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 small primary with a big intake story, this is a Church of England voluntary aided school in Belle Vue, Wakefield, serving ages 4 to 11 and running close to capacity at around 210 pupils.
The culture is shaped by two intersecting strengths. First, a clear Christian identity, with Gospel teaching linked to everyday routines and expectations. Second, a practical, well established commitment to inclusion, especially for pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities and for pupils who are new to English, including children arriving through asylum-seeking routes. Those strengths do not erase the core admissions reality. Reception is competitive in Wakefield, and this school is oversubscribed in the latest data, with more than two applications per place.
For families weighing it up, the question is less about whether the school feels welcoming, it clearly does, and more about fit. If your child benefits from consistent routines, explicit values language, and an approach that takes additional needs seriously, it is likely to suit. If your child is at the earliest stage of learning English, you will want to ask directly what classroom adaptations and staff training look like now, because this is the main development priority identified at the latest inspection.
The school’s own language is anchored in a simple set of values, nurture, learn, succeed, together, backed by a broader Christian vision about “growing together” and helping children become “all that we are created to be”. The important point for parents is what that looks like in day to day life. Expectations for pupils’ behaviour are explicit and consistently taught, with three core rules that are easy for children to recall and apply.
Community continuity is a distinctive feature. External evaluation notes that many parents and carers were pupils at the school themselves, which helps create the feel of a settled local institution rather than a high churn setting. That kind of continuity tends to show up in small ways that matter to families, familiar faces at pick up, an established PTA rhythm, and a shared understanding of how the school does things.
Inclusion is not treated as an add on. The latest inspection describes a higher than average proportion of pupils who speak English as an additional language and an increasing number of pupils joining from asylum-seeking families. It also highlights a higher than average proportion of pupils with education, health and care plans, alongside a local reputation for being welcoming to pupils with SEND. In practical terms, the school is aiming to make ambitious, whole class teaching work while still using adaptations and specialist resources where needed, so children do not feel segregated from everyday school life.
There is one important nuance. Inclusion is strongest when it is operationalised. In this case, external evaluation praises the consistency of specialist resources for pupils with SEND across subjects and year groups, but also flags that the curriculum is not yet adapted well enough for pupils who are learning English as an additional language, particularly at the earliest stages. For parents of EAL learners, that does not automatically mean the school is the wrong choice, but it does mean you should ask for specifics, how reading support is tailored, what staff training has changed, and how bilingual cues are used in classrooms.
This is a primary school, so the most useful academic indicators are Key Stage 2 outcomes and the component measures that sit behind them.
In the most recent published results 69% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. That is above the England average of 62%. Reading and mathematics scaled scores were 104 and 102 respectively, compared with an England scaled score benchmark of 100. Grammar, punctuation and spelling averaged 105. Science outcomes are a clear bright spot, with 93% reaching the expected standard. (FindMySchool results, 2024 measures.)
It is also important to be candid about relative rank, because that is what many parents use when comparing options. On the FindMySchool ranking for primary outcomes, this school is ranked 10,139th in England and 42nd in Wakefield. That places performance below England average overall on that specific comparative measure, even though the combined expected standard result sits above the England average. (FindMySchool rankings based on official data.)
How can both things be true? Because rank is influenced by the full distribution and by which measures are included in the ranking model, not only the headline combined expected standard percentage. For parents, the practical implication is to look at the shape of attainment. The expected standard outcomes look solid, science is a strength, and the scaled scores suggest pupils are leaving Year 6 with secure foundations, but the proportion achieving higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics is modest at 6.67%, close to the England average of 8%. (FindMySchool results.)
The fairest reading is that the school is helping many pupils reach the expected threshold, which matters, especially given a complex intake profile. If your child is highly academic and you are aiming for consistent higher depth outcomes, you will want to discuss stretch and extension directly, particularly in writing where the greater depth figure is 0%. (FindMySchool results.)
A final point on interpretation. With an intake that includes a high proportion of pupils who are new to English and a higher than average proportion of pupils with EHC plans, raw attainment measures do not tell the whole story. The more useful question for many families is what progress looks like from your child’s starting point. The latest inspection reports that most pupils are achieving as well as they should, and that expectations are high for all pupils.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
69%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
A clear feature of teaching here is consistency of model. External evaluation describes a common structure across subjects, including a strong emphasis on recapping prior learning at the start of lessons. For pupils, that kind of routine reduces cognitive load. For parents, it tends to mean fewer surprises, clearer homework expectations, and children who can explain what a “good lesson” looks like.
