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 rural primary where early years sits central to the story. With places from age 2 and a total roll of 54 against a capacity of 90, this is the sort of school where staff can genuinely know families over time, from toddler group through to Year 6.
The setting is part of a federation with another local primary, with the leadership team operating across both schools. The current head is Amanda Hopwood.
The physical environment leans heavily into village-school strengths. The school describes an original Victorian building alongside a hall and kitchen opened in July 2008, plus grounds that include a sports field, pond, adventure play trail, and wider natural wildlife areas.
Academic information for small schools can be less straightforward to interpret at headline level, because cohort sizes are small and year groups are mixed. What parents can judge more confidently here is the curriculum intent, reading culture, behaviour, and safeguarding evidence, all of which are well described in the most recent official inspection and the school’s own curriculum documentation.
This is a school that leans into togetherness. Official inspection evidence describes calm routines, strong relationships between adults and pupils, and a playground culture where children include each other and stay purposeful when play turns back into learning.
The outdoor environment is not a decorative extra, it is part of the school’s everyday identity. The school’s own description of the site lists a pond, natural wildlife environment, and play and sports areas that allow learning to move between classroom and outdoors. That matters most in a small primary, because it gives pupils different spaces to reset, build confidence, and learn through practical experience rather than only through desk-based work.
As a Church of England voluntary aided school, faith life is visible in both values language and admissions structure. The federation publishes a values framework framed as “Be Respectful”, “Be Kind”, and “Be Responsible”, with associated virtues like service, justice, perseverance, forgiveness, and inclusion of others. In practice, this gives the school a shared vocabulary for behaviour and relationships that can be used consistently across age ranges, including early years.
A final tone-setter is the way the school tries to ease children into school life early. The 2023 inspection report references a weekly toddler group run in school, aimed at helping pre-school children become familiar with the environment before starting. For families deciding between a nursery attached to a primary and a separate early years setting, that kind of “soft landing” can be a genuine practical advantage.
The latest Ofsted inspection was an ungraded inspection on 13 June 2023 and concluded that the school continues to be Good.
For parents, the most useful way to interpret an ungraded “remains Good” outcome is as a confirmation that standards, culture, and safeguarding are secure, rather than as a league-table style headline. The same inspection describes a curriculum that is designed so pupils practise and apply learning regularly, and it highlights clear explanations in lessons, frequent checks for understanding, and strong subject knowledge from staff.
Because Key Stage 2 outcomes and cohort-level measures can be more volatile in very small schools, families often do better to judge academic quality through triangulation:
Curriculum coherence, meaning pupils build knowledge in small steps and revisit it in purposeful ways.
Reading and language development, which is a leading indicator in primaries.
SEND practice, especially how well support plans translate into day-to-day classroom adaptation.
On those indicators, the evidence is mostly positive. Early reading is described as a strength, with adults identifying quickly when pupils need extra help. The main improvement point raised relates to the precision of some SEND support plans, which do not always set out clearly enough what pupils need to know, remember, or be able to do, and therefore do not always lead to tightly focused additional support.
If you are comparing nearby schools, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you put each option’s available attainment and context data side by side, while still keeping in mind that small-cohort schools can swing year to year.
Teaching in a school of this size tends to work best when adults are explicit, routines are consistent, and curriculum design anticipates mixed-age learning. The 2023 inspection report supports that picture, describing clear explanation, frequent checks for understanding, and strong subject knowledge that helps staff correct misunderstandings quickly.
Early years matters here because pupils can begin at age 2. The inspection report describes high levels of care and support in the nursery provision, plus skilled adult questioning that develops understanding and grows vocabulary. It also describes early reading teaching as expert, with prompt additional help when needed.
What that means for families in practice is that the school is aiming to build language and listening first, not rush children into formality too early. The school’s own early years curriculum pages reference structured phonics and a story and rhyme-rich approach, which aligns with the inspection emphasis on poems, rhymes, and stories from nursery onwards.
The inspection evidence explicitly describes curriculum sequencing, with early foundations leading into more complex knowledge later, and regular opportunities to practise and apply learning so pupils remember more over time.
For parents, this matters because “small school” does not automatically mean “light curriculum”. The best small primaries are deliberate about what they teach and when they teach it, because they cannot rely on scale or set structures to carry consistency. This school’s published subject documentation suggests a structured approach across subjects, with policies and long-term planning available for families who want detail.
