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.
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At drop-off, this feels like an infant school that runs on clear routines and strong relationships, with the sort of calm that usually comes from consistency rather than quietness. The age range is 3 to 7, so pupils leave after Year 2, and that shapes almost everything: curriculum choices, how progress is assessed, and what families plan for next. Nursery is part of the picture, but it sits alongside a Reception intake that remains competitive. In the most recent admissions cycle captured here, 135 applications competed for 59 offers, which is roughly 2.3 applications per place, and first-preference demand exceeded places.
Leadership is stable. Miss Katherine Cooper is the head teacher, having taken up the post in September 2022.
This is a mainstream, mixed infant and nursery school, with a strong emphasis on inclusion. The most recent inspection describes a school where pupils feel safe and enjoy attending, and where relationships between pupils, staff, and families are warm. That matters in an infant setting, because emotional security tends to show up quickly in behaviour, attendance, and how confidently children attempt unfamiliar tasks.
The physical set-up is clearly designed around younger children rather than retrofitted to them. The school handbook describes buildings built in the late 1960s, with six classrooms plus a purpose-built Nursery, as well as several named internal spaces that indicate how the school organises support and enrichment. These include the Nest, the Squirrels room, and a dedicated Buttercup Room used for practical group work.
Outside space is not a side note here. The handbook describes a wooded area, a garden where pupils plant flowers, herbs and vegetables, and fixed musical instruments available for children to use at playtime. For parents, the implication is straightforward: this is a setting where learning and regulation are not confined to tables and carpets, and where the school can use outdoor routines as part of behaviour and wellbeing, not just as “break time”.
Because pupils leave at the end of Year 2, you should not expect the usual Key Stage 2 headline measures that parents see for primary schools. Instead, the best external snapshot is the inspection framework and what it says about curriculum, early reading, and how well pupils learn and remember core knowledge over time.
The latest Ofsted inspection took place on 4 February 2025 (published 13 March 2025) and graded the school as Good across all graded areas, including Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, Leadership and Management, and Early Years provision.
What does that mean in practice for an infant school? It usually points to three things parents can test when they visit or speak to staff: (1) children can explain what they are learning in simple language, (2) early reading and phonics teaching is systematic and not left to chance, and (3) behaviour routines are stable enough that learning time is protected.
For families comparing local options, the most meaningful performance questions here are about trajectory rather than exam tables: how quickly children learn to read, how well writing is built from spoken language and phonics, and how consistently maths concepts are revisited so they stick.
Early reading is presented as a clear pillar. The school handbook states that phonics and reading follow Little Wandle Letters and Sounds, and it describes a broader approach that emphasises speaking and listening as a foundation for reading comprehension and writing. In an infant setting, that combination tends to suit a wide spread of starting points, including children who arrive with strong vocabulary and those who need more structured language building.
Curriculum sequencing is explicitly prioritised. The curriculum page describes planned progression and clear end points, with each year group building on what was taught before. That sounds abstract until you connect it to day-to-day practice: the same core ideas, vocabulary, and methods reappear across the year, so pupils do not meet concepts once and move on. In a school that finishes at Year 2, this matters because there is less time to “catch up later”.
Practical learning is also embedded in the environment. The Buttercup Room is described as a space for cooking, sewing and related science activities, supported by a fitted kitchen and work area. That is a useful signal for parents of hands-on learners, because it suggests that fine motor development, instructions, measuring, and teamwork are built into real tasks, not only worksheets.
Because this is an infant school, transition planning happens earlier than many parents expect. The admissions information explains that the school is linked to Bishop Wood School, and it notes that many junior schools prioritise pupils from their linked infant school.
The key implication is that families should treat Year 3 planning as part of the original decision, not as a distant problem. If you are likely to prefer a particular junior school, you will want to read the junior school’s admissions rules early and understand how “linked school” priority interacts with distance and any sibling criteria. Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions process makes the dates predictable, but the competition varies year to year.
If your child starts in Nursery, it is also important to internalise one point that the school repeats clearly: a Nursery place does not guarantee a Reception place. For many families, that becomes the biggest practical difference between “we like the Nursery” and “we can rely on continuing into Reception”.
There are three distinct routes families commonly care about here: Nursery entry, Reception entry, and the move to a junior school for Year 3.
Nursery admissions are handled directly through the school’s process and follow a published timeline. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 23 February 2026 and close on 27 March 2026, with offers emailed on 24 April 2026.
The Nursery runs Monday to Friday with hours set out on the admissions page, and the school describes a single main entry point in September, with in-year starts only if places become available. The same page states that families can use universal 15-hour funding and, if eligible, extended 30-hour funding, with additional paid sessions available. (For Nursery fee details, use the school’s official pages, as pricing and session patterns can change.)
Reception places are coordinated by Hertfordshire. For the September 2026 intake, Hertfordshire’s published timeline includes online applications opening on 3 November 2025, the on-time deadline of 15 January 2026, and national allocation day on 16 April 2026.
