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.
This is an early-years and infant school that puts spoken language, phonics, and clear learning routines at the centre of day-to-day life. The culture is intentionally structured: pupils are taught how to listen, talk, and move around the building in ways that support learning, and that consistency shows up in the tone described in the most recent inspection report.
The school is part of the Learning for Life Education Trust, and serves children from Nursery through to Year 2. Because the school’s age range ends at 7, there are no Key Stage 2 SATs outcomes to judge it by; the best external lens is inspection evidence and what the school itself publishes about curriculum, pastoral routines, and wider provision.
For working families, wraparound provision is a practical plus. Breakfast Club and an after-school option run daily, which can matter as much as academics at this age.
Expect a school that talks explicitly about behaviour and learning habits. Pupils are taught simple, repeatable rules that make classrooms easier places to focus. The inspection report describes a calm, purposeful atmosphere, with pupils clear about expectations such as being “ready, respectful, and safe”, and staff reinforcing these consistently.
The pastoral design is also deliberately child-friendly. There is a “friendship stop” on the playground for pupils who want someone to play with, and the report describes pupils feeling able to seek help from trusted adults.
Leadership information that is clearly published: the head teacher is Mrs J Marshall (also listed as Jan Marshall in inspection documentation). A public start date is not consistently published on official pages that are accessible without restrictions, so it is best read simply as established leadership rather than a recently arrived head.
Nursery is a genuine part of the setting rather than an add-on, with separate morning and afternoon sessions published alongside the main school day structure.
In practice, what matters most in a school-based nursery is continuity: children can settle into routines, relationships, and language expectations that continue into Reception. The inspection narrative about communication and vocabulary development supports the idea that language is not treated as a bolt-on, it is part of how lessons run and how adults interact with children from the start.
For an infant school, headline performance measures look different. There are no published Key Stage 2 results because pupils move on before the end of Year 6, and the results supplied for this review does not include primary outcomes measures for the school.
The strongest evidence available is the most recent inspection. The latest Ofsted inspection (12 and 13 July 2023, published 26 September 2023) confirmed the school continues to be Good, and safeguarding arrangements were judged effective.
For what “good learning” looks like day to day, the inspection report highlights an ambitious curriculum broken into small steps, with careful attention to vocabulary (including precise mathematical language in Reception).
Language sits at the centre of the teaching model. The inspection report describes spoken language as a clear priority, with adults using children’s play, questioning, and targeted vocabulary to extend understanding. The “great talker” idea is not just a slogan; it shows up in how pupils are taught to explain their thinking in full sentences, including the use of “stem sentences” in maths.
Early reading is also described as systematic from the start of early years. Staff training and consistency checks are noted, and fluency is encouraged through modelling and structured practice. The report also points to specific reading culture touches, including a “ten books” initiative and a “reading caravan” space.
Support for pupils with SEND is described as integrated rather than separate. The report notes that staff make small adaptations so pupils can learn the same ambitious curriculum as their peers, which is often what parents want to hear at this age: help that keeps children included, not singled out.
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 an infant school, the main transition is into junior education (Year 3). Locally, a common next step is Irthlingborough Junior School, which sits within the same local area and is connected through wider trust context in published information.
In practice, the “best” next school depends on where you live and the local authority’s place allocation rules for juniors. Families should read the junior transfer guidance early in Year 2, especially if they are considering a school other than the most obvious local continuation option.
Reception admissions are handled through local authority coordinated admissions, not by the school directly. For September 2026 entry, the school’s admissions page states a closing date of 15 January 2026 and publishes a Reception intake number for that year.
Demand is real but not extreme by some urban standards: in the supplied admissions results, 94 applications were recorded for 74 offers for the primary entry route, which corresponds to an oversubscribed picture overall. Because no “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure is available for this school, it is not possible to give a meaningful distance indicator for how close families needed to live in the most recent cycle.
If you are trying to understand your odds, this is exactly where FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful: measure your door-to-gate distance and then compare it against the admissions rules and any published local authority allocation details, rather than relying on anecdote.
