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 with a mixed-age structure and a distinctive outdoor-learning strand. Current roll is listed as 17 pupils against a capacity of 56, so families should expect tiny cohorts, close staff knowledge of each child, and a school experience shaped by a small peer group.
Leadership sits within The Woodland Federation, which links Kings Nympton with a partner primary to share subject leadership and staff expertise. The latest Ofsted inspection, published 29 November 2022, confirmed the school continues to be Good.
This is a school where relationships are the organising principle. With mixed-age classes and very small numbers, routines tend to feel personal and predictable, which suits pupils who thrive on being known well. External evaluation describes a calm culture, with pupils reporting that everyone looks out for each other, and low-level disruption described as rare.
Responsibility is built into day-to-day life rather than bolted on. Pupils take on roles such as school council and eco-warriors, and older children spend time reading and sharing books with younger pupils. In a small setting, these roles can matter more because they are visible to everyone, and younger pupils tend to imitate the older ones quickly.
The federation arrangement shapes the social experience too. The school describes planning trips and residentials across the federation so children can meet peers from their wider year group ahead of secondary transition. For some families, that can ease the “small village primary to bigger secondary” leap; for others, it is simply a practical way to widen friendship circles.
For many small primaries, public results can be less informative year to year because cohorts are tiny. In practice, parents often learn more by asking how reading is taught, how mathematics is structured in mixed-age classes, and how the school checks pupils are retaining key knowledge over time.
Formal review evidence points to clear priorities. Reading is treated as central, with a structured phonics approach beginning in Reception and books matched to pupils’ phonics knowledge so pupils can practise successfully. Mathematics has been strengthened through a more systematic approach, supporting knowledge retention and helping teachers manage differing needs within a mixed-age Key Stage 2 class.
Where the picture is more developmental is in the wider curriculum. The same review highlights that, in geography and history, the knowledge pupils should learn is not always sequenced towards clear end points, which can limit how far understanding deepens over time. This does not mean those subjects are weak in every lesson, but it does signal an area parents may want to explore in conversations with leaders, especially if curriculum coherence matters to you.
If you are comparing nearby schools, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can still be useful here, not just for performance figures but for making sense of context, size, and admissions patterns side by side.
The most important teaching-and-learning feature is the mixed-age model. Kings Nympton operates with two classes, with Class 2 covering Years 3 to 6. Mixed-age teaching can be a genuine strength when it is well planned because pupils revisit ideas in different ways over time, and older pupils often consolidate learning by explaining it. It can also frustrate families who want tight, single-year pacing, so it is worth asking how teachers map coverage across a two-year or four-year cycle.
At federation level, the curriculum is framed through seven interwoven concepts: construction, innovation, civilisation, legacy, conflict, environment, and evolution. In the best versions of this approach, those concepts become reference points pupils keep returning to, which helps them connect learning across subjects and across time periods rather than treating each unit as isolated.
Digital access is also a deliberate choice. The federation states that every child in Key Stage 1 and 2 is allocated an iPad for use in school, enabling scaffolding and quick access to learning resources. In a small school, this can help teachers differentiate efficiently, but it is still worth asking about screen time balance, handwriting expectations, and how online safety is taught and reinforced.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
At the end of Year 6, the majority of pupils move on to Chulmleigh Community College, with some children in catchment for South Molton Community College. Secondary admissions are managed as a centralised process through Devon County Council, with parents expressing preferences during the autumn term of Year 6.
Transition tends to be a bigger event for pupils coming from a very small primary because the step-up in cohort size is significant. The federation’s practice of shared trips and experiences across schools can help children build confidence with a broader peer group before the move.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Admission for Reception is coordinated by Devon County Council, and the school also participates in Devon’s in-year coordinated scheme.
The pattern for primary entry in Devon for September 2026 is clear. The online application window opens 15 November 2025 and closes 15 January 2026. Offers for primary places are issued on 16 April in England (or the next working day if that date falls on a weekend or bank holiday).
Demand here can look unusual because the school is so small. In the most recent admissions snapshot provided for Reception entry, there were 4 applications and 5 offers, indicating an undersubscribed picture at that moment. For families, the practical implication is that securing a place may be less about “winning” a competition and more about whether this small-school model fits your child.
Parents considering a move often use FindMySchoolMap Search to understand practicalities such as travel time, rural road routes, and how realistic drop-off will be in winter months.
