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 very small rural primary in East Anstey, near Tiverton, built around mixed-age teaching and a close community feel. The school takes children from age 2 through to Year 6, with Nursery provision on site and two classes spanning Early Years to Year 2, then Years 3 to 6.
The latest Ofsted inspection (20 and 21 March 2024) rated the school Good across every judgement area, including Early Years, and described pupils who are proud of their school and play well across age groups.
A distinctive thread runs through the school’s priorities: reading from the earliest years, enriching experiences such as instrument tuition, and an outdoors and adventure strand that is unusually ambitious for a small village setting.
East Anstey Primary School’s defining feature is scale. With a published capacity of 51, and a roll recorded as 19 at the time of the March 2024 inspection, this is the kind of school where everyone is known quickly, including families. That intimacy shows up in how pupils mix across year groups: the inspection describes older and younger children playing together harmoniously and devising games using available playground equipment.
Mixed-age teaching is not a bolt-on here, it is the organising principle. The school groups children into two classes: Class 1 spans Nursery, Reception, Year 1 and Year 2; Class 2 spans Years 3 to 6. In practice, this tends to create a calm, responsibility-led culture, because routines and expectations have to work for a wide range of ages at once. It also suits pupils who benefit from being able to move at their own pace within a small cohort, rather than being tightly locked to an age-based set.
The ethos presented publicly emphasises high expectations, confidence-building, and a strong focus on learning experiences as well as standards. The school frames its approach through a set of “drivers” (standards, skills, experience, confidence) and positions itself as part of a federation that shares capacity and expertise across sites.
Leadership is federation-based. Tim Gurney is listed as executive headteacher on the school website, and as headteacher (executive headteacher) in the March 2024 inspection report. The start date of the current headship is not clearly published on the school’s own pages or in the most recent inspection documentation, so parents who care about leadership tenure should ask directly when arranging a visit.
For families looking from age 2, the Nursery offer is part of the school’s core story rather than an add-on. The March 2024 inspection highlights that language and communication are developed strongly in Nursery, with adults extending children’s vocabulary and spoken language. That matters in a small school context, because early language development is one of the biggest predictors of later ease with reading, writing, and wider learning.
The staffing list shows early years practitioners as a dedicated part of the team, alongside class teachers and teaching assistants, which is typically a good sign for consistency in early provision. For Nursery fee details, families will need to check with the school directly; for eligible families, government-funded early education hours may be available.
Published, comparable key stage outcome measures are not presented in the provided local results for this school, so it is not possible to make precise, numerical claims here about attainment or scaled scores without relying on third-party summaries. What can be evidenced, instead, is the shape of teaching priorities and the quality signals contained in official inspection evidence and statutory documentation.
The strongest academic signal in the current evidence base is early reading. Reading is described as a top priority, with phonics taught as soon as children start Reception, and books carefully matched to the sounds pupils have learned. The report also notes a “new library space” and older pupils who talk enthusiastically about favourite books and authors. In a small school, a well-run reading strategy can be the difference between a cohort that accelerates together and one where gaps widen quietly.
There is also a clear sense of structured assessment. The inspection states that assessment is used to check what pupils know and remember, and that staff use this information to adjust teaching and address gaps. This matters because mixed-age classes rely on teachers being very precise about what each pupil has secured, and what comes next, rather than assuming a single “Year 4 lesson” lands the same way for everyone.
The main academic caveat in the latest evidence is curriculum consistency in some foundation subjects. The inspection notes that, while the curriculum is designed to suit mixed-age classes and is sensibly sequenced in many areas, not all staff have the depth of subject knowledge needed in some subjects, which reduces consistency of delivery and, in turn, what pupils learn. For parents, the key implication is not that core learning is weak, but that you should ask how subject leadership and staff development are being strengthened across the wider curriculum, particularly if your child is highly curious about specific subjects.
For families who want to verify performance information directly, the school links to the Department for Education’s school performance tables via its statutory information page.
