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.
In a small village setting on the Isle of Wight, this is a primary that has had to prove its value to the local community in recent years, and has responded with a sharper focus on curriculum quality and routines. The most recent inspection (July 2025) judged all areas as Good, including early years provision, which matters for a school that educates children from age 2.
Academically, the 2024 Key Stage 2 picture is mixed but readable. In combined reading, writing and mathematics, 63% met the expected standard, slightly above the England average of 62%. The proportion achieving the higher standard across reading, writing and maths was 22%, well above the England average of 8%, suggesting a meaningful cohort of higher attainers alongside pupils still building core fluency.
Admission demand is not huge in raw numbers but still tight for a small school. For the main intake route, 17 applications competed for 12 offers in the most recent, which is enough to create an oversubscribed outcome, even if it does not feel like big city competition. Families should treat this as a school where timing and preferences still matter.
Wroxall Primary School presents itself as a school rooted in clear values and straightforward expectations for behaviour, attendance and readiness to learn. The language used across safeguarding and wider school communications emphasises consistency and adult clarity, which is often exactly what smaller schools need to keep standards steady across mixed-age dynamics.
A defining feature is that the school includes early years from age 2, through Wroxall Robins Preschool. The preschool information places communication and vocabulary development at the centre of the curriculum, with a strong emphasis on children articulating ideas and learning to keep themselves safe. That focus, when well-implemented, tends to show up later as better listening, stronger early reading readiness, and more confident talk in Reception and Key Stage 1.
Leadership stability is also a recent theme. The current headteacher, Tara Hopkinson, took up post in September 2024, and the inspection in July 2025 explicitly notes that leadership has changed since the previous inspection cycle. That timing matters because it aligns with the period when schools typically reset curriculum sequencing, tighten routines, and establish consistent classroom expectations.
A small-school advantage, when done properly, is adult knowledge of pupils and families. The best version of this is not informality, it is precision: adults noticing patterns in attendance, emotional regulation, reading confidence, friendship issues, and small learning gaps before they become bigger barriers. The safeguarding information signals a multi-person safeguarding structure, including preschool leadership, which is sensible for a setting spanning ages 2 to 11.
This is a primary-phase school, so the most useful public outcomes are Key Stage 2 measures. In the most recent (2024), 63% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%.
Breaking that down:
Reading: 78% met the expected standard; average scaled score 105.
Mathematics: 56% met the expected standard; average scaled score 102.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling: 78% met the expected standard; average scaled score 104.
Science: 67% met the expected standard, compared with an England average of 82%.
The higher standard picture stands out. 22% achieved the higher standard across reading, writing and mathematics, versus an England average of 8%. That gap is big enough to suggest a real high-attaining strand in the cohort, rather than a statistical quirk. For parents, the implication is that higher attainers can be stretched here, but there is also work to do to lift the “secure and consistent” middle, particularly in mathematics and science.
On rankings, the school is listed as ranked 10,301st in England for primary outcomes, and 3rd locally in the Ventnor area, using FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings based on official data. The England percentile band places it below England average overall. This is best interpreted as “not yet consistently strong across cohorts”, rather than a fixed judgement on teaching quality, because small primaries can move markedly year to year based on cohort size and need.
A practical way to use these numbers is not to chase a single headline. Instead, look for alignment: do reading and writing look secure, is maths improving, are higher attainers being pushed, and does the school explain its approach to closing gaps without narrowing the curriculum too early.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
63.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum breadth looks like a priority. The school website sets out a wide curriculum structure and publishes policies across core and foundation subjects, which is often a proxy for deliberate planning rather than ad hoc delivery.
The July 2025 inspection provides a useful window into what leaders have prioritised. Inspectors carried out deep dives in reading, mathematics and design and technology, and the school received Good judgements across quality of education and leadership and management. That combination usually points to a school that has moved beyond basic compliance and is building subject coherence, even if not every subject is equally mature yet.
The main improvement point from the same inspection is about subject leadership in some foundation subjects, specifically around systems for checking how well pupils are learning the intended curriculum. For families, that translates into a helpful question to ask on a visit: how does the school know that pupils are remembering and building on prior learning in history, geography, art, or similar subjects, not just enjoying the activities?
Early years and preschool are not an add-on here, they are integral. With provision from age 2, the strongest schools use early language, routines, and self-regulation as the foundation for later reading, writing and maths success. The preschool’s stated emphasis on communication and vocabulary is a sensible anchor, particularly for children who arrive with less developed speech and language.
As a state primary in the Isle of Wight local authority area, most children typically transfer to local state secondary schools within the Island system, with allocations shaped by geography, sibling links and the local authority admissions process. For this school, the most reliable public information is the Isle of Wight admissions framework for secondary transfer rather than a school-specific destination list.
If you are considering the move-on pathway, the right question is less “which secondary does everyone go to” and more “how does the school manage transition”. Look for Year 6 preparation that includes academic readiness (particularly writing stamina and maths fluency), organisational routines, and pastoral preparation for a bigger setting.