Applications
4
Total received
Places Offered
5
Subscription Rate
0.8x
Apps per place
Pastoral support in a small primary often shows up as early identification. Staff can spot changes in behaviour or confidence quickly because they see the same children across multiple years and contexts. Review evidence describes pupils as confident, polite, and mature around school, with a clear understanding of expectations and responsibility.
Safeguarding is described as effective, with staff training and reporting processes clearly understood. Beyond compliance, the curriculum includes risk education such as online safety and relationship education, and Forest School sessions explicitly cover practical safety themes such as fire, tools, and water.
One area flagged for development is pupils’ understanding of cultural diversity beyond their own experience, with leaders expected to strengthen curriculum and planned experiences to broaden this. Parents who prioritise a strong, explicit approach to diversity and wider cultural knowledge should ask what has changed since 2022 and how this shows up in classroom practice now.
The signature programme is Forest School, and it is unusually detailed for a small primary. The school states it is led by a Level 3 qualified Forest School leader, and that pupils have whole days outdoors, offsite in woodland just outside the village. Activities described include nature study, fire-lighting with strikers, den building, rope swing or slack line, hammock time, tool use, cooking over a campfire, and river paddling, with sessions running in most weather conditions.
The implication for families is practical as well as educational. Children who learn well through movement and real-world tasks can thrive here, and the routine of supported risk-taking tends to build self-management. On the other hand, if your child strongly dislikes getting wet or muddy, or finds outdoor unpredictability stressful, you will want to understand how the school adapts sessions and how frequently pupils participate.
Wider enrichment appears through trips and experiences. Pupils spoke positively about visits beyond the immediate area, including a trip to Eden Project. At federation level, Key Stage 2 year groups are described as having annual residentials, with Year 6 referenced as a three-day London residential including major attractions and a West End show.
Wraparound sits alongside enrichment rather than feeling separate. Before-school club is offered for Classes 1 and 2 from 8:00am on weekdays in term time, and the school notes it reviews demand for additional provision.
The school day runs 9:00am to 3:30pm, with children able to come into school from 8:50am. A before-school club operates from 8:00am, with published session options and prices. The website states after-school clubs run 3:30pm to 4:30pm but also notes that, currently, no after-school clubs are running.
Lunch runs 12:10pm to 1:15pm, and meals are ordered in advance via an app-based system.
For travel, the school is set in rural Devon with links towards Chulmleigh and South Molton. For families who use public transport occasionally, Kings Nympton railway station serves the area on the Tarka Line. In practice, most families should plan on car-based commuting and check winter driving realism as part of their decision.
Very small cohorts. Current roll is listed as 17 pupils. That can be ideal for children who want calm, familiarity, and lots of adult attention; it can feel limiting for children who want a large friendship pool and many same-age peers.
Mixed-age teaching is a defining feature. Class 2 covers Years 3 to 6. This model can be highly effective when sequencing is tight; ask how leaders ensure coverage and progression for each year group.
Curriculum development priorities are explicit. Wider-curriculum sequencing in geography and history, and pupils’ understanding of cultural diversity, were identified as areas for improvement in the latest published inspection evidence. Parents should ask what has changed since then and how progress is monitored.
Wraparound may not suit families needing after-school care. Before-school provision is published; after-school clubs are currently stated as not running. Families who need regular care after 3:30pm should confirm current options directly.
Kings Nympton Community Primary School suits families who actively want a small rural primary where every child is known well, mixed-age teaching is normal, and outdoor learning is a serious strand rather than an occasional theme. The combination of federation support, structured reading and mathematics priorities, and the depth of Forest School provision makes the offer distinctive. Best suited to children who gain confidence from familiarity, benefit from practical learning, and are comfortable with a small peer group.
It is rated Good, with published inspection evidence describing a calm, inclusive culture where pupils feel supported and behaviour is consistently orderly. The most recent report also highlights clear priorities in early reading and a more systematic approach in mathematics.
Devon coordinates admissions for Reception entry, and families apply through the local authority. Catchment can matter in Devon, so parents should check the local authority’s published admissions information for their home address and the school’s oversubscription criteria for the relevant year.
A before-school club is published as running from 8:00am on weekdays in term time. The website also states that after-school clubs are currently not running, so families who need regular provision after 3:30pm should confirm what is available now.
Most pupils transfer to Chulmleigh Community College, with some families choosing South Molton Community College depending on catchment and preference. Secondary admissions are handled through Devon’s coordinated process during Year 6.
The federation frames learning through seven interwoven concepts such as civilisation, conflict, environment, and innovation. For pupils, this can make it easier to connect learning across subjects, and it also supports mixed-age teaching by providing shared themes across different year groups.
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