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.
Old Cleeve Church of England First School is a small village first school serving children aged 3 to 9, with Nursery through Year 4 on one site in Washford, near Watchet. It is part of Beacon Education, a local multi-academy trust, and it is deliberately intimate in scale, which shapes daily life: classes are small, staff roles overlap, and families tend to know one another quickly.
The most recent inspection evidence points to a school that has stabilised, improved, and built a confident start for younger pupils. The 11 to 12 July 2023 Ofsted inspection judged the school Good overall and Outstanding for early years provision.
Parents weighing this school are usually balancing three things. First, wraparound practicality, because the school runs breakfast and after-school provision on site. Second, the transition point, because pupils leave after Year 4 and move on to the next phase elsewhere. Third, admissions reality, because the school can be oversubscribed in some years even at a small size.
This is a school that leans into being a community institution rather than trying to feel like a scaled-down version of a large primary. The language the school uses about belonging is consistent across public information, including the phrase “Achieve, Thrive, Care and Belong”, and it positions itself as welcoming to families of all faiths and none while remaining clearly Church of England in character.
Daily experience is shaped by mixed-age realities and a small staff team. The school’s published staffing list makes it clear that senior roles are hands-on and multi-functional, including safeguarding leadership sitting with the headteacher. For parents, that usually translates into a quick line of sight to decision-makers, and fewer layers between a concern and an action.
The school is also explicit about emotional literacy and consistent adult responses in its behaviour information, framing behaviour support as understanding feelings, limits, and the roots of behaviour choices. For some children, particularly younger pupils who are still learning how to regulate and communicate, that stance can be a strong match. For others who respond better to more formal, systematised behaviour frameworks, it is worth checking how this plays out day-to-day.
Nursery is part of the school’s identity, not an add-on. The age range begins at 3, and the most recent inspection judgement highlights early years as a headline strength. Practically, that means many children start their school journey here earlier than Reception, and families often build their relationship with the school over a longer period.
The school also signals a preference for learning that is experiential and rooted in trips, visitors, outdoor learning in the school grounds, and links with the parish church, which fits well with early years expectations when done carefully and consistently. For parents, the key question to ask is how those experiences are sequenced, meaning whether they are occasional highlights or part of a coherent approach that builds vocabulary, knowledge, and routines across Nursery and Reception.
For this school, parents should read “results” in a phase-appropriate way. It is a first school ending at Year 4, so it does not publish GCSE or A-level outcomes, and the usual KS2 end-of-Year-6 measures do not apply to the school’s own cohort endpoint.
What parents can use as external performance evidence is the most recent inspection profile. The July 2023 inspection confirmed a consistent set of Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management, with Outstanding early years provision.
If you are comparing several local schools, FindMySchool’s local hub pages and comparison tools can still be helpful for organising information side-by-side, but the most meaningful differentiators here are often culture, early years strength, and the transition pathway after Year 4 rather than headline test percentages.
The school describes a broad curriculum built around experiential learning, including outdoor learning and visits, and it foregrounds quality-first teaching and inclusivity as a driver. That is important in a small school because cohort sizes can make it harder to offer lots of separate pathways; strong universal teaching matters more when staffing is tight.
There are also some subject-specific indicators that help make the curriculum feel concrete rather than generic. The English curriculum is described as text-led, with an explicit emphasis on high-quality texts and a trust-wide canon for reading. That kind of shared spine can support consistency for pupils moving within a trust or for staff collaborating across schools.
In Reception, the school’s class information references regular outdoor learning sessions and structured PE days, which is a small detail but a useful one. It suggests the early years week has predictable rhythms, which typically supports behaviour, readiness to learn, and parent organisation.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school serves pupils to Year 4, “next steps” is mainly about transition to the next phase rather than exam destinations. In Somerset and parts of West Somerset, first and middle school structures mean children often move settings at Year 5 rather than Year 7, and families should plan for that earlier transition.
The school is part of Beacon Education, which includes both first and middle schools, and its admissions documentation sets out that Somerset local authority coordinates the main admissions process for starting school. For parents, the practical implication is that you should think about Year 5 planning earlier than you would in a typical all-through primary.
If you want a clear picture of typical destinations from Year 4, the most reliable route is to ask the school directly what most pupils do at the end of Year 4, because published destination lists are not standard at this phase.
Old Cleeve is an academy within Beacon Education, and its published admissions arrangements set out both the headline process and the oversubscription criteria.
For September 2026 entry, Somerset’s published primary admissions timetable states that applications opened on 29 September 2025, the closing date was 15 January 2026, and outcomes were issued on 16 April 2026.
