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 junior school that takes Year 3 entry seriously, rather than treating it as an administrative transfer. Reading is checked carefully at the start of Year 3, expectations around behaviour are explicit, and pupils are given clear roles to practise responsibility. The result is a setting that tends to suit children who respond well to structure, routine, and being trusted with real jobs.
Two whole school threads stand out. First, environmental leadership is part of everyday life, with a pupil Eco Committee and practical habits around waste, energy and school grounds. Second, outdoor learning is not an occasional treat, it is planned, resourced and treated as a core route into engagement, including OPAL play development and curriculum links to local nature facilities.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Parsons Down Junior School forms part of the Parsons Down Partnership of Schools, a federation that opened on 4 February 2013, and now operates infant and junior provision on one site following a building project completed in 2022. That matters in practice because the Year 3 step up is designed to feel joined up, with transition work between the phases rather than a hard reset.
The school’s culture is anchored by two visible routines. One is responsibility, pupils are given specific jobs and leadership roles and the language of citizenship is used in a concrete way. The other is recognition for learning behaviours, the Learning Gems system rewards pupils for skills such as working as part of a group, coping with distractions, attempting a new challenge, sharing ideas, being kind, and solving problems. Because the rewards are tied to behaviours rather than raw attainment, it can help pupils who are still finding confidence after the Year 3 move.
Environmental action is unusually specific. Pupils are encouraged to take practical steps around reducing litter and waste, and the Eco Committee is treated as a serious leadership group rather than a token council. For 2024 to 2025 the partnership selected Global Citizenship, Healthy Living and School Grounds as its Eco Schools focus, and the Eco Committee structure for 2025 to 2026 is published with named pupil representatives. In a junior school context, that kind of transparency tends to translate into pupils feeling that their work has real consequences.
Outdoor space is not just “nice to have” here, it is embedded in day to day planning. The OPAL approach is framed as a school improvement programme, and the partnership’s own description links it to better playtimes, pupil voice (including Play Detectives), and wider wellbeing aims. Practical features mentioned include den building, an adventure playground, a multi use games area (MUGA), a sensory garden, and an outdoor classroom. These details matter for families with energetic children, lunchtime can be an important part of the day, especially in Years 3 and 4.
Leadership information is clear on current post holders, the headteacher is Mrs Catherine Bull. The school and the government establishment record align on this.
This review focuses on the most recent published Key Stage 2 outcomes available.
In 2024, 67.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The England average in the same measure is 62%. That gap is meaningful, it suggests outcomes are above the national benchmark in the core combined standard that many parents care about most.
Scaled scores also sit above the typical England reference point of 100, with an average reading scaled score of 104 and an average mathematics scaled score of 102, alongside grammar, punctuation and spelling at 104.
At the higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, 14.67% reached that level, compared to an England average of 8%.
Rankings tell a slightly different story and need careful interpretation. Ranked 10,858th in England and 2nd in West Berkshire for primary outcomes, this is a proprietary FindMySchool ranking based on official data. In plain English, that England position sits in the below England average band. The most useful way to read the combination is this: core attainment in 2024 is above the England benchmark, while the overall distribution used in the ranking places the school lower nationally, and very strong within its immediate local area. For parents comparing nearby options, the local picture is usually the more actionable starting point, then you look deeper at the component indicators.
A practical takeaway for families is that results appear solid in the combined expected standard, and there is evidence of a meaningful higher attainer group. If your child benefits from challenge, the higher standard figure is a good sign. If your child is still rebuilding confidence after the move into Year 3, the slightly above average scaled scores suggest a broadly secure baseline in reading and mathematics rather than a narrow peak.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
67.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Teaching here is described in official material as conceptually clear and carefully sequenced, with learning planned as a progression from the beginning of Year 3 to the end of Year 6 rather than disconnected lessons. That curriculum sequencing is an important feature in junior schools, children arrive from different infant settings, so coherence matters.
Reading is treated as a priority at the point of transfer. Every Year 3 pupil’s reading is checked on arrival, and support is planned depending on whether a child needs phonics work or fluency and speed. For parents, this is reassuring because it signals that the school expects variability at entry and has a system to respond quickly rather than waiting for gaps to widen.
The curriculum documentation is unusually detailed for a primary setting and gives a sense of what “breadth” looks like in practice. For example, in Years 3 to 6, French is taught weekly using the Rising Stars French scheme, with topics that build from “Moi” and “Jeux et chansons” to “Notre monde” and “Quoi de neuf?”. That kind of structured language provision can suit children who enjoy routine and cumulative learning.
Wider curriculum planning is also clearly mapped. Examples include Year 3 work on the Stone Age alongside rocks and soils, Year 4 Ancient Egyptians alongside living things and habitats, Year 5 “Lift off!” linked to Earth and space and a North America locational study, and Year 6 Evolution linked to evolution and inheritance and natural resources. Even from a parent perspective, these specifics help you sense the intellectual ambition and the balance between history, geography, science, arts and personal development.
The learning culture is reinforced by the Learning Gems approach, which is explicitly framed as encouragement for skills that help pupils learn, not just for correct answers. In practice, systems like this often work best for children who are motivated by clear expectations and for classes where teachers want a shared language about learning behaviours.
