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This is a one-form entry village primary serving Hermitage and nearby rural communities outside Newbury, with pupils aged 4 to 11 and a published capacity of 210.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (11 March 2025) reported Good judgements for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, leadership and management, and early years provision, plus Outstanding for personal development.
Recent published admissions data suggests demand is real but not extreme: 45 applications for 26 offers for Reception entry, which works out at roughly 1.73 applications per offered place.
For day-to-day logistics, wraparound care is clearly established. Rise and Shine Breakfast Club runs from 07:45 and Sunshine After School Club runs until 18:00, which is a genuine advantage for commuting families.
The strongest thread running through the school’s public-facing information is an emphasis on belonging and positive habits, with language that keeps coming back to children feeling safe, happy and curious, and being encouraged to persevere. You see that same focus echoed in the way the governing body describes priorities, and in how the school talks about children as individuals rather than as a cohort.
Leadership is unusually transparent for a small primary. The headteacher, Mrs Gillian Turner, is named consistently across official sources, and she also publishes a clear personal account of her route into the role, including the point she became headteacher in September 2019 after the previous head retired. That matters because it gives parents a practical timeline for stability: this is not a school constantly cycling leadership, and it has had time to embed routines and expectations.
Scale shapes the feel. With one form entry, children tend to be known quickly, and families often see the same staff year on year. That is not automatically better than a larger primary, but it does influence the social experience. For confident children it can feel reassuring and predictable; for children who need a bigger peer group to find their people, it can feel a little bounded. The upside is that systems like pastoral check-ins, nurture interventions, and targeted social support are easier to coordinate when the school community is not sprawling. The school lists trained Emotional Literacy Support Assistant practitioners, which is typically used for structured emotional regulation and friendship work in a primary setting.
In 2024, 60% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. Science sits a touch above the England comparator with 83% meeting the expected standard compared with 82% across England. Reading and mathematics expected-standard rates are both listed as 67% and 63% respectively, and the average scaled scores are 104 for reading, 102 for maths, and 104 for grammar, punctuation and spelling.
The high-attainment end is where the story becomes clearer. The percentage achieving the higher standard across reading, writing and mathematics is listed as 15.33%, compared with an England average of 8%. That suggests the school is producing a meaningful group of pupils who are exceeding the expected threshold, even if the combined expected standard headline is slightly below the England figure in that same year. For many families, that translates into two simultaneous truths: the core outcomes are broadly in line with England, and the stretch element looks stronger than the national benchmark.
Rankings should be read carefully and comparatively. In the FindMySchool ranking based on official outcomes data, the school is ranked 10,979th in England for primary measures and 7th locally in the Thatcham area. That places performance below England average overall in this ranking set, within the lower-performing 40% nationally. Parents should treat that as a broad comparison tool rather than a precise measure of classroom quality, and use it to compare nearby schools on a like-for-like basis.
A practical way to use this is through FindMySchool’s local hub comparison view. If you are choosing between village primaries where the culture and wraparound offer differ, comparing outcomes side-by-side keeps decisions grounded.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
60%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A small primary still has to do the big jobs: strong early reading, secure number sense, and a curriculum that builds knowledge cumulatively. The most recent inspection framework in England now grades individual judgement areas rather than issuing a single overall grade, which makes “quality of education” the headline proxy for curriculum and teaching. Hermitage was graded Good in that area in March 2025.
One useful indicator of what leaders prioritised during that inspection is the set of subject deep dives undertaken: early reading, mathematics, music and geography. That combination often tells you where leaders believe the curriculum is coherent and where they are ready to show work scrutiny, lesson visits and pupil conversations. It also hints at balance. Many schools lean heavily into English and maths; including music and geography suggests the school is willing to be held to account on foundation subjects too.
The school’s own materials repeatedly emphasise a creative curriculum and outdoor learning. As always, the important parent question is what that means in practice. Here, the clearest concrete example is that every class is described as taking part in Forest School sessions and using a Round-House for outdoor activities. Those are not generic statements like “we love the outdoors”, they are specific approaches with a recognisable delivery model, and they usually come with practical benefits: resilience, collaboration, and a calmer learning rhythm for children who struggle with long sedentary periods.
For a primary school, the transition question is simple: which secondaries do pupils typically move on to, and how supported is the move?
Hermitage is described as part of a soft federation of local small schools that feed into The Downs Secondary School. That helps parents because it suggests there are established relationships and a well-trodden transition pathway, rather than families having to work it out from scratch each year.
The other part of transition is support for pupils who need additional planning. The school’s local offer materials describe structured transition work, including extra visits and targeted emotional support where needed. For children with identified needs, that kind of planning can matter as much as exam outcomes at primary stage.
