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 a very small Church of England primary serving families around Dalton and the Skelmersdale area, with a published capacity of 84 places and around 65 pupils on roll. The scale is the headline feature, children are known quickly, older pupils mix naturally with younger ones, and routines can be consistent because staffing and spaces are familiar.
Leadership has recently changed. Mr I. Attkins is the headteacher and the designated safeguarding lead, and he states he stepped into the role in January 2025.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (8 and 9 March 2023, report published 18 May 2023) judged the school Good across all areas, including early years.
As a state school, there are no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual extras such as uniform, trips, and optional clubs.
The school’s Church identity is not a badge, it shapes the language and the rhythm of the week. A Church school inspection dated 3 October 2024 sets out a vision framed around belonging, belief, and achievement, with a biblical reference (Matthew 5:16) as its anchor. That matters in practice because it influences how pupils talk about responsibility, community, and service, rather than faith being limited to assemblies.
The same inspection describes a strong sense of belonging, strengthened by the school’s relationship with the local church, and notes that collective worship is treated as shared time for reflection. It also flags a clear development point: religious education needs a broader and better-sequenced curriculum that includes a range of world faiths and worldviews, alongside staff development to improve teaching and progress in the subject.
Scale shapes the day-to-day feel. In small schools, peer groups can be tight, friendships tend to run across year groups, and children often get responsibilities earlier. The Ofsted report describes pupils as feeling safe, with low-level disruption reported as rare.
Comparable key stage outcome figures are not presented within the performance data available for this review, so it is not responsible to quote attainment percentages or ranks here.
What can be evidenced is the school’s academic intent and the way core skills are prioritised. Ofsted describes a broad and balanced curriculum overall, while noting that a few subjects needed clearer sequencing so teachers know precisely what knowledge pupils should learn and when.
Reading is positioned as a central priority. Ofsted reports that staff have the expertise to teach early reading, children start phonics as soon as they begin Reception, and reading books are matched to the sounds pupils already know, which supports accuracy and confidence.
Parents comparing local schools can use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages to line up published primary outcomes side by side, rather than relying on impression.
The school describes its curriculum approach as the Connected Curriculum, built to cover the National Curriculum through contexts intended to be meaningful to pupils’ everyday lives, with practical first-hand experiences and enrichment through visits and visitors.
There is a sensible implication for families. In a smaller setting, cross-curricular planning can help staff keep learning coherent across mixed ages and classes, especially when staffing is tight. When it is done well, pupils see how writing, mathematics, and problem solving show up in geography, history, and wider topic work, not as separate silos.
Early years is an important part of the picture. The school accepts children from age three and links nursery life to the wider school routines, which often supports a confident transition into Reception for children who stay on.
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 primary school, the next step is secondary transfer at the end of Year 6. The school’s own Church school inspection references parents reporting that pupils settle well into high school because of the secure start they receive.
For families planning ahead, the practical step is to check Lancashire’s coordinated admissions information for secondary options and timelines, then match that with travel time. For rural-edge communities, transport can become the deciding factor as much as school preference.
Demand looks high relative to the school’s small intake. For the primary entry route in the available data, there were 28 applications for 8 offers, which equates to 3.5 applications per place, and the status is recorded as oversubscribed. This points to a school where timing and application accuracy matter, especially because a small change in numbers can have a big effect in a small cohort.
Reception applications are handled through Lancashire’s coordinated process, and the school’s admissions page states a clear closing date and offer date for the September 2026 cycle. The closing date is 15 January 2026, and offer letters are issued on 16 April 2026.
100%
1st preference success rate
7 of 7 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
8
Offers
8
Applications
28
Safeguarding culture is a defining factor for any primary. Ofsted states that safeguarding arrangements are effective and that leaders maintain a strong safeguarding culture with up-to-date training and active work with families and external professionals where needed.
The Church school inspection adds detail on wellbeing practice, describing pastoral support and a culture of trust and friendship, plus links to a children’s mental health charity for identified pupils who need targeted emotional support.
For families, the implication is straightforward. In a small school, children often find it easier to identify trusted adults, but it also means communication works best when parents engage early and consistently, especially around attendance, anxiety, or friendship issues.
Enrichment here is less about a huge menu and more about purposeful, repeatable experiences that work at a small scale.
A distinctive feature is the school’s own wraparound club, Dalton Discoverers, described as themed provision for children from three to eleven. Themes include arts and crafts, sports, baking, technology, and film across the week. For working families, that kind of predictable structure can be as valuable as a long list of clubs because it helps children settle into routines and gives parents a clear plan.
There are also traditional after-school clubs. A sports club is listed as running on Mondays via the West Lancashire Sports Partnership, aimed at pupils in Years 3 to 6. On Thursdays, the website lists a Key Stage 2 football club run by the headteacher, and it references both a Gardening Club and a Science Club programme.
The Church school inspection adds wider enrichment examples rooted in the local area: learning that draws on nearby ponds and woodlands, environmental projects (including work connected to local wildlife), and educational visits that broaden horizons.
The published school day runs 8.45am to 3.15pm. Wraparound care is clearly set out: breakfast provision begins at 7.45am, there is an earlier drop-off option from 8.30am, and after-school care runs until 5.00pm.
Transport planning matters because the school describes a wider catchment that can include parts of Skelmersdale, Dalton, Up Holland, and surrounding areas. Families should test the day-to-day reality of the commute at peak times, particularly in winter.
Very small cohorts. This can be brilliant for individual attention, but friendship groups are smaller and social dynamics can feel more intense for some children.
Competition for places. With an oversubscribed profile and small intake numbers, families should treat admissions deadlines as non-negotiable.
Religious education development work. The Church school inspection highlights the need to strengthen curriculum breadth in religious education, including world faiths and worldviews, and to support staff development in the subject.
Clubs by rhythm, not volume. There are clear clubs and wraparound themes, but it will not feel like a large primary with dozens of parallel activities every day.
Dalton St Michael’s suits families who want a small primary where staff know children well, the Church ethos is visible in daily life, and wraparound care is practical and structured. The recent headteacher appointment in January 2025 may appeal to parents who value clear leadership momentum.
Who it suits: children who thrive in smaller peer groups, and families who value a faith-shaped culture with a strong sense of community. The main challenge is admission, because demand can quickly outstrip places in a school of this size.
The school was graded Good at its most recent Ofsted inspection (March 2023), including Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. A later Church school inspection dated October 2024 describes a strong sense of belonging and positive relationships, while also setting a clear next step around strengthening religious education curriculum breadth.
Reception applications are made through Lancashire’s coordinated admissions route, rather than directly to the school. The school also refers to drawing families from Dalton and parts of the Skelmersdale area, alongside nearby communities. For the September 2026 intake, the closing date stated on the school’s admissions page is 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school accepts children from age three and has wraparound care before and after the school day. The published day runs 8.45am to 3.15pm, with breakfast provision from 7.45am and after-school care until 5.00pm. For early years session details, families should check the school’s published early years information.
A Church school inspection in October 2024 sets out a vision centred on belonging and achievement, rooted in a biblical reference, and it describes collective worship as a valued daily moment of reflection supported by links with the local church. It also notes pupils’ social action projects and an emphasis on responsibility and service within the community.
For structured childcare, Dalton Discoverers is described as themed after-school provision for ages three to eleven, with different themes across the week. The school also lists specific clubs such as a Monday sports club via the West Lancashire Sports Partnership and a Thursday Key Stage 2 football club, plus references to Gardening Club and Science Club activities.
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