of school, including early communication and numeracy, before the more formal Reception curriculum begins. Session times are published, which helps parents planning work and childcare.
SEND support is a significant part of the teaching model, not a side service. The stronger implication for families is that differentiation is expected in everyday lessons, not only in separate interventions. For most pupils with additional needs, adults are described as providing specific, thought through support to help pupils access the curriculum.
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 primary, the key transition is Year 6 to Year 7. For Year 7 entry in September 2027 in Sunderland, applications close on 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 1 March 2027.
For Valley Road Academy families, the practical point is that primary and secondary admissions calendars run in parallel across autumn term. Parents are often juggling Reception applications for a younger child at the same time as Year 7 applications for an older sibling. Keeping a single calendar for both processes helps.
Beyond the admissions mechanics, the school’s approach to personal development suggests pupils leave with experience of speaking up and contributing, which can ease the move to larger secondary settings. The School Council is framed around rights and voice, with elected class representatives and practical projects such as food bank collections.
The school also prioritises learning beyond the local streets, through trips and visits that extend pupils’ sense of the wider world.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Admissions into Reception for Sunderland are coordinated through the local authority process.
Demand indicators show the school is not a walk in option. For the most recently available entry route data, there were 57 applications for 39 offers, which equates to 1.46 applications per place. In plain terms, there is competition, but it is not at the extreme end seen in some tight catchment city primaries.
For September 2027 entry into Reception in Sunderland, the published key dates include:
Information packs, week commencing 25 to 29 September 2025
Online system available from 5 October 2025
Closing date 15 January 2027
Offer day 16 April 2027
Acceptance deadline 6 May 2026
Nursery attendance does not remove the need to apply for Reception. For families using nursery as a pathway, treat it as a great start for your child, not an admissions guarantee.
Applications
57
Total received
Places Offered
39
Subscription Rate
1.5x
Applications per place
Wellbeing provision is unusually explicit for a primary. The school publishes a named structure, including a senior mental health lead, a Safe Space room for children to access when they need quiet time or want to share worries, and both pupil and staff wellbeing ambassadors.
Support is not only peer based. Additional help includes access to a play therapist (Dawn Baxter) and educational mental health practitioners (Beth and Sarah), which signals a proactive model rather than a wait until crisis approach.
For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your child is anxious, has friendship issues, or struggles with emotional regulation, there is a visible internal system to lean on, and it is described in a way that suggests pupils are encouraged to use it without stigma.
Safeguarding culture is also described as a whole staff responsibility, with training and clear processes, and pupils are taught practical safety including online safety and managing risks on trips.
Valley Road Academy’s enrichment offer is best understood as three strands: community, sport, and wider world experiences.
School Council is not decorative. Pupils elect representatives and then use meetings to choose practical actions, such as collecting food for a local food bank during harvest season. That approach helps children see civic responsibility as something they can do now, not later.
The school documents participation in sports festivals and inter school events. Examples include a football festival and a tag rugby festival, including activity involving the Rainbow Room.
The value for families is confidence building. Competitive events teach children how to win and lose well, and team sport rewards pupils who are not necessarily the loudest in class but are reliable and cooperative.
Friday Feeling is a named feature, with regular mini bus trips to explore the local region.
There are also curriculum linked visits such as a Year 3 trip to Broom House Farm, which combined animal care, seasonal farming, and outdoor play in an adventure forest setting.
For primary pupils, these experiences do more than entertain. They build vocabulary, strengthen background knowledge for reading comprehension, and help children connect classroom learning to real places.
The school also runs parent and carer engagement activities, including craft afternoons that bring adults into school to work alongside children.
The core school day structure is clearly published. Gates open at 8.30am and close at 8.45am; the end of day gate window is 3.15pm to 3.25pm, with collection arrangements by year group.
Breakfast club runs 8.00am to 8.15am for Reception to Year 6 and is priced at £0.20 per day per child, with advance booking required.
Nursery and pre school morning sessions run 8.30am to 11.30am.
Details for after school wraparound provision are referenced through the school’s parent information structure, but the specific operational detail is not easy to verify in plain text. Families who need after school childcare should confirm current timings and booking arrangements directly with the school.
For travel, the setting serves Hendon and surrounding Sunderland neighbourhoods. Practicalities such as parking and preferred drop off routes vary street by street, so it is worth checking the school’s latest guidance and doing a dry run at your intended arrival time.
Entry competition. With 57 applications for 39 offers in the most recently available reception route data, demand outstrips places. Families should apply with realistic backup preferences.
SEND complexity. The school has strong systems for most pupils with SEND, including a specially resourced provision and targeted support. The trade off is that some provision refinement is still a live priority for pupils with the most complex needs, so parents of children with significant needs should ask detailed questions about curriculum access, staffing, and how progress is tracked.
Early years logistics. Pre school and nursery timings are clearly set out, but they are morning session based. Working parents who need longer childcare days will want to confirm wraparound options early.
Strong results can create pace. KS2 outcomes suggest a school that expects pupils to work hard and keep up. That suits many children, but if your child is easily overwhelmed, ask about classroom scaffolding, homework expectations, and how support is introduced.
Valley Road Academy is a state primary that combines strong KS2 outcomes with an unusually explicit wellbeing and inclusion framework. The result is a school that can suit both academically able pupils and children who need careful pastoral structure, particularly where reading, routine, and emotional support make the difference.
Best suited to families who value clear expectations, structured learning, and a school culture that takes wellbeing seriously, and who are prepared to engage early with the Sunderland admissions process.
Valley Road Academy continues to be rated Good, with safeguarding confirmed as effective at the most recent inspection. Academic outcomes at the end of Year 6 are strong, including 80% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in the 2025 dataset.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the Sunderland local authority process and follow published oversubscription criteria.
Yes. The school provides pre school from age two and nursery provision, with published morning session times. Families should check the school’s early years pages for the most current session structure and availability.
For Sunderland, the published closing date for primary applications is 15 January 2027, with offers released on 16 April 2027. Parents should apply through the local authority system and keep evidence documents ready in case they are requested.
The school describes a structured approach including a Safe Space room, named staff wellbeing ambassadors, pupil wellbeing ambassadors trained through an Anna Freud peer mentoring programme, and access to a play therapist and educational mental health practitioners.
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
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