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.
For families looking at an infant school, the day-to-day experience matters at least as much as test data. Here, the age range is 4 to 7, so the focus is on early reading, language, number sense, and the habits that make Key Stage 1 work. The school’s own language is straightforward, its vision is Believe in Yourself, and that idea shows up in practical ways, from confidence-building safeguarding work to predictable routines that help younger pupils feel secure.
This is a community, state-funded school, with no tuition fees. It sits in Barrow-in-Furness (Blake Street), under Westmorland and Furness Council for admissions. Demand looks real rather than speculative, with 27 applications for 17 offers in the most recent primary entry-route results supplied, which is consistent with the school being oversubscribed.
The latest Ofsted inspection outcome (25 June 2024) is Good, with Good recorded across the key judgement areas.
A clear indicator of an infant school’s culture is whether it can stay calm while still feeling busy. The structure here looks designed to support that. The school day runs 8.50am to 3.20pm, and the practicalities are laid out in a way that families can actually use, including entrance and exit arrangements linked to class groupings.
The class names, such as Snowy, Barn, Tawny, Elf, Eagle and Boobook, help younger pupils orient themselves, and that kind of small detail often signals a setting that cares about how children experience transitions.
The school values are also explicit and child-friendly, Celebrate, Thankful, Friendship, Keep Trying and Kindness. For Reception and Key Stage 1 pupils, values work best when they are concrete and repeated, and the list here reads like something staff can actually reference in assemblies, certificates and corridor conversations.
Leadership visibility matters for trust at this age. The current headteacher is Mrs Andrea Edmondson, shown consistently on official records and on the school website.
Because the school educates pupils up to age 7, families should not expect the usual Key Stage 2 outcomes that appear for 4 to 11 primaries, and this is why comparative performance tables can look thin. In short, the most useful “results” questions here are about readiness for junior school: early reading, writing stamina, number fluency, and whether pupils leave Year 2 able to work independently and confidently.
The published curriculum messaging puts a strong emphasis on independence, high expectations, and enjoyment of learning. For many families, that combination is a better predictor of a good Key Stage 1 experience than headline numbers.
Early reading is usually the hinge point in an infant school, and it is helpful that the school signposts a named phonics reading platform, Bug Club, rather than relying on generic statements. A named scheme does not guarantee quality by itself, but it does tend to indicate clearer consistency across classes and staff.
Writing progression is also described in practical terms, with the stated aim that pupils are writing independently by the time they leave in Year 2. At infant stage, that typically means sentence structure, handwriting fluency, spelling strategies and confidence with composition, not just neat presentation.
In wider curriculum planning, the school publishes progression materials (for example, a history progression map), which suggests subject sequencing is being considered rather than improvised. That matters because the best infant classrooms feel playful on the surface, but are carefully structured underneath.
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 default transition is to junior provision at the end of Year 2. The school explicitly references St James C of E Junior School as the typical transfer destination for most children, which is useful clarity for parents planning ahead.
For families, the key practical question is whether the Year 3 move feels automatic or whether a separate application process is required. Because admissions are run through the local authority, it is sensible to treat the Year 3 move as an important administrative step, even when the educational pathway feels obvious.
Transition quality at this stage tends to depend on familiar routines and shared expectations, so it is worth asking what joint work happens between the infant and junior schools, for example shared events, pastoral handover, or visits for pupils in the summer term.
This is a community school, so applications are coordinated by the local authority rather than being decided solely by the school. For September 2026 entry, the school states that applications opened on Wednesday 3 September 2025 and the closing date was 15 January 2026.
For future years, families should expect a similar pattern, early autumn opening with a mid-January deadline, but should still check the current council timetable because dates can shift slightly year to year.
Demand, based on the supplied admissions results, points to an oversubscribed picture at the primary entry route, with 27 applications for 17 offers and 1.59 applications per place applications per place.
That is not the kind of competition seen in the most heavily pressured urban catchments, but it is enough that families should treat deadlines seriously and avoid last-minute submissions.
A furthest distance at which a place was offered is not available provided for this school, so it is not sensible to make promises about what address “should be safe”. The best practical approach is to review the council’s criteria and, if distance is relevant in a given year, measure from the published reference point used by the admissions authority.
