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 calm, high-expectations Catholic primary where routines matter, reading is treated as a core priority from Reception, and pupils are encouraged to take responsibility early through roles such as Digital Leaders and Peace Pioneers. The latest published Key Stage 2 figures show a stronger than average combined picture in reading, writing and maths, supported by above-average scaled scores.
This is a voluntary aided school in Norley Hall, Wigan, with pupils aged 4 to 11 and a published capacity of 395. Leadership is clearly visible across the website, with Mr John Rushton listed as Head Teacher. The wider setup includes an Early Years Centre alongside the main school, and wraparound provision is explicitly set out for Reception to Year 6.
Parents considering the school should keep two realities in mind at once. First, the academic data suggests pupils leave Year 6 well prepared. Second, local demand looks real, with Reception entry oversubscribed in the most recent admissions data.
The school’s tone is guided by a clear Catholic identity, reinforced through mission language that places faith and everyday conduct together rather than treating them as separate strands. The mission statement emphasises Jesus at the centre of the community, a love of learning and aspirations to “dream big”, and a culture of welcome and respect. This matters for families because it signals that Catholic life is not a thin layer. It is presented as a daily reference point for how pupils treat one another and how adults speak about expectations.
Pastoral culture is described in practical terms rather than slogans. Staff are presented as knowing pupils and families well, and the school’s public-facing information repeatedly comes back to routines, clear boundaries, and support when children struggle. In a primary context, those details often correlate with what parents experience most, morning drop-off, classroom consistency, and how quickly issues are dealt with.
Leadership and responsibility are also built into the pupil experience. The school highlights a set of roles that go beyond a standard school council model. Digital Leaders, for example, are framed as a pupil team that supports the use of iPads, laptops and other tools, and promotes safe and sensible online behaviour. Peace Pioneers are also referenced as a recognised role. The implication for families is that personal development is structured, with defined jobs and visibility, rather than being left to occasional themed weeks.
Early years is treated as a distinct phase with its own logic. The January 2024 inspection material points to the “swift establishment of routines” in early years as a strength and links this directly to a smooth start for children new to school. That focus should suit children who benefit from predictability and clear transitions, especially in the first term of Reception.
Key Stage 2 outcomes suggest a school where most pupils meet the expected standard across the combined measure, and where scaled scores are comfortably above England averages.
In 2024, 72.33% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard measure, 15.33% reached the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, above the England average of 8%.
Scaled scores reinforce the picture. Reading averaged 104 and maths averaged 104, compared with typical national benchmarks of 100 for reading and 101 for maths. Grammar, punctuation and spelling averaged 103.
On FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings based on official data, the school is ranked 10,118th in England for primary outcomes, and 49th locally within Wigan. That ranking position translates to below England average in the national distribution, so it is important to interpret the results section with nuance. The combined attainment measures look positive against England averages, but the ranking suggests other components of the results, such as the mix of metrics included in the ranking model, place the school lower overall in the national ordering.
For parents, the practical implication is that this school looks like a “good outcomes for most pupils” option rather than a school that consistently sits among the highest-performing nationally. Families focused on steady preparation for secondary school, strong early reading habits, and a consistent culture may find the balance attractive.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
72.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum thinking is treated as a sequence rather than a list of topics. The January 2024 inspection content describes a comprehensive, ambitious curriculum across early years and Key Stages 1 and 2, with careful consideration of the order in which new learning is introduced. That sequencing point matters because it is often what separates a well-intentioned curriculum from one that reliably builds knowledge.
Reading is positioned as a whole-school priority. The inspection report describes a reading culture where pupils show enthusiasm and enjoyment, and it links this to an immediate start to phonics in Reception. The model described is familiar in strong primaries, tight consistency in the phonics programme, adults trained to deliver it in the same way, and rapid extra help for pupils who find it difficult. The implication is that children who need early catch-up support are less likely to drift in Year 1 and Year 2, which can be a decisive factor by the time SATs preparation begins.
Classroom practice is described as attentive and responsive. Teachers are presented as quick to identify misunderstandings and address them during lessons. That tends to benefit pupils who need small corrections early, and it also reduces the cumulative gaps that can build quietly over a term.
There is also an honest improvement point that is useful for parents to understand. The January 2024 inspection content indicates that, at times, some activities do not focus tightly enough on the essential knowledge identified in the curriculum. When that happens, a minority of pupils do not learn all the important information and vocabulary needed for future learning. The school’s stated improvement task is to ensure the curriculum is delivered as intended, so that pupils are well prepared for what comes next. For families, this is a prompt to ask how leaders check the match between curriculum intent and what pupils actually do in books and lessons, especially in foundation subjects.
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 key transition is into Year 7. The school’s own Year 6 information frames the final year as preparation for “High School”, with an emphasis on independence, organisation, confidence, and resilience. That language signals that the school treats the move to secondary as a developmental step, not simply an administrative change.
For many Wigan families, the next stage is likely to be a local comprehensive secondary, with some children also considering Catholic secondary options where relevant. Because secondary destinations vary significantly year by year and depend on family preferences and admissions criteria, it is sensible to ask the school which secondary schools most pupils typically move on to, and what transition work is done with Year 6 pupils beyond the standard primary curriculum.
Early years provision alongside the main school adds another transition point. Families using the Early Years Centre will usually be thinking about progression into Reception. The published material emphasises belonging, language-rich practice, and dependable care. Parents should ask how the Early Years Centre supports children moving into Reception, what information is shared between staff teams, and how continuity is maintained for children who find change challenging.
Reception entry looks competitive based on the admissions data. The most recent figures show 78 applications for 57 offers for the primary entry route, with the demand level marked as oversubscribed. That equates to roughly 1.37 applications per place offered, so families should treat entry as something that needs planning rather than assumption.