Reading is a major operational focus, starting immediately in Reception. The school introduced a new early reading curriculum two years before the latest inspection and it is described as fully embedded, including careful matching of reading books to the sounds pupils know. That is the right technical approach for early reading, because book matching is one of the mechanisms that prevents guessing and builds fluency.
The caveat is targeted support for pupils learning English as an additional language. External evaluation notes that, although most pupils read as well as they should for their age, many of the struggling readers are EAL learners, and staff training has not prioritised the most effective strategies to help them catch up quickly enough. For parents of EAL learners, the practical question is how the school is adapting phonics, vocabulary development, and comprehension work, as distinct from decoding.
Mathematics is described as ambitious and well implemented, with effectiveness reflected in statutory assessment outcomes. For pupils with SEND, the school provides more practical work to support understanding of concepts. Another practical teaching choice is the shift away from heavy written marking towards checking understanding during lessons and correcting misconceptions in the moment. That tends to benefit pupils who need immediate feedback loops rather than delayed corrections.
For SEND, the strongest evidence is about coherence rather than individual interventions. External evaluation describes specialist resources recommended by the local authority or special schools being used consistently across subjects and year groups, improving pupils’ communication and interaction skills over time. For parents, the implication is that support is not confined to one room or one adult, it is built into how classrooms function.
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 Wakefield primary, most pupils move into local secondary schools via the normal local authority admissions process, with allocations shaped by catchment and oversubscription criteria. Wakefield Council provides a catchment area search tool, which is the most reliable way to understand your likely secondary destination from your specific address.
What the school can influence most at this stage is readiness for transition. The evidence base here points to children who understand routines, can articulate expectations, and are accustomed to behaviour norms that translate well into secondary settings. The emphasis on recapping learning and on building secure fundamentals in reading and mathematics also supports a smoother move into Key Stage 3, where curriculum pace tends to increase.
If you are considering selective routes or faith based secondary pathways, those decisions sit largely outside the school’s control. The best approach is to treat Year 5 and early Year 6 as your planning window, use the Wakefield local authority admissions information alongside FindMySchool’s Map Search tools to sense check realistic options, and speak to the school about transition support for your child’s specific profile.
This is a voluntary aided school, which matters because the governing body is the admissions authority and can apply its own published criteria within the national admissions code. The school states an admission limit of 30 per year group, with single-age classes.
The most useful hard signal for competitiveness is the demand picture. For the latest Reception entry-route data, there were 79 applications for 30 offers, which is around 2.63 applications per place. The school is marked as oversubscribed, and the proportion of first preferences compared with offers is 1.08, suggesting that even among families ranking the school first, demand exceeds places. (FindMySchool results.)
Wakefield’s normal round Reception timeline for September 2026 entry is clear. The online parent portal opens on 01 November 2025, and the national closing date for on-time applications is 15 January 2026. Offers are released from 12:30am on 16 April 2026.
Because this is a Church of England voluntary aided school, the school also advises that families should complete the school’s supplementary information form if applying under church commitment criteria. The practical implication is simple, you should treat the local authority application and the school faith evidence process as two linked steps, and ensure both are completed by the relevant deadline.
92.6%
1st preference success rate
25 of 27 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
79
Pastoral strength here is closely tied to clarity of expectations and to relationships. External evaluation describes trusting relationships between staff and pupils and a culture where pupils feel happy and safe. The behaviour picture is similarly positive, with pupils described as behaving consistently well in lessons and at break and lunch, and poor behaviour rarely disrupting learning.
For families of children with higher levels of need, there is specific reassurance in the way EHC plan pupils are supported. External evaluation describes pupils with EHC plans having personalised curricula that include sensory breaks where necessary, helping pupils remain calm and able to access learning. That matters because it indicates proactive regulation support, not only reactive behaviour management.
Personal development is explicitly identified as a strength. One example used in external evaluation is the way older pupils discuss moral and ethical issues, including age-appropriate conversations about consent and power imbalance, framed through a real-world event. For parents, the implication is that relationships education is treated as an active curriculum strand rather than a one-off assembly topic.