The school’s trust admissions arrangements for 2026 to 2027 confirm the same deadline and outcome timing for on-time applications, and they set a planned admission number (PAN) of 30 for Old Cleeve First School.
The oversubscription criteria follow a standard pattern, prioritising children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, then looked-after and previously looked-after children, then catchment and sibling criteria, and finally distance as a tie-breaker measured by GIS straight-line methodology.
The figures indicate the school was oversubscribed on the primary entry route, with 32 applications and 22 offers recorded, and 1.45. applications per place That is not “impossible to get into”, but it is enough to treat admission as competitive in some years, particularly for families outside the catchment.
Parents considering a move often find it useful to use FindMySchool’s map tools to check how different addresses relate to likely admissions priority, then confirm the criteria directly in the school’s published arrangements.
100%
1st preference success rate
22 of 22 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
22
Offers
22
Applications
32
Pastoral care in a small school often works best when the adults are visible and consistent, and the published staffing structure suggests a tight safeguarding and leadership framework. The headteacher is identified as Designated Safeguarding Lead, and senior staff hold deputy safeguarding responsibilities.
The school’s published behaviour approach centres on emotional literacy, empathy, compassion, and understanding the roots of behaviour, and it frames adult responses as consistent and fair so children understand the pathway and feel safe. For parents, this is a good prompt to ask practical questions: how the school supports children who struggle with transitions, how it communicates with families when behaviour issues arise, and how it balances restorative work with clear boundaries.
Extracurricular at Old Cleeve is shaped by the age range and the school’s scale, so it is more about consistent, manageable opportunities than a huge programme.
The school publishes a specific clubs and activities schedule for January to February 2026, including morning cross country, Lego, arts and crafts, lunchtime football, and a “Dragon ball” after-school option, plus a Wednesday after-school activity delivered by Minehead Eye (with parents directed to contact that provider).
Music and performance also appear in the site structure, including an Old Cleeve Choir page and seasonal events such as Nativity content, which is typical for a Church of England first school and often a key part of community life for younger pupils.
The school day is published as starting at 8:40am and finishing at 3:15pm.
Wraparound care is a clear strength operationally. Breakfast club runs from 7:45am to 8:45am, and after-school club runs from 3:15pm to 5:30pm during term time, with session prices published on the school website.
For travel, the school serves Washford and the surrounding area. For most families, day-to-day practicality comes down to the drive and parking rhythm at drop-off and pick-up, and whether you will rely on wraparound care. If you are planning a house move, it is sensible to check the trust’s oversubscription criteria and confirm the current catchment definition before you commit.
Transition after Year 4. Pupils leave after Year 4, so families need to plan for a move to the next phase earlier than in a typical primary structure. This is straightforward when it matches your preference, but it can be unsettling for some children.
Competition for places can be real. The school can be oversubscribed in some years, and priority criteria matter. Families outside the catchment should treat admission as uncertain and plan contingencies.
Small-school dynamics. A close-knit community can be a major positive, but it also means friendship groups, parent networks, and classroom mixes are less flexible. This suits many children, but not all.
Faith character with an inclusive stance. The school is Church of England and integrates Christian ethos and calendar life, while also stating it welcomes families of all faiths and none. Families should check that this balance matches their expectations.
Old Cleeve Church of England First School suits families who want a small first-school setting with on-site Nursery, strong early years, and practical wraparound care. The most recent inspection profile supports a picture of a school that provides a good standard of education with an early years phase that stands out. It will suit children who benefit from stable routines, familiar adults, and a community feel, and it will also appeal to working parents who need dependable childcare around the school day. The main challenge is aligning admissions priority and planning ahead for the Year 4 transition.
The most recent inspection judged the school Good overall and Outstanding for early years provision, which is a strong indicator for families focused on Nursery and Reception quality. It is also a small school with wraparound care, which can be a practical advantage for many households.
For Somerset’s coordinated admissions, the published timetable for September 2026 entry opened applications on 29 September 2025, with a closing date of 15 January 2026, and offers issued on 16 April 2026. Check Somerset’s latest admissions guidance each year, as exact dates are set nationally and locally.
It can be. records 32 applications and 22 offers for the primary entry route in the relevant year, with an oversubscribed status. In practice, priority criteria such as catchment and siblings can make the difference.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast club running from 7:45am to 8:45am and an after-school club running from 3:15pm to 5:30pm during term time, with session pricing and booking arrangements set out on the school website.
The school publishes a rotating programme. For January to February 2026, it listed morning cross country, Lego, arts and crafts, lunchtime football, and an after-school “Dragon ball” activity, with an additional Wednesday after-school option run by Minehead Eye.
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