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 large, oversubscribed primary serving the Friar Park Estate, The Priory Primary School combines a broad curriculum with an explicit focus on inclusion, safety, and enrichment. The school runs from Nursery through to Year 6 and places particular emphasis on pupils feeling secure and supported, alongside clear expectations for learning and behaviour. The current head teacher, Mr Phillip Butcher, is a long-standing presence in the school’s leadership, which matters in a community setting where continuity can stabilise expectations and routines.
Academically, the picture is mixed but encouraging. Key Stage 2 outcomes show a strong proportion meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics, and the school’s scaled scores sit above the typical England baseline. That said, the school’s ranking position indicates performance is not consistently among the highest locally or nationally, which is a useful reality check for parents comparing options.
As a state school, there are no tuition fees. Families should still plan for the usual associated costs, such as uniform, trips, and any optional clubs.
The school presents itself as a place where pupils are known, cared for, and expected to take learning seriously. The language used in official reporting is clear about pupils feeling safe, and about staff holding high expectations for every child. This matters most for parents weighing a large primary, because scale can either dilute relationships or amplify consistency. Here, the reported culture points to the second outcome, consistent expectations applied across year groups.
Inclusion is not treated as a bolt-on. The school’s own messaging positions it as a community serving pupils from a wide range of backgrounds, and wider materials emphasise recognition for areas such as arts and values-based work. For families, that signals a school aiming for breadth, not a narrow focus on tests alone. The practical implication is that children who benefit from routine, clear boundaries, and a wider set of experiences beyond core subjects are likely to feel at home.
Leadership stability is another defining feature. Mr Phillip Butcher is listed as headteacher on official government records, and the school’s governance information also indicates long tenure in the role. Continuity can support consistent behaviour systems, predictable teaching routines, and steady expectations for families.
Key Stage 2 data suggests pupils leave Year 6 with solid attainment, particularly against the combined expected standard measure that most parents use as a quick reference point.
Expected standard (reading, writing, maths combined): 76.33% of pupils met the expected standard, compared with an England average of 62%.
Higher standard (reading, writing, maths): 18.33%, compared with an England average of 8%.
Scaled scores: Reading 103, mathematics 104, grammar, punctuation and spelling 103.
For parents, the implication is that attainment at the end of primary is a clear strength for many pupils, including a meaningful group exceeding the expected level. This is often associated with consistent phonics and reading routines, secure mathematics foundations, and early identification of gaps.
On rankings, the school sits lower in the England distribution on the available ranking measure. It is ranked 10,512th in England for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), and 11th locally within the identified local area grouping. In practical terms, that means results are positive, but not typically at the very top tier when compared across the full set of schools.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
76.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading has clear priority and is treated as a whole-school thread rather than a single key stage focus. The inspection evidence points to well-trained staff using assessment to spot early slippage and then acting quickly to close gaps, alongside routines that build daily reading time and exposure to more challenging texts as pupils move up the school. The implication for families is that children who need structured repetition and timely intervention are less likely to drift for long periods before support kicks in.
Mathematics is described in similarly structured terms, with planning that specifies the facts, methods, and strategies pupils should learn, and teaching that checks understanding in-the-moment to address misconceptions. This style tends to suit pupils who learn best through small steps and clear explanations, and it can be particularly supportive for those who need more guided practice to build confidence.
Beyond the core, the school’s curriculum pages show a broad subject offer including areas such as languages and Philosophy for Children, alongside the expected national curriculum subjects. Where that becomes meaningful for parents is in the breadth of vocabulary, background knowledge, and discussion skills pupils build over time, not just in test performance.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the main transition point is Year 6 to Year 7. The school’s role here is twofold: ensuring pupils leave with secure basics in literacy and numeracy, and ensuring they are ready socially and organisationally for a larger secondary setting.
The most recent inspection narrative emphasises pupils’ confidence, engagement in learning, and the presence of a culture of kindness and respect for difference. Those are precisely the habits that tend to help pupils settle quickly in Year 7, particularly in mixed-ability comprehensives where peer groups can be wider and routines less familiar.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority. Sandwell’s published guidance for primary admissions confirms the 15 January deadline for applications for the relevant admissions cycle, and a Sandwell council update also highlights 15 January 2026 as the deadline for Reception applications for 2026 entry.
