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.
Some primaries feel big because they are busy. This one feels big because it is connected. With three classrooms and a published capacity of 72, the school runs as a tight-knit village setting, yet it draws on the wider resources and leadership of the The Forest CE Federation.
Academically, the latest Key Stage 2 data places it comfortably above England averages. In 2024, 88% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is also striking, 30% reached the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with 8% across England.
Families considering Reception entry should note demand. For the most recently reported entry-route data, there were 20 applications for 8 offers, which is 2.5 applications per place, consistent with an oversubscribed school.
The school’s identity is unapologetically Church of England, but its day-to-day tone reads as inclusive and community-focused rather than narrow. Leaders describe an ambition for pupils to be curious, confident and creative, grounded in Christian values and a sense of responsibility to others.
Two rhythms shape daily life here. The first is the “everyone knows everyone” feel that comes with a small roll and mixed-age social dynamics. Children are expected to take responsibility, and older pupils are given visible roles, including classroom and school responsibilities that build independence and confidence over time.
The second rhythm is the federation model. Leadership and governance sit across multiple schools, which matters for a small setting. It tends to bring more consistency in systems, more shared staff expertise, and more chances for pupils to mix with peers from other village schools for sport and events, without losing the small-school feel day to day.
Faith is integrated in a practical way. Pupils attend services at St Mary's Church, Whittlebury at least once each half-term, and the school describes regular visits from clergy for assemblies. This works well for families who want worship to be part of normal school life, while still welcoming pupils with a wide range of beliefs.
For a small primary, the headline KS2 picture is unusually strong.
88% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined (England average 62%).
30% reached the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics (England average 8%).
Scaled scores were 108 for reading and 106 for maths (scaled scores are standardised, where 100 is the expected standard).
Those figures are backed by strong subject-specific indicators, including 91% reaching the expected standard in maths and 82% reaching the expected standard in reading. GPS (grammar, punctuation and spelling) is also a strength, with an average scaled score of 108 and 82% reaching the expected standard.
ranked 2631st in England and 3rd in Towcester for primary outcomes. This places the school above England average and comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England.
For parents, the practical implication is simple. Pupils are leaving Year 6 with secure core skills and a meaningful proportion working at greater depth, which generally supports a smooth move into a more subject-segmented secondary curriculum.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
88%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading is treated as a strategic priority. Phonics is taught from the start of Reception and the early reading books are closely matched to the sounds pupils have learned, so pupils build fluency quickly. Over time, pupils are expected to read widely across different authors and genres, with a planned approach to texts.
Beyond reading, the curriculum intent is clear. In most subjects, learning is sequenced so pupils revisit ideas and remember more over time. Pupils are also expected to take responsibility for their own work and develop the ability to work independently, which is often a hallmark of small primaries that do well academically.
The most useful nuance for families is that curriculum consistency is still a live improvement area. A small number of subjects were identified as less fully sequenced, and leaders were advised to tighten the incremental planning in reading beyond phonics, and the way early years assessment checks progress against termly milestones. In a small school, these “planning mechanics” can matter, because staff often cover multiple subjects and year groups, and clarity helps maintain consistency.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
A small village primary rarely publishes destination numbers, so what matters most is preparedness. The curriculum and classroom culture deliberately build independence, sustained concentration, and the ability to work more autonomously, which aligns well with the step-change pupils feel when moving into a larger secondary setting.
For local context, village information indicates that many secondary pupils from Whittlebury attend Sponne School, with some travelling further to The Royal Latin School or Magdalen College School, Brackley. Families should still confirm their own likely options through the local authority’s secondary admissions information, as patterns vary by cohort and eligibility.
Reception admissions are coordinated by West Northamptonshire Council rather than handled directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, the council’s published timeline states that applications open from 10 September 2025, the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are released on 16 April 2026.
The school also encourages informal visits, and describes summer-term familiarisation activities for children who have secured places for September entry.
Demand is material even allowing for small numbers. With 20 applications for 8 offers in the most recently reported entry-route data, families should assume competition in most years. If you are trying to judge realistic chances, it is worth using FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your exact home-to-school distance and compare it with historic allocation patterns for the area, while remembering that distance cut-offs can shift significantly year to year.