Two structural decisions shape teaching here: mixed-age organisation and a curriculum model designed for it. The March 2024 inspection report describes a curriculum designed to work for mixed-aged classes, with content sequenced sensibly in most subjects “right from the start”. That sequencing point is crucial. In mixed-age settings, strong curriculum design prevents repetition for older pupils and prevents younger pupils being pulled into content they are not ready for.
Early reading is the clearest example of a well-engineered approach. Children begin phonics quickly on entry to Reception; by the end of Year 1 most pupils are using phonics confidently; books are closely matched to taught sounds; and older pupils read accurately and with enjoyment. The implication for parents is practical: a child who thrives on routine, repetition, and incremental mastery is likely to feel secure, because the reading programme is described as coherent from Nursery through Key Stage 1.
Mathematics also has strong visible links to wider life. The inspection notes pupils’ understanding of the importance of mathematics for future careers. On the school’s partner list, East Anstey also states it is part of the Jurassic Maths Hub, involved in developing and researching approaches to maths teaching. While that is not a direct outcome measure, it is a meaningful indicator of professional engagement and external networks, particularly for a very small school.
Provision for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as inclusive and accurately targeted. The inspection states that pupils with SEND are included in all aspects of school life, needs are identified accurately, and targets are generally well matched, with pupils learning the curriculum and making progress. In a small school, this kind of inclusion is often felt day to day, because staff can adjust quickly, and pupils know each other well.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Transition at 11 is a major moment for any small primary, because the move is not just to a different site, it is typically to a far larger environment. East Anstey’s partnership information is helpful here: the school states it is part of the South Molton Learning Cluster, described as 11 schools feeding into South Molton Community College. That offers a practical clue about likely transition routes and professional links that can support pupils moving on.
What matters most is how the school prepares pupils for scale, independence, and resilience. The inspection points to character and resilience-building experiences, including team-based challenge and responsibilities for older pupils. For many children, those experiences translate into confidence in unfamiliar settings, which is exactly what a small-school leaver needs when arriving at a large secondary.
If you are choosing East Anstey partly for local continuity, it is still sensible to check secondary transport routes early. In rural areas, the “school day” can stretch significantly once travel is included, and transport eligibility is not always intuitive.
As a state-funded community school within Devon County Council, normal-round applications for Reception are coordinated through the local authority rather than made directly to the school. The school explicitly invites prospective families to arrange a visit via the school office, which is particularly valuable here because mixed-age organisation and very small cohort size can feel either perfect or too small depending on the child.
The admissions demand signal in the supplied data shows a very small numbers environment: 8 applications and 7 offers, with the entry route marked as oversubscribed. In settings this small, a single family moving in or out of the area can change the picture sharply from year to year, so it is worth treating each cohort as its own story.
For September 2026 entry in Devon, the published local authority timeline indicates applications open on 15 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offer day for primary starters on 16 April 2026. If your child is applying from outside Devon, you still apply through your home local authority, but the national deadline structure is aligned across councils in most cases.
Parents assessing their chances should use the FindMySchool Map Search tool to check the precise home-to-school distance that would apply under the local authority’s rules, then cross-check against the most recent published admissions outcomes for the school. Even in tiny cohorts, distance rules can matter.
Applications
8
Total received
Places Offered
7
Subscription Rate
1.1x
Apps per place
Small schools often succeed or fail on relationships, because there is nowhere for weak culture to hide. The March 2024 inspection describes warm, supportive relationships between staff and pupils, with staff caring about pupils and their families, and a friendly community atmosphere in which pupils feel respected.
Behaviour and play are described as positive across ages. Older and younger pupils play together, and the wider school culture emphasises fairness and respect. In practice, that tends to suit pupils who thrive on predictable routines and clear expectations, and it can be especially supportive for children who find larger, noisier settings difficult.
Safeguarding leadership is clear on the school’s published safeguarding page, with named designated and deputy safeguarding leads. Families should still ask practical questions on a visit: how concerns are recorded, how online safety is taught, and how the school works with external agencies when needed, particularly in rural contexts where access to services can vary.
A small school can sometimes struggle to offer breadth. East Anstey’s evidence suggests it addresses that challenge by using partnerships and well-chosen signature experiences.