As a Wigan local authority school, Reception applications are handled through the local authority coordinated process. For September 2026 entry, Wigan’s published primary admissions guidance states that the closing date is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026. In practice, families should also expect the application window to open in early autumn the year before entry, as is standard in coordinated admissions.
The school website notes an intended intake of up to 60 pupils at the beginning of the new school year, and that admissions follow the local authority procedure. For a voluntary aided Catholic school, parents should also expect that faith-based criteria can play a role where the school is oversubscribed, so it is worth reading the published admissions arrangements and any supplementary information requested.
Open events and visits are best treated as seasonal rather than date-specific unless the school has published future dates. If recent open events or tours are shown for past years, it is reasonable to assume similar timings recur annually, often in the autumn term for Reception intake planning. Families should check the school’s calendar and admissions information for the next available visit slots.
A practical tip: parents weighing up oversubscription risk should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand their practical position relative to the school, then read the admissions criteria to see how places are prioritised.
100%
1st preference success rate
55 of 55 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
57
Offers
57
Applications
78
Wellbeing is framed as part of daily practice rather than a bolt-on programme. The inspection content points to pupils being happy, supported promptly when needed, and learning in classes rarely disrupted by the behaviour of others. That is the kind of foundation that helps children who thrive on calm, and it can be particularly important for pupils who are easily distracted.
There is also a stated emphasis on physical and mental health, including pupils learning simple breathing techniques for mental wellbeing. In a primary setting, this can be a useful early toolkit, especially for children who struggle with transitions, friendship difficulties, or assessment anxiety later in Year 6.
Attendance is treated as a priority and approached systematically. The inspection content describes careful analysis of absence patterns and a wide range of strategies to improve attendance. For parents, that signals a school likely to intervene early if attendance begins to slip, rather than waiting for a pattern to become entrenched.
Safeguarding is a core baseline for any school choice. The latest Ofsted inspection (23 and 24 January 2024) confirmed that the school remains Good and that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The most convincing extracurricular programmes in primary schools are the ones with named opportunities and clear purposes. Here, there are several concrete examples families can anchor to.
Leadership roles are one strand. Digital Leaders are described as supporting classmates and teachers with iPads and laptops, and promoting safe and respectful internet use. That is more than a badge. It gives pupils a defined job, builds confidence, and normalises responsible online behaviour early. Peace Pioneers and school council roles are also referenced as part of the wider pupil leadership setup.
Clubs are another strand, with examples including baking, judo and art. The school also lists termly after-school activity information for parents. At the time of review, Dance with WACT is listed as an after-school activity on Mondays, with other days varying by term. The implication is that extracurricular choices may be seasonal rather than fixed, so parents who rely on clubs for childcare should check each term’s schedule rather than assuming the same pattern year-round.
Finally, the school’s Catholic life structure provides another form of “beyond the classroom” experience, with prayer and liturgy, parish links, and activities such as Mini Vinnies presented as part of the school’s wider formation and service culture. For Catholic families, this often functions like an additional enrichment layer that combines values, responsibility and community involvement.
The school day is clearly set out by phase. Reception and Key Stage 1 run from 8:55am to 3:15pm, and Key Stage 2 runs from 8:55am to 3:20pm. Reception does not have scheduled playtimes, reflecting a continuous provision model.
Wraparound care is published for Reception to Year 6. Breakfast Club opens at 7:45am and is priced at £4.50 per session. After-school club runs until 5.30pm and is priced at £9.00 per session. Contracts are described as remaining in place through to the end of Year 6 unless amended, which is useful for families who need consistency.
Transport details are not set out in a way that supports specific journey planning in the published material, so families should test the school-run logistics at the times they would actually travel. If driving, ask about drop-off arrangements and any constraints on parking nearby.
Oversubscription pressure. Reception entry is marked as oversubscribed in the most recent admissions data, with 78 applications and 57 offers. Families should read the admissions criteria carefully and plan applications realistically.
Curriculum consistency point. External review material indicates that, at times, activities do not focus tightly enough on the essential curriculum learning, which can leave some pupils without key vocabulary and knowledge. Parents may want to ask how leaders check the consistency of curriculum delivery across classes and subjects.
Catholic character is central. The faith dimension is not presented as optional. Families who prefer a fully secular approach, or who are uncomfortable with a strong Catholic identity, should reflect carefully on fit.
Clubs can be termly and variable. Some extracurricular activities are listed term by term, which suits families who enjoy variety but may be less convenient for those needing a fixed weekly after-school pattern.
This is a well-organised Catholic primary where routines, early reading, and personal responsibility are treated seriously. The published Key Stage 2 data shows a stronger than average combined attainment picture, and the inspection evidence supports a calm, purposeful learning environment with effective safeguarding.
Who it suits: families seeking a faith-led school with clear expectations, a structured start in early years, and a practical wraparound offer for Reception to Year 6. The main hurdle is admission, with Reception entry showing signs of sustained demand.
The school is rated Good, and the most recent Ofsted inspection in January 2024 confirmed it continues to meet that standard, including effective safeguarding. Published Key Stage 2 outcomes also show a stronger than average combined figure for reading, writing and maths.
Reception applications are made through Wigan Council’s coordinated admissions process. The published closing date for September 2026 entry is 15 January 2026, and the offer date is 16 April 2026.
Yes. Breakfast Club is available from 7:45am and after-school club runs until 5.30pm for Reception to Year 6. Families should check availability and booking arrangements with the school.
In the most recent published data, 72.33% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, above the England average of 62%. Reading and maths scaled scores are also above national benchmarks.
The Catholic ethos is woven through the school’s mission and wider life, including prayer and liturgy, parish links, and service-oriented activities. Families considering the school should expect Catholic identity to be a central part of the culture.
Get in touch with the school directly
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