The federation’s values framework is detailed and practical, linking respect, kindness, and responsibility to everyday behaviours and civic habits like truthfulness, accountability, and inclusion of others. In a primary, values are only useful if they show up in routines, playtime expectations, and how adults handle conflict. The inspection report’s description of pupils including each other, behaving calmly, and taking pride in learning sits comfortably alongside that values framework.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
For a rural primary, transition is both a practical process and a social one. Pupils move from a small, familiar setting into a larger secondary environment, often with a wider intake and longer travel times. What matters most is that children leave with strong reading habits, self-management, and the confidence to make friendships in new contexts.
Two signals in the inspection evidence suggest preparation is taken seriously. First, the report describes experiences designed to build independence and resilience by Year 6, including camping out in school grounds and a week-long residential on the Isle of Wight. Second, it describes pupils developing an appreciation of different cultures, religions, and beliefs through visits, which matters in the move from a village setting into a more varied secondary community.
Families planning ahead should also remember that Year 7 applications are a separate process from Reception entry. Hertfordshire’s coordinated admissions calendar and open event season tend to sit in the autumn term ahead of entry, so it is sensible to map likely secondary options early and treat open evenings as part of the decision, not an afterthought.
This is a voluntary aided school, which shapes admissions in two ways. First, it is its own admitting authority, so the governors have responsibility for admission arrangements. Second, Hertfordshire’s directory indicates that applicants may need to complete supplementary information, which is typical for voluntary aided schools where faith-related criteria can form part of oversubscription rules.
The published admission number is 12.
Demand indicators in the latest recorded entry route data show oversubscription, with 9 applications for 2 offers and 4.5 applications per place applications per place. In plain terms, entry is competitive relative to the number of places. (Because this is a small school, the absolute numbers will always look small, but the ratio still signals pressure.)
Where distance-based cut-offs exist, families should treat them as volatile. This school does not publish a single distance figure in Hertfordshire’s directory summary and advises families to contact the school for allocation distance information.
Parents considering reception entry should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand their home-to-school distance precisely, then track whether oversubscription patterns look tightening or easing year to year.
For primary admissions in Hertfordshire for September 2026 entry, the county publishes a clear timetable:
Applications opened on 3 November 2025
Deadline for on-time applications was 15 January 2026
National allocation day is 16 April 2026
The last date to accept an offered place is 23 April 2026
Because today is 2 February 2026, applications can still be made, but families should pay close attention to the county’s late application guidance and evidence requirements.
The school offers nursery provision and confirms government-funded hours are available for eligible families. Applications for nursery places are made directly to the school rather than through the local authority’s reception admissions system.
A key rule for parents is simple: treat nursery as an early relationship with the school, not an automatic pipeline. In most state primaries, nursery attendance does not guarantee a reception place, so it is still important to complete the reception application route on time.
Hertfordshire’s school directory includes a notice that the county council has brought forward proposals to close the school, describing it as a statutory process including public consultation, and stating that no decision has been made at this stage. Families considering entry should read this carefully and factor it into visits and questions, including how continuity would be managed if changes were approved.
Applications
9
Total received
Places Offered
2
Subscription Rate
4.5x
Apps per place
Pastoral strength in a small primary is often about reliability rather than programmes. Evidence from the 2023 inspection report describes a secure environment where pupils know there is always an adult to turn to, where routines are clear, and where behaviour supports learning.
Safeguarding arrangements are described as effective in the latest inspection report, with staff well trained, concerns recorded clearly, and pre-employment checks carried out with diligence.
The school also signals a proactive approach to mental health. It is a Stormbreak school, describing a movement-based approach designed to help children develop coping strategies and emotional regulation skills. In practical terms, that tends to work best when it sits alongside consistent classroom routines and a calm behaviour culture, which is also supported by the inspection evidence.
For pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, the inspection report describes access to the full curriculum with classroom activities usually adapted appropriately. The improvement area is specificity in some support plans. Parents of children with identified needs should ask how targets are translated into daily classroom strategies, how progress is reviewed, and how the SENDCo works across the federation.
A school’s “extras” matter more than people expect, because they often determine whether children feel seen. Here, the evidence points to three pillars: outdoors, participation, and community.