Applications
20
Total received
Places Offered
8
Subscription Rate
2.5x
Apps per place
Small schools can deliver pastoral care in two distinct ways: closeness and speed. The closeness comes from staff knowing pupils and families well, which is explicitly recognised in external commentary. The speed comes from being able to act on concerns quickly because the team is small and communication lines are short.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as well organised, with needs identified accurately and provision set out in personalised plans. The wider personal, social and health education programme is framed around respectful relationships, equal treatment, and an age-appropriate understanding of difference.
The latest Ofsted inspection (15 December 2022, published 07 February 2023) confirmed the school remains Good and that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Because this is a small primary, enrichment tends to work best when it is structured and repeatable. That is exactly how it is presented.
All pupils from Reception to Year 6 are described as taking part in a six-week block of Forest School delivered through Acorn Forest School at Salcey Forest. Practically, this gives pupils repeated exposure to working in natural settings, learning to manage sensible risk, and developing confidence outside the classroom.
The federation works with Rhino Sports Academy for coaching and wraparound sport. Sport is not limited to traditional games, the published enrichment information references activities such as archery and dance alongside football, netball and tag rugby, plus competitions across the federation and wider local area.
All pupils in Years 5 and 6 take swimming lessons at Towcester Leisure Centre, and the school states these are fully funded. Besides the obvious health benefit, the life-saving component is a meaningful practical outcome by the end of primary.
Instrumental lessons are available through Northamptonshire Music and Performing Arts Trust, with published examples including brass, strings and guitar. For families weighing up small schools, access to peripatetic music teaching is often a differentiator, because it gives pupils specialist input without needing a large in-house department.
The awards system is unusually distinctive for a small primary. A monthly “Pupil of the Month” model includes a Golden Ticket sent home and a celebration assembly where the VIP walks down a red carpet, supported by a points-based rewards approach. Weekly Star Awards sit alongside this. The intended implication is clear, behaviour and effort are made visible, and pupils learn that recognition is linked to contribution, not just attainment.
The school day is clearly set out. Gates open at 08:45, registration is 09:00, and collection is 15:30, with a weekly total of 32.5 hours for pupils.
Wraparound provision is described as sport-led. Breakfast club runs 08:00 to 08:45, and after-school provision runs 15:30 to 16:30 as activities delivered by an external sports provider. Parents who need longer cover than 16:30 should check directly with the provider or the school office, as the published information focuses on this one-hour after-school window.
On travel, the setting is village-based, so most families will arrive on foot or by car. The practical pinch point is usually parking and narrow roads at drop-off. If you rely on driving, it is worth checking the immediate approach routes and any informal local norms early on.
Small-school scale. With three classrooms and a small roll, friendship groups and parent networks can feel intense. That can be reassuring for some families and constraining for others.
Admissions competition in a small cohort. Oversubscription at small schools can be deceptively volatile, a few extra local applications can materially change the outcome. The recent ratio of 2.5 applications per place suggests you should not assume an easy offer.
Curriculum consistency is still being refined. External feedback identified that a small number of subjects were not yet as tightly sequenced as others, and that incremental planning in reading beyond phonics needed clearer milestones. Families who want absolute curriculum uniformity across all subjects should ask how this has developed since the last inspection.
Faith integration is real. Regular church services and clergy involvement are part of the lived culture. This suits many families, but those who prefer a more secular day-to-day experience should explore what participation looks like in practice.
This is a high-performing village primary with the kind of structured curriculum and clear expectations that often correlate with strong KS2 outcomes. The federation model adds capacity and wider opportunities, while the small size preserves the close pastoral feel many families want.
Best suited to families who value a small school, want a clear Church of England ethos in everyday life, and are comfortable with a setting where relationships and routines are highly visible. The main challenge is admission, competition can be significant even when the raw numbers look small.
The most recent inspection confirmed it continues to be Good, with effective safeguarding. Academic outcomes at Key Stage 2 are also strong, including 88% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics in 2024, which sits well above England averages.
Reception places are allocated through the local authority’s coordinated admissions process, using published oversubscription criteria rather than a simple “village catchment” promise. Families should read the local authority admissions guidance and check how criteria apply to their address.
Applications are made through West Northamptonshire Council. For September 2026 entry, the council states applications open from 10 September 2025, the on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Published information describes a breakfast club running 08:00 to 08:45 and sport-based after-school provision from 15:30 to 16:30. Families needing longer cover should confirm current arrangements directly, as the published details focus on this one-hour after-school slot.
The school describes daily worship and prayer in school, regular services at the parish church at least once each half-term, and involvement from clergy through assemblies. The ethos is framed as Christian values alongside respect for differing beliefs.
Get in touch with the school directly
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