Admissions are coordinated through West Berkshire on the normal national timetable for Reception entry, even if you are applying to schools outside the local authority area. For September entry, applications open in September and close on 15 January, with offers released on 16 April.
Demand at Hermitage Primary looks meaningful rather than overwhelming in the latest published admissions figures you provided: 45 applications and 26 offers for Reception, with oversubscription indicated. That combination often produces movement via waiting lists after offer day, particularly if some families list the school as a preference while expecting to move house or accept independent options.
If you are applying from within Hermitage and nearby villages, distance and transport time are worth checking early, especially if you are weighing this against other West Berkshire options. A sensible approach is to shortlist, then use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check real door-to-gate distances for each option.
100%
1st preference success rate
23 of 23 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
26
Offers
26
Applications
45
Pastoral work is the most distinctive part of Hermitage Primary’s current official story. Personal development was graded Outstanding in March 2025, which is not a soft judgement, it usually reflects a coherent PSHE programme, behaviour culture, opportunities for responsibility, and consistent attention to inclusion.
The school is also explicit about structured emotional support. ELSA practitioners are listed by name, and the local offer references targeted interventions and signposting to wider services when needed. For families, that reduces the risk of the “we will keep an eye on it” loop, because it signals that there are defined processes and trained staff to deliver them.
For children with additional needs, the local offer is detailed, including how concerns are identified, how plans are reviewed, and how parents are involved. Even for children without SEND, a school that is organised around clear pastoral systems tends to be calmer, with fewer behavioural surprises and more predictable routines.
Village primaries sometimes struggle to offer breadth without stretching staff capacity. Hermitage looks to solve that in two ways: outdoor learning embedded into class time, and wraparound clubs that provide both childcare and enrichment.
Forest School sessions for each class, plus outdoor activities in the Round-House, are the most concrete extracurricular-adjacent experiences described publicly. These are not optional clubs for a small subset, they are framed as part of what everyone gets. The implication is equity: outdoor learning is not reserved for children whose parents can commit to after-school timings.
Wraparound provision is also clearly structured. Rise and Shine Breakfast Club runs in the morning, and Sunshine After School Club runs until 18:00 with snacks included. For families where both adults work, this can be the difference between a school being viable or not.
Finally, staffing lists suggest a breadth of specialist roles and responsibilities even in a small setting, including a named Special Educational Needs Coordinator and a deputy headteacher. In practice, that often supports extracurricular range because leadership bandwidth exists to coordinate activities, partnerships, and pupil experiences beyond lessons.
The published school day runs from 08:50 to 15:30, with guidance not to drop children before 08:40. Breakfast club starts at 07:45, and after-school provision runs to 18:00.
Term dates are published for 2025 to 2026, which helps for holiday planning and childcare arrangements.
Outcomes are broadly mid-pack rather than headline-grabbing. In 2024, 60% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, slightly below the England figure of 62%. Families primarily motivated by top-line results may want to compare nearby options carefully.
The top end looks stronger than the headline suggests. Higher standard attainment across reading, writing and maths is listed at 15.33%, above the England benchmark of 8%. That can be a good fit for high-attaining children, but it also points to a spread in outcomes that parents may want to understand.
Village scale is a strength, but not for everyone. One-form entry often means stability and familiarity; it can also mean a narrower peer group. This is worth weighing for children who rely on a wider social mix.
Wraparound care is a clear plus, but check availability early. Breakfast and after-school provision is established, yet places can still be limited at popular times.
Hermitage Primary is best read as a practical, well-organised village school with a mature pastoral offer and a strong personal development judgement. Academically, the latest results points to outcomes close to England norms overall, with a stronger-than-average higher-attainment slice. Best suited to families who value wraparound care, outdoor learning woven into the school week, and a smaller community where children are known quickly. Entry can be competitive, so admissions planning matters.
The most recent Ofsted inspection in March 2025 graded the school Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, leadership and management, and early years provision, plus Outstanding for personal development. That combination usually indicates a well-run school with a clear culture and strong personal development work alongside secure teaching.
Reception applications follow the national timetable and are coordinated by West Berkshire for local residents. Applications typically open in September and close on 15 January, with offers released on 16 April.
Recent published admissions figures indicate oversubscription, with 45 applications and 26 offers for Reception entry in the latest available data. This level of demand often produces waiting list movement after offer day, but it still means families should apply on time and list preferences realistically.
Yes. The school publishes a breakfast club start time of 07:45 and after-school provision running until 18:00, alongside a school day that ends at 15:30. Availability can vary, so it is sensible to check places early if wraparound care is essential for your family.
The school is described as part of a federation of local small schools that feed into The Downs Secondary School. Transition support is also referenced in the school’s local offer, including additional planning for pupils who need it.
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