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.
Small schools live or die by the quality of relationships, and this one leans into that advantage. With a roll of around 85 to 86 pupils and a published capacity of 105, the school is intentionally close-knit, with staff knowing families well and routines built for a community scale.
Academic outcomes are a clear strength. In 2024, 85.7% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 38% reached greater depth, compared with an England average of 8%.
Families considering Reception should also understand the admissions reality. With 24 applications for 5 offers demand outstrips supply by a wide margin. The admissions criteria are parish-led, with distance used as a tie-break within categories.
This is a Church of England voluntary aided primary where the Christian ethos is not treated as a bolt-on. The school’s vision is framed around “walking in the shoes of others”, and that language is reinforced through how pupils are encouraged to think about compassion, empathy, and community responsibility.
The shape of the school day reflects its size. Pupils come in from 8.45am, registration is at 9am, and the day finishes at 3.15pm. There is a clear sense of adults being visible and accessible, including leadership presence at the start of the day, which matters in a small setting where minor worries can be addressed quickly before they become big ones.
Leadership continuity is another defining feature. Mrs Sue Elliott has been headteacher since January 2017, after joining the school in 2015, and her role as designated safeguarding lead is also explicit in the school’s published safeguarding information.
The data points to a high-performing primary by England standards, particularly in the core measures parents track most closely.
In 2024, 85.7% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared to the England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is especially striking: 38% reached greater depth, against an England average of 8%.
Scaled scores are similarly strong. Reading and maths both sit at 109, and grammar, punctuation and spelling is also 109. In a small school, cohort size can make percentages swing year to year, but the pattern here still suggests a consistently high ceiling for attainment.
Rankings provide a useful shortcut for parents benchmarking locally. Based on FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings using official data, the school is ranked 1,012th in England for primary outcomes, and 3rd in Tonbridge. That sits comfortably within the top 10% of primaries in England.
Parents comparing options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tool to view these results alongside nearby primaries on the same metrics, rather than relying on generic summaries.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
85.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum intent is ambitious and designed to cover the full breadth of national curriculum requirements, not just the tested elements. Reading and phonics are given daily emphasis from the start of Reception, with a structured approach to early reading and careful checking of gaps so teaching can adjust quickly.
A strength in a small primary is often the ability to tailor explanations and spot misconceptions early. The most recent inspection evidence aligns with that, describing staff who use questioning and evaluation of pupils’ work to understand what has been securely learned, then build on it systematically.
The main development priority is also clear. Some subjects are not taught as effectively as others because teachers’ subject knowledge is not consistently strong across the curriculum. For parents, the practical implication is not a weak academic picture overall, but that the experience can vary depending on subject leadership and staff confidence in specific areas.
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 Kent primary, the main transition point is into Year 7, with families navigating a mixed secondary landscape that includes both non-selective schools and selective routes via the Kent Test, depending on a child’s profile and parental preference.
What this school appears to do well is preparation in the broader sense: confidence in learning, good conduct, and a well-structured personal development programme. Those are the foundations that travel well into any secondary setting, whether comprehensive or selective, and they matter as much as raw attainment when pupils hit the bigger social and organisational step-up.
Admissions are coordinated through Kent County Council for Reception, with the application window typically opening in early November and closing in mid-January. For September 2026 entry in Kent, the national closing date was Thursday 15 January 2026, with offer day on Thursday 16 April 2026 and acceptance deadline on 30 April 2026.
This is a voluntary aided Church of England school, so the governing body is the admissions authority and uses faith and parish-linked oversubscription criteria rather than a simple distance-only model. Priority is given first to looked-after and previously looked-after children, then to children living within the ecclesiastical parish of Penshurst, followed by siblings, then a defined group of neighbouring ecclesiastical parishes, and finally other applicants. Where applications exceed places within a category, distance is used to prioritise offers.
Demand is the key story in the published figures. The latest results shows 24 applications for 5 offers for the primary entry route, indicating strong competition for places relative to the small cohort size.
Families trying to judge practical chances should use the FindMySchool Map Search to measure their home-to-school distance accurately, then read the oversubscription criteria carefully to understand how distance is applied within the relevant category.
100%
1st preference success rate
3 of 3 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
5
Offers
5
Applications
24
Pastoral strength is closely tied to culture in a small school, and the evidence here points to a caring environment with good conduct and low-level disruption not being a defining problem. Pupils are taught about bullying and how to report concerns, and staff are positioned as responsive to worries.
The safeguarding picture is also straightforward. The latest Ofsted inspection (17 November 2022) confirmed the school continues to be Good and that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
SEND identification and support are described as well understood by staff, with learning adapted so pupils with SEND can achieve and experience success across subjects.
In a small primary, enrichment tends to be built around a mix of whole-school experiences and a smaller set of clubs that can run viably with limited numbers. The school explicitly offers wraparound provision and works with external providers for sports clubs.
Sports activity is unusually specific in recent school communications, with named opportunities including archery, netball, football, gymnastics, and dodgeball, which suggests a practical, participation-first programme rather than a narrow focus on one or two traditional sports.
The wider personal development offer also includes trips, visits and pupil involvement in school events, including taking a lead in planning collective worship. In a Church school, that kind of pupil leadership tends to shape confidence and speaking skills early, particularly when pupils are encouraged to explain values and reflect on behaviour in a shared setting.
The school day runs from 9.00am to 3.15pm, with pupils able to come into school from 8.45am.
Wraparound care is available through an Early Morning Club (7.45am to 8.45am) and after-school sessions on weekdays. Published session prices are £4.00 for Early Morning Club, £5.00 for Monday and Friday after-school care (3.15pm to 4.30pm), and £6.50 for Tuesday to Thursday after-school care (3.15pm to 5.00pm).
Lunch arrangements are also clear: school dinners are free for pupils up to the end of Year 2, and are £2.80 per day for Year 3 and above.
A genuinely competitive intake. The entry cohort is small, and the published demand figures show far more applications than offers. If this is your first-choice school, plan early and understand how the oversubscription categories work in practice.
Faith and parish criteria matter. This is not a simple distance-only admissions model. Families outside the relevant ecclesiastical parishes should read the criteria carefully and be realistic about how priorities are applied.
Mixed-age structure can shape daily experience. The school operates with a small number of classes and mixed-age groupings in parts of the school. Many children thrive in that environment; some prefer a larger year-group peer cohort.
Curriculum consistency is the improvement focus. The current development priority is strengthening subject knowledge in some curriculum areas so pupils learn equally well across all subjects, not just the strongest ones.
High attainment, small-school relationships, and a clearly articulated Church of England ethos define this school. It suits families who want a village primary with a strong values framework and an academic profile that is well above England averages. The biggest hurdle is admission, particularly for families outside the parish-led priority categories.
Yes, the school is currently judged Good by Ofsted following its most recent inspection in November 2022, and safeguarding arrangements were found to be effective. Academic outcomes in 2024 were well above England averages, particularly in the combined reading, writing and maths measure.
There is no single simple catchment boundary in the way some community primaries operate. Priority is based on church parish links and specific oversubscription categories, with distance used to rank applicants within a category when needed.
Yes. The latest published admissions results shows 24 applications for 5 offers for the primary entry route, indicating strong competition for places.
Registration is at 9.00am and the school day ends at 3.15pm. Pupils can typically come into school from 8.45am.
Yes. The school publishes an Early Morning Club and after-school wraparound sessions on weekdays, with set start and finish times and session charges.
Get in touch with the school directly
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