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 two-form entry, voluntary aided primary (Reception to Year 6) with a distinctly Catholic character and an inclusive admissions structure that still prioritises Catholic children when demand exceeds places. It is academically strong for a state school, with 2024 key stage 2 outcomes that sit well above England averages and place it among the stronger primaries in England. A January 2024 Ofsted inspection confirmed the school continues to be Good.
Wraparound care is a meaningful practical advantage here, with on-site Breakfast Club and After-School Club extending the day from 7:45am to 6:00pm.
The tone is purposeful and community-minded, with a clearly articulated behaviour culture. Pupils are expected to meet high standards for conduct, and the language of being “ready, respectful and responsible” is used as a shared reference point across the day.
The Catholic dimension is not a bolt-on. The admissions policy makes the underlying purpose explicit, a Catholic education shaped by doctrine and practice, while also stating that families of other faiths can apply and be admitted under the published criteria. That combination often suits families who want a faith-anchored school, but also want their child’s peer group to reflect the wider local area.
Leadership is stable, with Hayley Townsend listed as headteacher on the school website and on official records. In her welcome message, she highlights a long relationship with the school, first as a parent and then as a teacher before taking on the headship, which typically translates into a strong grasp of local expectations and a clear sense of continuity.
A notable cultural feature is the house system, designed to build cross-year relationships and recognise contribution, not just attainment. Pupils can take on visible responsibility through roles such as house and school captains, which is an effective way to develop confidence and a sense of service, especially for pupils who thrive when trusted with real jobs.
For a state primary, the headline key stage 2 outcomes are exceptionally strong.
In 2024, 90% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 44% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%. Reading and maths scaled scores are also high (111 for reading and 107 for maths), with grammar, punctuation and spelling at 110.
On the FindMySchool ranking (based on official outcomes data), the school ranks 781st in England for primary outcomes and 2nd in the local area (Thames Ditton). That England position places it well above the typical range, outperforming around 95% of primaries.
A useful way to interpret these figures as a parent is to separate two questions: “Is it strong at expected standard?” and “Does it stretch the top end?”. The answer to both is yes here. The expected-standard figure indicates broad consistency across the cohort; the higher-standard figure indicates a sizeable group also reaching beyond the basics.
Parents comparing options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub Comparison Tool to view these measures alongside other nearby primaries, especially if you are balancing academic performance against travel time and wraparound practicality.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
90.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is structured with clear sequencing, so knowledge and skills are revisited and practised rather than treated as one-off topics. In practice, this matters because it supports pupils who need repetition to secure fundamentals, and it also enables higher attainers to deepen understanding rather than simply move on quickly.
Reading is treated as a priority from Reception. Pupils build accuracy and fluency early, with additional help identified quickly for those who need it. Older pupils discuss their independent reading, and the school uses a “10-minute pledge” approach to class reading that helps to normalise daily practice.
Mathematics starts with strong foundations in Reception, including number and practical measurement. As pupils get older, they learn a wider range of methods and are expected to apply that knowledge beyond maths lessons, for example in geography.
A distinctive curriculum strength is art, which is described as ambitious, carefully developed from the early years, and built through precise steps over time. The implication for pupils is twofold: creative work is treated as serious learning, and pupils who communicate best through visual or practical media are likely to feel recognised.
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 school, the key transition is into local secondary provision, and families typically plan well ahead because Year 6 is a busy academic and pastoral year. The school’s Year 6 messaging focuses on consolidating academic knowledge, independence and maturity, which is the right blend for the move to secondary routines and expectations.
For Catholic families, one common planning step is to map likely Catholic secondary options alongside non-faith alternatives, because admissions criteria and travel logistics can differ. For non-Catholic families, the practical question is often the same as at Reception: which schools are realistic on distance, and how much commuting is acceptable day-to-day.
This is an oversubscribed school on the Reception entry route. The most recent published admissions figures show 177 applications for 60 offers, which is just under three applications per place.
Applications for Reception are coordinated by Surrey County Council, and the school also asks families to complete a Supplementary Information Form, particularly where a faith criterion is being relied upon.
The governing body is the admission authority and, when oversubscribed, the criteria prioritise Catholic looked-after and previously looked-after children, then Catholic children more broadly, followed by other looked-after children, catechumens and certain Eastern Christian applicants, then other Christian denominations and other faiths, and finally any other children. Within criteria, sibling links can increase priority, and the tie-break is straight-line distance to the school gate as measured by the local authority.