Applications
27
Total received
Places Offered
17
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Apps per place
The pastoral picture leans heavily into confidence and safety education, which is appropriate for this age group. The school describes its use of KidSafe as an age-appropriate programme that helps children recognise unsafe situations and build self-esteem, using child-friendly language such as “yukky feelings”. For many Reception and Key Stage 1 families, that kind of common vocabulary is useful, because it gives children a simple way to report worries.
Wellbeing is also addressed through daily mindfulness practice, with each classroom described as having a mindful area and mindful activities delivered daily. This kind of routine can help pupils manage emotions and attention, particularly for children who find school transitions challenging.
Safeguarding documentation is published and updated, including overarching statements that frame safeguarding broadly, covering health, safety, wellbeing, behaviour, medical needs and educational visits. That breadth is often what parents want at infant stage: not only response to incidents, but prevention and consistent culture.
At infant stage, extracurricular breadth is less about elite performance and more about giving children safe, structured opportunities to practise social skills, curiosity and confidence after the school day.
The school’s own updates reference specific after-school clubs including Story and Quiz Club, Art Club, and Sports Club. For younger pupils, these are sensible choices, mixing language, creativity, and physical activity in low-pressure formats.
The wider “beyond the classroom” offer also includes practical enrichment that sits close to the curriculum, for example health and wellbeing work through KidSafe, and wellbeing routines through mindfulness. The implication for families is that extracurricular life is likely to feel integrated rather than bolt-on, which tends to suit children who need predictability.
The school day runs from 8.50am to 3.20pm.
Wraparound care is clearly described. Breakfast provision includes an early breakfast club from 7.45am priced at £2.50 per session, plus a free breakfast session from 8.15am.
After-school wraparound care is offered in two sessions, 3.20pm to 4.00pm at £2.50 and 3.20pm to 5.00pm at £5.00, with the note that after-school care is not offered on Fridays.
For travel, most families will be thinking for walkability and short car journeys rather than rail links, given the age range. It is worth asking directly about drop-off and pick-up flow, and where families are expected to park or wait, because infant-school logistics can shape daily stress levels.
Limited headline performance data. Because the school is 4 to 7, the usual Key Stage 2-style outcome metrics do not apply. Families who want a data-heavy comparison should focus on the quality of early reading, writing progress, and how Year 2 prepares pupils for the junior phase.
Entry is competitive in practice. The primary entry route shows 27 applications for 17 offers which supports the description of being oversubscribed. If you are considering a move, treat council deadlines and evidence requirements as non-negotiable.
Friday wraparound limits. After-school wraparound care is stated as not available on Fridays, which may matter for working patterns. Some families will find the breakfast offer covers the bigger need; others will need a Friday back-up plan.
Plan the Year 3 transition early. Most children move on to St James C of E Junior School, but families should still confirm exactly how the transfer works administratively and what support is offered for children who find change difficult.
Brisbane Park Infant School looks like a practical, structured option for local families who want a calm Key Stage 1 start, with clear routines and unusually explicit wraparound provision for an infant setting. The Good inspection outcome in 2024 supports a steady baseline across quality areas, while the day-to-day detail, such as club names, class organisation, and wellbeing work, suggests a school that thinks carefully about how young children experience school.
Best suited to families who value predictability, clear communication, and a strong early-years approach to confidence and safety education, and who want an infant-to-junior pathway that is clearly signposted. Entry is the primary hurdle rather than what follows.
If you are shortlisting options, the FindMySchool Saved Schools feature is a sensible way to track key questions for visits, especially around phonics, Year 2 writing independence, and the Year 3 transfer process.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (25 June 2024) judged the school Good overall, with Good recorded across the main judgement areas. For an infant school, the best additional indicators are practical: early reading consistency, how quickly pupils settle into routines, and whether Year 2 pupils leave as confident independent learners.
Admissions are coordinated through the local authority rather than handled as a purely school-run process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 3 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026. For later intakes, expect a similar autumn opening with a mid-January deadline, but confirm the live timetable each year.
Yes, it is described as oversubscribed provided. The most recent primary entry-route figures supplied show 27 applications for 17 offers, which indicates competition for places even though demand is not at the extreme levels seen in some large cities.
Yes. The school publishes details for breakfast provision including an early paid session from 7.45am and a free session from 8.15am. After-school wraparound care is offered in two paid sessions, with a stated note that it is not available on Fridays.
Most pupils transfer to St James C of E Junior School. Parents should still confirm the exact Year 3 application or transfer steps with the admissions authority and ask what transition support is offered for children who are anxious about change.
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