Demand is meaningful. The school is recorded as oversubscribed, with 65 applications for 46 offers on the provided admissions snapshot, which equates to 1.41 applications per place. For parents, the implication is straightforward: apply on time, ensure you understand the oversubscription criteria, and do not assume a place is automatic even for nearby families.
100%
1st preference success rate
44 of 44 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
46
Offers
46
Applications
65
The latest inspection evidence is explicit about pupils feeling safe and about staff caring for pupils and wanting the best for them. It also highlights a culture where difference is understood and accepted, which matters in a diverse intake because it reduces the risk of pupils feeling marginalised.
The inspection narrative also states that bullying is not tolerated and that pupils report it does not happen, linked to clear expectations and consistent adult action. For families, the practical test is how concerns are handled: the same report describes established systems for raising and following up safeguarding concerns and for involving outside agencies where needed.
The latest Ofsted inspection (9 and 10 November 2021) confirmed the school continues to be Good.
The inspection also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Enrichment is a visible strand. The inspection report highlights opportunities including sports, music tuition, and success in public speaking competitions. This matters because it signals structured confidence-building activities, not just informal clubs. Public speaking in particular tends to benefit pupils who are quieter, as it gives them a supported route to being heard, as well as providing an outlet for confident communicators.
The school’s own after-school clubs page provides concrete examples rather than generic claims. Current examples include:
Martial Arts, led by Mr Patel, described as holding three black belts.
Zumba and Music, led by Mr Williams.
Arts and Craft for younger pupils, led by staff including Mrs Patel and Miss Parish.
Sports led by the school’s sports coach, Mr Griffiths.
Trips and experiences also appear purposeful rather than tokenistic. The inspection report references travel beyond the local area, including a London visit to the Houses of Parliament, and visits such as Mary Arden’s Tudor farm and the pantomime. The implication for parents is that pupils are exposed to wider cultural and civic experiences, which can be especially valuable where families may not routinely access them outside school.
The school publishes weekly compulsory hours rather than a simple start and finish time summary. Nursery is listed as 30 hours per week, and Reception to Year 6 as 32 hours and 55 minutes per week. Parents who need exact daily gates-open, drop-off, and pick-up times should confirm directly via the school’s official communications.
Performance is solid, not top tier by ranking. KS2 attainment is strong on expected and higher standard measures, but the ranking position suggests results are not consistently among the highest compared with the full England distribution. This matters for families benchmarking against the very strongest schools.
Curriculum consistency varies by subject area. Core areas such as reading and mathematics are described as well-established, while the inspection report notes some foundation subjects were newer in their revised form and therefore less securely embedded. Ask how leaders ensure pupils catch up on missed essential knowledge.
Oversubscription is real. With more applications than offers in the latest available admissions snapshot, families should treat admission as competitive and make contingency plans.
After-school clubs have limited spaces. The school states places can be allocated with specific fairness criteria and that attendance expectations are strict once a place is given. This can work well for consistency, but it is worth understanding the commitment required.
The Priory Primary School, Wednesbury offers a reassuring mix of safety, clear expectations, and meaningful enrichment, with strong KS2 attainment indicators for many pupils. It suits families who want a structured, inclusive community primary with a broad curriculum and visible opportunities in sport, music, and confidence-building activities such as public speaking. The main limitation is that admission can be competitive and, while outcomes are positive, the overall ranking position suggests it may not match the very highest-performing schools for consistency across cohorts.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (November 2021) confirms the school continues to be Good and that safeguarding is effective. KS2 attainment measures also show a strong proportion of pupils meeting expected standards, with a meaningful group reaching the higher standard.
At Key Stage 2, 76.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is 18.33%, above the England average of 8%, and scaled scores are 103 in reading and 104 in maths.
Yes. The latest available admissions snapshot shows 65 applications for 46 offers, which indicates more demand than places. Families should apply on time and make sure they understand oversubscription criteria.
Reception applications are made through Sandwell’s coordinated admissions process. Published guidance highlights a 15 January deadline for the relevant cycle, including 15 January 2026 for 2026 entry. Always check Sandwell’s admissions pages for the current year’s dates and instructions.
Examples published by the school include Martial Arts, Zumba and Music, Arts and Craft, and Sports. Places are limited and the school sets expectations around regular attendance once a child has been given a place.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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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