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 junior school, the main transition point is Year 6 to Year 7. The partnership’s admissions guidance points families to apply for secondary places through West Berkshire’s coordinated process, and also signposts local secondary information via its link schools material.
West Berkshire secondary transfer follows a national timetable. For families planning ahead, the junior years move quickly, and Year 5 is often when families start attending open events and comparing travel routes. A practical approach is to shortlist likely secondaries early, then use FindMySchool’s comparison tools to check how options differ on outcomes and admissions characteristics, rather than relying on reputation alone.
Parsons Down Junior School is a community school within West Berkshire, with admissions criteria set by the local authority. Most pupils transfer from the linked infant school, but families still need to apply through the local authority to secure a Year 3 place.
For September 2026 entry, West Berkshire states that applications can be made online from 12 September, and the closing date for applications is 15 January. These dates apply to reception entry and to Year 3 junior school entry within the normal admissions round.
Visits are encouraged, but the school avoids listing fixed open day dates on the admissions page, instead advising parents to contact the office for current arrangements. This is a sensible pattern for primary settings where open events often run in recurring autumn term windows, but specific sessions change each year.
Pastoral support is described as layered rather than limited to class teachers. The partnership publishes a Family Support function, delivered by a dedicated Family Support Worker, with examples of support ranging from transitions between classes and year groups to bereavement and parental separation, plus signposting and referrals to other agencies when needed. For families going through a change, this kind of practical support can matter as much as academic structures.
Safeguarding is described in the school’s handbook as a whole staff responsibility, with procedures and training expectations set out at partnership level, and with clear attention to site security arrangements during the school day. The latest inspection confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Wellbeing also shows up in everyday habits. The handbook frames the setting as a “Healthy School” with routines around water, activity, pupil voice through council structures, and an expectation that pupils take responsibility for their environment.
This is an area where the school’s published detail helps it feel distinctive.
Environmental leadership is one strand. The Eco Schools programme is presented as pupil led, run by an Eco Committee, with specific annual topics and visible action planning. For a child who likes to organise, persuade, or take practical responsibility, this offers a real outlet.
Outdoor play and activity is another. OPAL is not presented as simply “more play”, it is described as an improvement programme designed to upgrade the quality of play opportunities and reduce lunchtime issues. The partnership’s own account references planning of school grounds with an OPAL mentor and a school council, and it lists specific play opportunities such as den building, a sensory garden, a MUGA, an outdoor classroom, and ping pong. For many pupils, the best learning happens after a good break, so improving play quality can have a direct classroom impact.
Sport is well signposted, with both curriculum physical education and competitive opportunities through the West Berkshire Sports Network, including activities ranging from football and netball to speedstacking and archery. The school also references achieving the School Games Gold award, which indicates sustained participation and competition structures rather than a one off success.
Wraparound care, through Twilight Club, provides a practical extension to the school day. The club description lists a broad range of activities including art and craft, baking, construction with Lego and Duplo, indoor games such as bench ball, reading, puzzles and board games, and outdoor play including use of the field, MUGA and the adventure playground. For working families, the fact that this is shared across infant and junior pupils can also make logistics simpler, siblings can often use the same provision.
School hours are published in the partnership handbook. For Key Stage 2, doors open at 8.40am and the school finishes at 3.15pm. Before major holiday breaks at the end of each long term, the finish time is 1.35pm.
Wraparound care is available via Twilight Club, which operates before and after school for pupils across the infant and junior schools, and the published activity mix suggests it is designed as genuine childcare rather than a narrow homework club.
For travel planning, families should look closely at their own walking route and road crossing points around Herons Way, and consider whether a Year 3 child can manage the route independently later on. The local authority’s application process also highlights transport eligibility rules and the importance of distance criteria, which can be relevant if you are weighing multiple schools.
Year 3 entry means a real transition. Children arrive at a point where reading checks and expectations ramp up quickly. Many will thrive on the clearer structure; some may need time to settle into the junior phase pace.
Outdoor provision is central. OPAL, outdoor learning and active play are prominent, which suits many children, but families should be comfortable with outdoor routines in varied weather and the practical kit expectations that often come with it.
Admissions are local authority controlled. Even for children transferring from the linked infant school, parents still need to apply through West Berkshire by the published deadline to secure a place.
A well organised junior school that puts responsibility, outdoor learning, and practical pupil leadership at the centre of daily life. The published curriculum mapping, weekly French in Years 3 to 6, and structured reading checks at entry suggest a school that values sequencing and early identification of gaps. Best suited to families who want a clear, structured junior phase and a school day where outdoor learning and active play are treated as part of learning, not a side note.
The most recent full inspection (July 2022) judged the school to be Good and confirmed safeguarding is effective. Academic outcomes in 2024 show 67.67% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%.
Year 3 places are coordinated by West Berkshire. Even if your child attends the linked infant school, you still need to submit an application through the local authority during the normal admissions round.
West Berkshire states that applications open from 12 September and the closing date is 15 January. These dates apply to Year 3 entry into junior schools as well as reception entry.
Yes. The partnership runs Twilight Club as before and after school provision for pupils from both the infant and junior schools, with a mix of indoor activities and outdoor play.
Environmental leadership and outdoor learning are particularly prominent, including a pupil Eco Committee and the OPAL programme, with structured play opportunities such as den building, a sensory garden and a MUGA.
Get in touch with the school directly
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