For Reception entry to start in September 2026 in Surrey, applications open from 3 November 2025 and the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026. Offers are issued on 16 April 2026, with accept or decline required by 30 April 2026.
Open events for Reception 2026 are shown as having already taken place, with tours offered instead. In practice, that means families who are still deciding should look for tour availability rather than waiting for a fixed open morning date.
Parents should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check real-world distance from home to the school gates, because distance becomes decisive in many oversubscribed schools once priority criteria have been applied.
100%
1st preference success rate
53 of 53 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
60
Offers
60
Applications
177
Pupils’ wider development is treated as part of the core offer, not an optional extra. That shows up in how pupils learn about relationships, respect and online safety, and in the expectation that pupils can contribute to the life of the school through leadership roles and shared responsibilities.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as responsive, with needs identified quickly and a range of support put in place. The key caveat is that there can be variation in how precisely classroom work is adapted for a small number of pupils, which is a useful “ask about this” point for parents of children who rely on consistent day-to-day adjustments.
Safeguarding is described as effective.
The extracurricular programme is extensive and clearly organised, with before-school, lunchtime and after-school options, and a mix of staff-led and externally delivered clubs.
A strength here is the breadth across sport, performance, creative arts, and practical skills. Examples named on the clubs page include chess, cricket, football across different year groups, netball, musical theatre, street dance, art club and sewing club (Magpie Makes), guitar lessons, piano lessons, drum club and drum lessons, Pop Choral Group, Kidslingo Spanish Club, and a mindfulness club titled Prepare Pause Pray.
This matters for parents because the best primary extracurricular programmes do two jobs at once. First, they give pupils a chance to discover strengths beyond English and maths. Second, they make the logistics of working life easier, because clubs plus wraparound care can reduce the number of “short days” a family has to manage.
Wraparound care itself is described as activity-based, with craft, games, use of the gym and trim trail, and time for homework, running from 3:30pm to 6:00pm, with breakfast served earlier in the morning.
The published school day runs from 9:00am to 3:30pm, with a lunch break and shorter morning and afternoon breaks, equating to a 32.5-hour week.
Wraparound care extends the day, with Breakfast Club and After-School Club operating from 7:45am to 6:00pm.
The school website does not set out detailed travel guidance (for example, preferred drop-off routes or parking arrangements). Families should factor in local road conditions and any restrictions when planning daily routines, and clarify expectations directly during a tour.
Admission pressure. Nearly three applications per place on the Reception route means many families will be disappointed. Consider realistic alternatives in parallel.
Faith criteria are consequential. When oversubscribed, the criteria prioritise Catholic children, and families relying on a faith criterion should expect to provide the required evidence and complete the supplementary form on time.
SEND consistency question. Support is in place and needs are identified quickly, but classroom adaptations can vary for a small number of pupils. Parents of children who depend on consistent adjustments should probe how this is monitored across classes.
Open events timing. For Reception 2026, scheduled open events are shown as already passed, with tours offered instead, so planning a visit may depend on available tour dates.
This is a high-performing Catholic primary with unusually strong key stage 2 outcomes for a state school, a clear ethos, and real practical support for families through wraparound care and a busy clubs programme. It suits families who value a Catholic education, want a structured culture with high expectations, and can manage the competitive admissions landscape. The limiting factor is entry, not the quality of education.
Yes, it has a strong performance profile. In 2024, 90% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, well above the England average, and 44% reached the higher standard. The most recent inspection (January 2024) stated the school continues to be good.
Reception applications are made through Surrey County Council’s coordinated process, and the school also asks families to complete a supplementary form, particularly if applying under faith criteria. For September 2026 entry, Surrey’s on-time deadline is 15 January 2026.
Yes. The most recent published admissions figures show 177 applications for 60 offers on the Reception entry route, which is just under three applications per place.
Yes. The school states it offers on-site wraparound care, with Breakfast Club and After-School Club running from 7:45am until 6:00pm.
A wide programme is published, including options such as chess, football, netball, musical theatre, street dance, art club, sewing club, and a Pop Choral Group, plus instrument lessons. Clubs vary by term and are delivered by staff and external providers.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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