For Reception entry in state schools on the Isle of Wight, applications are co-ordinated through the local authority. For September 2026 entry, the published closing date for primary applications is midnight on Thursday 15 January 2026.
Demand data indicates that the primary entry route was oversubscribed, with 17 applications for 12 offers. That is not a huge number, but it is enough to create competition for a small setting.
Two practical tips:
If you are moving house, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense-check location choices against real admissions patterns, rather than relying on informal local assumptions.
If you are comparing several schools, FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison view helps you weigh outcomes, capacity and demand side by side, rather than trying to hold it all in your head.
Open days and visits tend to run to a familiar primary-school rhythm, but dates vary. Where schools publish specific dates, follow those. If dates are not currently published, contact the school directly and ask about tours for your intended entry year.
100%
1st preference success rate
12 of 12 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
12
Offers
12
Applications
17
Safeguarding structures matter in any primary, and especially where a setting includes younger children. The school publishes named safeguarding contacts, including leadership roles that span the school and preschool.
The July 2025 inspection is also clear on safeguarding effectiveness, which is a baseline expectation but still important for parental confidence.
Beyond safeguarding, look for the everyday mechanics: attendance follow-up, consistent behaviour expectations, and adults who know children well enough to intervene early. In small schools, the quality of pastoral care often comes down to whether routines are predictable and calmly held, and whether children experience learning as something they can succeed at, not something that happens to them.
For a small primary, enrichment can be a real differentiator, particularly for families who want their child’s week to include creative and academic clubs, not only sport. The school advertises a programme of after-school clubs, including named options such as Chess Club and Theatre Club (with year-group eligibility indicated in the published club information).
Wraparound activity provision is also explicit. The school’s published extended-school information describes an after-school childcare offer (referred to as an after-school “Chill Club”) running after the school day on set weekdays.
Newsletters also point to enrichment that is linked to curriculum areas, such as an after-school science club, which is often a good sign that staff are trying to make learning feel purposeful beyond formal lessons.
The most useful way to assess extracurricular quality is not counting clubs, but checking what they enable. Chess tends to build concentration and pattern recognition; theatre builds confidence, expressive language and teamwork; science club can promote curiosity and careful observation. For children who do not naturally shine in written work, these spaces can be where confidence catches up.
Term dates and training day closures for Isle of Wight schools are published by the local authority, and Wroxall Primary is listed within the 2025 to 2026 information.
The school also publishes a document setting out the structure of the day and practical drop-off arrangements, including breakfast club timing, start-of-day routines, and finish times.
For wraparound care, published information indicates a breakfast club with a stated start time and a published price point, with additional detail for eligible families. After-school childcare is also described in the school’s extended-school information.
Transport-wise, as with many village primaries, daily logistics are often about safe drop-off, walkability for some families, and managing peak-time congestion. The school’s published “school day” guidance includes parking and entrances advice, which is worth reading before your first week.
Foundation subject consistency. The latest inspection highlights the need to strengthen subject leadership systems in some foundation subjects, so leaders can evaluate how well pupils are learning across the wider curriculum. This is an important developmental step for schools building long-term curriculum quality.
Results that can swing. As a small primary, outcomes can change noticeably year to year. The 2024 data includes a strong higher-standard proportion, alongside areas that still need lifting, particularly in maths and science. Families should look for evidence of sustained improvement rather than a single cohort’s headline.
Oversubscription in a small setting. Application numbers are not large, but the figures indicate more applicants than offers for the main entry route. If you are targeting a specific entry point, make sure you understand the local authority process and deadlines.
Early years logistics. With preschool alongside the main school, ask how transitions are handled from age 2 provision into Reception, and what that means for continuity, staffing, and day-to-day routines for younger children.
Wroxall Primary School reads as a small village primary that has tightened its offer and is moving in the right direction, with the most recent inspection judging every area as Good and identifying a specific, fixable next step around foundation subject leadership systems. Academic outcomes show a cohort of higher attainers doing well, with the bigger challenge being consistency across subjects and across year groups.
Who it suits: families wanting a smaller primary setting with early years included, clear expectations, and a school that appears to be building momentum under a headteacher who started in September 2024.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (July 2025) judged all key areas as Good, including quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years provision. Academic outcomes show 63% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in 2024, close to the England average of 62%, with 22% reaching the higher standard compared with an England average of 8%.
For Reception entry in September 2026 on the Isle of Wight, applications are made through the local authority, with the published closing date at midnight on Thursday 15 January 2026. Families should also check for any school-specific visit opportunities and ensure preferences are submitted on time.
Yes. The school includes early years from age 2, through Wroxall Robins Preschool. Information published by the preschool places communication and vocabulary development central to the early curriculum.
Published information indicates a breakfast club and an after-school childcare offer. Details include timings and costs in the school’s published documents; families should confirm current availability and booking arrangements directly with the school as these can change across the year.
The school publishes an after-school clubs programme that includes named options such as Chess Club and Theatre Club, with eligibility by year group. Newsletters also reference curriculum-linked clubs, such as a science club, which can add depth to the weekly experience for interested pupils.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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