Pupils learn instruments including the gamelan, ocarina, and recorder, and have chances to perform in assemblies and concerts. The implication is cultural: performance opportunities build confidence, listening skills, and a sense of shared endeavour, which often carries into speaking and writing as pupils get older.
The school describes an Outdoor Learning Programme with repeated success in CPRE competitions focused on habitat preservation, plus involvement with the Woodland Trust and a Green Tree Initiative Gold Award. This suggests outdoor learning is structured, not just opportunistic. For pupils who learn best through practical, place-based experiences, that can be a major draw.
The inspection describes older pupils taking part in the Exmoor Challenge, navigating a 16-mile route over Exmoor in teams of four using map and compass skills. The educational value is multi-layered: fitness, teamwork, risk assessment, and real-world problem-solving, all of which strengthen transition readiness for secondary school.
Pupils design and run events that raise money for the school community. For a primary-aged pupil, this is practical economics, communication, and planning, with an immediate sense of purpose.
The school lists external links with University of Exeter (teacher training partnership), Ogden Trust (science and STEM projects), Exmoor National Park learning links, and local providers supporting adventurous and climbing elements. This is a sensible strategy for a very small school: rather than trying to do everything in-house, it pulls in targeted expertise.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Term dates are published clearly, including non-pupil days and half-term dates for 2026 and beyond. The school day start and finish times are not set out in the pages accessed during this review, so families who need precise timings for work schedules should confirm directly with the school office. The same applies to wraparound provision: information on breakfast club or after-school care is not published on the accessible pages, so parents should ask what is available, how regular it is, and how booking works.
Transport planning matters in a rural village setting. The school’s transport page stresses that responsibility for attendance rests with parents, and it summarises statutory eligibility rules, including the two-mile walking route threshold for primary-aged children, with eligibility and arrangements handled by Devon rather than by the school itself.
On day-to-day costs, lunches are cooked on site with a choice of hot meals including a vegetarian option, and infant pupils (Reception to Year 2) are eligible for universal infant free school meals. Uniform is clearly specified in practical terms, with branded burgundy items optional but commonly used, and a pre-loved option available through the school.
Very small cohorts. With a small roll, friendship groups and class dynamics can feel intense, and year-to-year changes can be dramatic. This suits children who enjoy close relationships; it may feel limiting for those who want a large peer group.
Mixed-age teaching is a strength, but not for everyone. Some children love learning alongside older pupils and developing independence early. Others prefer a larger year-group identity and the pace of single-age teaching. The best test is a visit and a conversation about how work is pitched across the age span.
Curriculum consistency in some foundation subjects is still developing. The latest inspection highlights that staff subject knowledge is not equally strong in every subject, which affects how consistently parts of the wider curriculum are delivered. Families with strong subject preferences should ask how training and subject leadership are being strengthened.
Rural transport and childcare logistics. Eligibility rules for free transport can be counter-intuitive, and wraparound care details are not published on the accessible pages. Working families should confirm both early, before committing to a plan.
East Anstey Primary School offers something increasingly rare: a genuinely small village primary where mixed-age teaching is normal, Nursery starts from age 2, and enrichment is not superficial. Music tuition (including gamelan and ocarina), ambitious outdoor learning, and resilience-building challenges create a rounded experience that goes beyond core lessons.
Best suited to families who value small cohorts, close relationships, and outdoor learning, and whose child is likely to flourish in mixed-age classes. The main caveat is the natural constraint of scale: some families will love the intimacy; others will want a larger peer group and more published childcare logistics.
The most recent graded inspection in March 2024 judged the school Good across all areas, including early years, and highlighted strong relationships, positive behaviour, and a clear focus on reading.
As a Devon community school, admissions are coordinated through the local authority, and allocation rules are applied through the Devon coordinated admissions process. If you are relying on distance or designated school rules, confirm the current criteria and check your home-to-school distance using an accurate mapping tool before applying.
Yes. The school takes children from age 2 and runs Nursery alongside Reception and Key Stage 1 within its mixed-age Class 1 structure.
For Devon primary starters, the local authority timeline indicates applications open on 15 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offer day on 16 April 2026.
Get in touch with the school directly
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