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.
Kings Hill is a modern, planned community, and The Discovery School fits that context well, a large, organised primary where expectations are clear and pupils are encouraged to be curious, articulate, and responsible. The school opened in 2003 and has grown substantially since then, including celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2023.
Leadership has been stable for several years, with Miss Tina Gobell listed as headteacher and a start date of 01 January 2018 in the governing body information. A well-established values system (friendship, perseverance, honesty, respect, kindness) runs through behaviour routines, rewards, and a house structure that includes Topaz, Garnet, Citrine, and Peridot.
Academically, the strongest headline is Key Stage 2 attainment, with 87% of pupils meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in the most recent published data well above the England average of 62%. That academic picture is complemented by an unusually explicit approach to enrichment, through year group curriculum guarantees and a wide menu of clubs.
The tone here is purposeful but not narrow. The school’s own messaging puts “Be the best you can be” at the centre, and the practical expression of that is a consistent values vocabulary used across the week, including celebration assemblies and house points. The house system is not just for Sports Day, it is built into daily rewards and routines, and even siblings are kept in the same house.
The school’s values are stated plainly as friendship, perseverance, honesty, respect, and kindness. That matters because it provides a shared language for pupils across a large roll, and it helps families understand what is being reinforced day-to-day. In the latest inspection report, behaviour is described as calm and focused in lessons, with pupils taking pride in their work and bullying described as rare.
Inclusion is not treated as an add-on. The inspection report frames the culture as ambitious and inclusive, and highlights personal development as a clear strength, with pupils taking on leadership roles such as digital leaders and participating widely in clubs and music. The school also publishes information about SEND leadership, including that the SENCo holds the National Qualification for SEND Co-ordination, which signals a level of professional expertise families often want to see in a mainstream primary.
A final cultural marker is the emphasis on equality work that pupils can recognise and describe. The Diversity Council content shows pupils actively shaping aspects of school life, including the move to gemstone house names and broader discussion of fairness and representation.
This is a high-performing primary by the available outcomes data.
87% reached the expected standard (latest published results), compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 30% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%.
Scaled scores add useful detail: reading 108, maths 106, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 109.
Ranked 2,175th in England and 2nd in West Malling for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This places performance above the England average and comfortably within the top 25% of primary schools in England (25th percentile band).
For parents, the practical implication is that attainment is not only strong in a single subject, it is strong across the core suite, and the higher-standard figure suggests a meaningful proportion of pupils are working beyond the expected level by the end of Year 6.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
87.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school describes its curriculum as enquiry-based, and the inspection report reinforces that learning is planned as a coherent journey from early years through to Year 6, with leaders reviewing and refining what pupils learn and remember.
A distinctive feature is the explicit use of retrieval and structured sequencing. The inspection report notes the use of video floor books to recap prior learning before new topics begin, helping pupils make connections within and across subjects. That kind of practice tends to suit pupils who benefit from frequent recap and clear “what we learned last time” signposting, and it can also help parents support learning at home because the steps are more visible.
Reading is treated as a whole-school priority. The inspection report highlights early reading support for the least fluent readers, with targeted help designed to enable rapid catch-up. The school also publishes detail on its library setup, including a non-fiction reference library organised using the Dewey Decimal System, and an audio-visual station connected to music learning.
In maths, the curriculum documentation references alignment with White Rose Maths, which can be useful for parents familiar with that progression and vocabulary.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a state primary, the main “destination” decision point is secondary transfer. The school publishes a secondary transfer information page and directs families to guidance on the secondary application process and the Kent Test (11-plus).
For families with Year 6 children, the key implication is that selective and non-selective pathways are both part of the local environment. The school’s role is guidance and preparation for the process, rather than steering families toward a single type of secondary. The school’s own information for the 2026 Year 7 intake notes an application window that opened on 01 September 2025 and closed on 31 October 2025, which also gives a clear sense of the typical annual timing.
Transition is also described in SEND documentation as involving liaison and transition planning with the receiving setting, with extra measures where required.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Admissions for Reception are coordinated through Kent County Council.
Demand is strong: 186 applications for 81 offers, which is around 2.3 applications per place offered, and the school is marked as oversubscribed. This matters because it sets expectations early, families should assume competition for places, particularly in a growing area.
For Reception entry (September 2026 start), the Kent primary admissions timetable in the county guide includes:
Applications open on Friday 07 November 2025
Closing date Thursday 15 January 2026
Offer day Thursday 16 April 2026
Accept or refuse by Thursday 30 April 2026
Appeals lodged by Monday 18 May 2026
The school also listed tours for parents of children starting in September 2026, with dates running through October and November 2025 and an additional January 2026 date. Because these dates were scheduled for the September 2026 intake, families looking ahead should treat this as a pattern, tours typically run in autumn with an extra slot after the new year, and the school website is the best place to confirm the next set of dates.