Demand is material. In the latest admissions figures provided here, there were 135 applications for 59 offers, and the route is marked Oversubscribed. For parents, the practical implication is that you should treat the application as genuinely competitive, and not assume a place will follow automatically from proximity or from Nursery attendance.
Because pupils leave after Year 2, parents must apply for a junior school place. The school’s admissions page explicitly flags the linked-school relationship and directs families to check junior school rules.
For parents who prefer planning with certainty, this is the moment to map the whole pathway: infant school now, junior school from Year 3, then secondary later. FindMySchool tools can help here. Use the Map Search to check how your address sits relative to multiple schools you may need across phases, then use Saved Schools to keep the shortlist organised while you compare policies and timings.
Applications
135
Total received
Places Offered
59
Subscription Rate
2.3x
Apps per place
Infant settings live or die by the basics: how adults speak to children, how routines are taught, and whether support for additional needs is normalised rather than exceptional. The school’s published information points to a well-established, practical approach. The handbook describes experienced teaching and support staff, with each class having a full-time teacher and teaching assistant, plus additional teaching assistants working across year groups.
SEND support is described as early identification followed by graduated support in class, with external agency involvement where needed (for example, educational psychology and speech and language support). The school also names the SENDCo on its public pages. The implication for parents is that the school expects variation in need and has a structure for responding, rather than treating support as a rare exception.
Wellbeing is also framed through daily practice. The handbook describes daily collective worship as a short gathering linked to religion and worldviews in a broad sense, with the right to withdraw. In many infant schools, that daily shared moment is less about theology and more about rhythm, shared language, and calm reset points, which can matter for pupils who find full days tiring.
The extracurricular offer is unusually specific for an infant school, which helps parents judge fit. The clubs page names Drama Club, French Club, Street Dance Club, Tennis Club, Goldfingers Gardening Club, plus year-group football clubs. The handbook adds that clubs run termly, with opportunities such as French, art, singing, dance and sports, and that Reception pupils can typically join from the Spring term.
The strongest value of this kind of programme is not “variety”; it is early confidence. Drama Club can help quieter pupils practise voice and turn-taking. Gardening club connects directly to the outdoor learning described in the handbook and can support vocabulary, observation, and responsibility through routine tasks. French Club makes language learning normal rather than niche, which can suit children who enjoy patterns and sounds.
PE is described as a structured programme delivered through a planned scheme, and the school’s sports premium documentation highlights uptake in clubs including dance, football and tennis. For families with energetic children, this points to a school that treats movement as part of the week, not as an occasional reward.
Core hours are clearly published. The school day for Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 runs from 8.45am to 3.15pm, and Nursery hours and gate timings are also set out.
Wraparound care is offered through Buttercup Club, with breakfast provision from 7.30am to 8.45am and after-school provision from 3.15pm to 6.00pm. Published pricing includes breakfast club at £7 per session, and the admissions page also lists after-school club at £16 per session.
For transport and logistics, the school’s information includes on-site car parking for 25 cars across two car parks, with additional unrestricted on-road parking nearby.
The latest inspection profile is Good, not Outstanding. Older inspection history includes Outstanding, but the most recent graded inspection (February 2025) sits at Good across the board. Families who value external benchmarks should read the latest report closely, then ask how priorities have evolved since 2022.
Nursery does not guarantee Reception. The school is explicit that Nursery attendance does not secure a Reception place, and Reception entry is coordinated by the local authority. This matters for childcare planning and for families hoping to settle once and stay.
This is an infant school, so you must plan for Year 3. The linked junior pathway can be helpful, but it is not automatic. Families should read junior school admissions rules early and keep the Year 3 transfer timeline in view from the start.
Wraparound is available, but it is an extra cost. Buttercup Club offers practical coverage for working families, but parents should budget for sessions and confirm availability for the days they need.
This is a structured, inclusive infant and nursery school with strong routines, a clear early reading programme, and enough named enrichment to feel purposeful rather than generic. It suits families who want a well-organised start to schooling, value outdoor space and practical learning, and are comfortable planning the pathway beyond Year 2. The main challenge is admissions, especially if you are relying on continuity from Nursery into Reception, and then on into a preferred junior school.
It presents as a well-run infant and nursery setting with a clear curriculum structure and a strong focus on early reading. The most recent Ofsted inspection in February 2025 graded the school as Good across all inspected areas, including early years provision.
Reception entry is oversubscribed in the latest admissions figures available here, with 135 applications for 59 offers. That level of demand means families should treat the application as competitive and follow Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions timeline carefully.
No. The school states clearly that Nursery attendance does not guarantee a Reception place, and Reception applications must be made through Hertfordshire’s admissions process.
For Nursery, applications open on 23 February 2026, close on 27 March 2026, and offers are sent on 24 April 2026. For Reception, Hertfordshire lists the on-time deadline as 15 January 2026 and national allocation day as 16 April 2026.
Pupils move on to a junior school for Year 3, and the school notes a linked relationship with Bishop Wood School. Parents should check junior school admissions rules early, because priority rules vary and places are not guaranteed.
Get in touch with the school directly
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