Safeguarding is confirmed as effective in the most recent inspection report.
Clubs and wraparound care matter because they change the rhythm of family life. Here, you get both internal clubs and a structured wraparound offer.
The school clubs list includes computing, cricket, Lego, homework, OPAL, art, and tag rugby, with clubs running at lunchtimes and after school and most sessions typically starting at 3:20pm and ending at 4:20pm. The mix is practical. Computing and Lego speak to pupils who like structured problem solving. Cricket and tag rugby give sport options beyond the usual football focus. A homework club can be a real pressure release for working parents who need homework handled before evening routines begin.
OPAL is worth noticing. Even without seeing the school’s internal documentation, the fact it appears as a named club suggests an emphasis on structured play and outdoor learning culture rather than only formal sport, which often suits younger pupils and pupils who benefit from movement breaks.
Wraparound care is unusually well specified, including times and costs. Breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:50am, with breakfast served until 8:30am. After-school club is offered as an early session from 3:20pm to 4:30pm, a late session from 4:20pm to 6:00pm, and a full session from 3:20pm to 6:00pm, with an earlier end time on Fridays. Even if you never use wraparound weekly, having it available tends to make childcare arrangements more resilient when work or family circumstances change.
One point for parents to keep in mind is demand. After-school club places are described as limited in line with staffing quotas and need to be booked in advance. If wraparound is essential for you, treat confirming availability as part of your school choice due diligence, not an afterthought.
The published school day runs from 8:50am to 3:20pm. Breakfast club begins at 7:30am, and the late wraparound option can extend to 6:00pm.
For transport and logistics, this is an urban Wakefield setting where many families will walk, use short car trips, or rely on local bus routes. The practical best practice is to test your exact route at drop-off time, because congestion patterns matter as much as raw distance.
For term dates, the school publishes calendar documents for the year.
Competitiveness at Reception. With 79 applications for 30 offers this is not an easy place to secure. Families should plan early, understand the criteria, and have realistic backup preferences. (FindMySchool results.)
EAL support is the main improvement priority. The latest inspection identifies curriculum adaptation for pupils learning English as an additional language as the key development area, particularly for pupils at the earliest stage of English acquisition. If this describes your child, ask for specifics on reading and language support and what has changed since 2023.
Higher standard outcomes are modest. The combined expected standard result is above the England average, but the higher standard figure is close to the England benchmark and writing greater depth is very low. If you are aiming for consistent stretch outcomes, discuss extension and writing depth directly. (FindMySchool results.)
Wraparound places may be constrained. Times are clear and the offer is strong, but places are described as limited and booking is required. If wraparound is non-negotiable for your family, confirm how availability works in practice.
A values-led, Church of England primary that appears to run with calm consistency and a clear commitment to inclusion. The strongest evidence points to trusting relationships, good behaviour, and an established approach to supporting pupils with SEND, alongside a warm welcome for families new to the area and for children new to English.
Best suited to families who want a small school feel, a Christian ethos that is genuinely integrated into daily life, and a setting that takes additional needs seriously. The main challenge is admission, and families of early-stage EAL learners should make sure they are satisfied with the school’s current curriculum adaptations and staff training before committing.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (September 2023) confirmed the school continues to be Good, with pupils described as thriving and behaviour described as consistently strong. Academic outcomes show 69% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%, with science outcomes particularly strong.
Applications are made through Wakefield’s normal Reception admissions process. The parent portal opens on 01 November 2025 and the on-time closing date is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. Because this is a voluntary aided Church of England school, you should also check whether you need to complete the school’s supplementary form if applying under church commitment criteria.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:50am, and an after-school club runs from 3:20pm with options up to 6:00pm. Places are described as limited and need to be booked in advance, so families who rely on wraparound should confirm how availability works.
Most recent results, 69% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. Reading and maths scaled scores were 104 and 102. Higher standard outcomes are more modest, and families seeking strong stretch in writing should ask about extension and greater depth strategies.
External evaluation highlights a strong local reputation for welcoming pupils with SEND and describes consistent use of specialist resources to support communication and interaction over time. The key improvement priority is adapting the curriculum for pupils learning English as an additional language, especially at the earliest stages, so parents of EAL learners should ask what targeted strategies are used now, particularly for early reading.
Get in touch with the school directly
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