For in-year moves, the county guidance explains that you apply using the in-year admissions process and there is no guarantee of a place at a preferred school, which is a realistic point for families relocating mid-year.
Tip: if you are shortlisting multiple local options, use the FindMySchoolMap Search to compare realistic travel patterns and, where available, historic allocation trends.
100%
1st preference success rate
70 of 70 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
81
Offers
81
Applications
186
Safeguarding and wellbeing are described as structured and embedded. The 21–22 February 2023 Ofsted inspection rated the school Outstanding, with Outstanding across all graded areas, including early years.
The same report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective, and describes a culture where pupils learn how to stay safe, including online, and know to report concerns to trusted adults.
Beyond safeguarding, the school’s wider approach to personal development includes a bespoke PSHE programme and explicit equality work, including a pupil diversity group described in the inspection report, alongside published Diversity Council material on the school website.
The enrichment offer is unusually concrete, and that is helpful for parents because you can see what “broad opportunities” means in practice.
Funky Feet, Superskills Sports Mix Club, Running Club, KS1 Choir, KS2 Choir, Tennis Club, Growing Golf, and School of Panto. The implication is that there is a blend of sport, performance, and general fitness, with separate Key Stage choir provision and activities that suit different confidence levels.
The school publishes year group opportunities for 2025–2026 that include items such as an action adventure residential, developing a business as an entrepreneur, visiting an Astrodome to learn about the solar system, learning to play the djembe, and producing an end-of-year musical production. This kind of planning tends to matter in a large school, because it provides a baseline entitlement, children in different classes should still access the same core experiences.
The school’s Forest School documentation describes a dedicated outdoor area with features such as a gazebo and a mud kitchen or firepit area, which points to a practical, hands-on outdoor offer rather than occasional one-off sessions.
Digital leaders are highlighted in the inspection report as a pupil leadership role, which suggests pupils can take responsibility for aspects of school technology and online safety culture.
Parents comparing schools on enrichment should use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool to line up curriculum breadth, wraparound care, and outcomes in one place.
Registration begins at 8.50am, and published school communications also reference a 3.15pm end to the day.
Breakfast club runs 7.30am to 8.45am, and after-school club runs 3.15pm to 6.00pm. The school describes booking flexibility (ad hoc or regular) and a childcare focus with indoor and outdoor activities and food provided.
Term dates for the 2025–2026 academic year are published on the school site, which is useful for parents coordinating childcare and travel.
Kings Hill is close to West Malling, and local area information notes that West Malling (for Kings Hill) station is a short drive away, with a shuttle bus scheduled to meet trains. (Families should still check current transport timetables and routes, as these can change.)
Large-school feel. With a roll around the mid-600s in official inspection information, this is not a small village primary. That can suit pupils who like a bigger peer group and lots going on, but some families prefer a smaller setting.
Oversubscription is real. With 186 applications for 81 offers admission is competitive. Families should plan early, understand the local authority criteria, and consider realistic alternatives.
A culture of high expectations. The inspection report emphasises ambition, strong routines, and exceptional achievement. For many children, that is motivating; for others, the pace and expectation can feel intense.
Secondary decisions may arrive sooner than you expect. The school’s secondary transfer information highlights the Kent Test and the annual timing of the Year 7 application window, so Year 5 can be a planning year for many families.
This is a high-performing state primary with a clear internal structure, strong reading and curriculum sequencing, and a broad, well-documented enrichment programme. The strongest fit is for families who want ambitious learning, calm routines, and lots of structured opportunities beyond lessons, including clubs, music, outdoor learning, and defined year-group experiences. The main challenge is securing a place in an oversubscribed context.
The available evidence points to a very strong school. It was rated Outstanding at its most recent inspection in February 2023, and the Key Stage 2 attainment figures are well above the England average in reading, writing and maths combined.
Admissions are coordinated by Kent, and places are allocated using the published oversubscription criteria rather than a guaranteed place for all local families. If you are relying on proximity or a particular criterion, check the current Kent admissions guidance for the relevant intake year.
Yes. The school publishes breakfast club and after-school club provision, with breakfast running from 7.30am and after-school club running through to 6.00pm, designed as wraparound childcare rather than an extension of lessons.
You apply through Kent’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the county timetable lists applications opening in early November 2025, with a closing date of 15 January 2026 and offers released on 16 April 2026.
Pupils move on to a mix of secondary routes, including non-selective options and, where families choose, selective grammar pathways through the Kent Test process. The school publishes guidance for families on secondary transfer and key annual timings.
Get in touch with the school directly
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