Open events and tours are referenced through the school’s parent information, but specific forward dates are not always posted far in advance. If you are applying for a future year, treat school tours as typically running during the autumn term and confirm the current schedule via the school’s website.
100%
1st preference success rate
73 of 73 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
74
Offers
74
Applications
94
Safeguarding roles are clearly set out on the school website, including named designated safeguarding leads, which tends to indicate a school that expects parents to understand who to speak to and how concerns are handled.
The inspection report also describes children knowing how to raise worries and staff acting quickly with concerns, including multi-agency work where needed.
One practical wellbeing point is attendance. The report identifies persistent absence reduction as an ongoing priority, which matters because missed time at this age can disrupt phonics progression and routines that underpin confidence.
At infant stage, “extracurricular” is often more about enrichment and broader experiences than long club lists. The inspection report refers to trips, events, and visitors being used to enrich learning and widen pupils’ understanding of the world.
A second strand is wraparound, which doubles as enrichment for many families. The school’s Fun 4 All provision includes Breakfast Club and after-school care, with a published menu of activities such as football, creative play, arts and crafts, and games.
Reading culture also functions as enrichment here. The “ten books” initiative and “reading caravan” add a concrete, child-facing dimension to literacy, and are more meaningful than generic statements about “loving books”.
The school publishes clear session times. Main school doors open at 8.50am, registration is at 9.00am, and home time is 3.15pm. Nursery sessions are also published as a morning block and an afternoon block.
Wraparound care is available through Fun 4 All, with Breakfast Club from 8.00am to 9.00am and after-school provision from 3.15pm to 6.00pm.
For travel, most families at this age optimise for walkability and a simple drop-off routine. If you are driving, build your plan around safe parking and short walking distances rather than expecting on-site parking convenience, and sanity-check journey time in term-time traffic.
No Key Stage 2 results to compare. Because pupils leave at 7, there is no Year 6 SATs data to use as an external benchmark; your decision should lean more heavily on inspection evidence, curriculum detail, and what day-to-day routines feel like for your child.
Oversubscription without a published distance anchor. The school is oversubscribed in the supplied admissions results, but without a “furthest distance at which a place was offered” figure, families should be cautious about assuming a place based on rough proximity alone.
Attendance focus is explicit. The most recent inspection identifies absence reduction as an area leaders are still working on. If your child has health needs that might affect attendance, ask how the school supports continuity of learning.
Very structured culture. The emphasis on routines and explicit learning behaviours suits many children, especially those who like clarity; a child who struggles with structured expectations may need careful transition support.
This is a well-organised infant school with a clearly articulated approach to language, early reading, and classroom routines. The strongest evidence points to calm classrooms, consistent expectations, and thoughtful curriculum planning, with safeguarding handled effectively.
Who it suits: families who want a structured early-years and infant setting, with strong attention to communication and reading, and who value wraparound childcare as part of the weekly rhythm. The main question to resolve is admissions practicality: confirm how local authority allocation is likely to work for your address, and book a visit to see whether the school’s routines match your child’s temperament.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (July 2023) concluded the school continues to be Good, with effective safeguarding. The report describes pupils as keen to learn, classrooms as calm and focused, and the curriculum as ambitious and carefully sequenced, with strong emphasis on spoken language and early reading.
Reception admissions are coordinated through the local authority. The school’s admissions page states that for September 2026 entry, the closing date for applications was 15 January 2026, and it publishes the planned Reception intake number for that year.
Yes. The school website describes Fun 4 All provision, including Breakfast Club (8.00am to 9.00am) and after-school care (3.15pm to 6.00pm), with a mix of play-based activities and snacks.
The inspection report describes early reading beginning from the start of early years, with consistent phonics teaching, staff training, and modelling of fluent reading. It also mentions a “ten books” initiative and a “reading caravan” space that supports reading for pleasure.
As an infant school, pupils typically transfer to a junior school for Year 3. A common local pathway is into Irthlingborough Junior School, though the right option depends on where you live and the local authority’s junior allocation arrangements.
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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