The school site description is unusually explicit for a small primary, listing a pond, natural wildlife environment, sports field, and an adventure play trail. These are not simply nice-to-have features. In a primary, they underpin science learning, local geography, personal development, and the confidence children build through sensible risk and exploration.
The inspection report’s mention of a forest area and outdoor play patterns aligns with that picture, as does the way it links residential experiences and on-site camping to independence and resilience.
The federation’s sports premium statement describes approaches that include training sports or play leaders, organising cross-country events, and using schemes designed to increase activity at lunchtime. In a small school, leadership opportunities like sports leader roles can arrive earlier and feel more genuine, because pupils are not one of hundreds competing for a handful of positions.
Stormbreak is a distinctive named programme, and the school frames it as movement-led mental health support with transferable coping skills. The practical implication is that wellbeing is treated as something children practise, not something reserved for crisis moments. For many families, that sits well alongside a Church school values framework that emphasises responsibility, kindness, and respect in daily behaviour.
The school’s own site navigation points to pupil leadership structures such as Schools Parliament (also referred to as Junior Dragons). In small schools, pupil voice can move quickly from symbolic to practical, because pupils see the immediate impact of decisions on school routines and events.
The federation also participates in the Envision Partnership, described as a group of 21 primary schools across the Bishop’s Stortford area collaborating on peer review and school improvement practice. For parents, this matters because it is one of the ways a small school can access the professional learning and external challenge that larger organisations get through internal scale.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Families should expect the usual costs for uniform, trips, and optional clubs or childcare.
School day timings are clearly published for the Albury site. Core hours run 8.40am to 3.15pm on most days, with after-school club extending the day to 4.30pm on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Wraparound care is available for Reception to Year 6, with breakfast club from 8.00am and after-school club until 6pm, delivered through an external provider. Booking and payment are managed outside the school’s own systems, so families should factor that into logistics early, especially if they need reliable late collection.
The setting is explicitly described as a village school, five miles from Bishop’s Stortford, next to the parish church of St Mary the Virgin. For most families, that points to car-based drop-off and pick-up or local walking routes rather than urban public transport patterns.
Very small cohorts. The closeness is a major strength, but it can also mean a narrower peer group in each year. Children who prefer a bigger social pool may find a larger primary more comfortable.
Admissions can be tight. The most recent recorded demand data indicates oversubscription (4.5 applications per place). Voluntary aided processes can also require supplementary information, so organisation matters.
SEND planning detail is worth probing. The latest inspection highlights that some support plans need clearer, more measurable targets to ensure additional help is tightly focused. Families should ask specific questions about how needs are translated into classroom practice.
School closure proposals are in consultation. Hertfordshire’s directory states that proposals to close the school are in a statutory process including public consultation, with no decision made at the time of update. This is a material consideration for families planning a multi-year primary journey.
Albury Church of England Voluntary Aided Primary School suits families who actively want a small village primary where early years continuity, outdoor space, and a Church of England values framework shape daily life. It also works well for children who benefit from being well known by adults over a long stretch, from nursery through to Year 6.
The main challenge is balancing the advantages of a close-knit school against practical uncertainty, including competitive entry ratios and the ongoing local consultation about the school’s future. Families who do their admissions homework early and ask direct questions about continuity, SEND planning, and wraparound logistics are best placed to judge fit.
The school was judged to continue to be Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection (13 June 2023). Evidence from that inspection describes calm behaviour, strong relationships, and an interesting curriculum that builds knowledge over time, with early reading a clear strength.
For Hertfordshire primary admissions for September 2026 entry, the online system opened on 3 November 2025 and the on-time deadline was 15 January 2026. Offers are released on 16 April 2026, and families normally need to accept by 23 April 2026.
Yes. The school has nursery provision and the local authority directory confirms nursery class availability. Families apply for nursery directly to the school and funded early education hours are available for eligible children.
Yes. Wraparound care is available for Reception to Year 6. The school publishes breakfast club from 8.00am and after-school club until 6pm, delivered through an external provider.
Hertfordshire’s school directory includes a notice about proposals to close the school, describing a statutory process including public consultation, and stating that no decision has been made at the time of update. Families should read the latest council information and ask how continuity would be handled if changes were approved.
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