Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
A rural primary with nursery provision and a genuinely small-school feel, St Michael’s sits in Bothel, within reach of Wigton and the wider north Cumbria coastline. Its ethos is explicitly Church of England, with a stated set of Christian values that run through daily life, and strong links to local churches.
Academically, the current profile flags a very small KS2 cohort and does not provide a refreshed publishable percentage set, so older 2024 results should be treated as context rather than a current attainment claim. Families should ask how the school supports both pupils working toward the expected standard and those ready for greater depth.
The latest Ofsted inspection (14 March 2024) confirmed the school remains Good, with strengths in early reading, behaviour and the breadth of the curriculum, alongside a clear development focus around assessment and consistency in a small number of newer subjects.
This is a school that presents itself as a close, village-rooted community, and that identity shapes the atmosphere. The head teacher, Mrs Polly Page, frames the school as small, rural and outward-looking, with outdoor space and the local landscape used deliberately as part of learning.
Faith is not a label here, it is a working part of the culture. The school describes itself as Voluntary Aided and Church of England, and it explicitly links its day-to-day expectations to Christian values including friendship, perseverance, respect, love, courage and generosity. For families who want a values-led environment with visible church links, this will feel coherent. For families who prefer a strictly secular approach, it is worth being clear-eyed that the religious character is central rather than incidental.
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.
Ofsted’s most recent report supports a positive social tone. Pupils are described as cheerful and happy, polite and well-mannered, with behaviour and routines that help lessons run smoothly. In a small setting, that matters, because calm routines reduce the friction that can otherwise come from mixed-age grouping and small cohort dynamics.
The headline Key Stage 2 story should be read cautiously because the current profile does not provide a refreshed publishable result set for this very small cohort.
Current publishable reading, writing and maths percentages are not available here because the cohort is very small.
Ask the school how higher attainers are stretched, rather than relying on older small-cohort percentages.
Ask how science attainment is tracked in the current cohort and how gaps are picked up across mixed-age teaching.
Current publishable reading scaled-score data is not available here for this very small cohort.
Current publishable mathematics scaled-score data is not available here for this very small cohort.
Current publishable grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled-score data is not available here for this very small cohort.
Combined total score (reading, maths, GPS): 309
The results profile should be read through a small-cohort lens. For parents, the practical implication is that year-group variation can be significant. Ask how the school supports pupils who need help to reach the expected standard, and how it stretches the most able, because both ends of the distribution matter here.
A clear strength is early reading. The school prioritises reading across year groups, and the most recent inspection describes a systematic phonics programme delivered consistently well, with pupils becoming confident and fluent readers and targeted support helping those who need to catch up.
Curriculum design is presented as broad and carefully sequenced from early years through Year 6, with knowledge broken down into smaller steps so pupils build understanding logically over time. That matters particularly in mixed-age classes, where sequencing, retrieval and clarity about “what comes next” are the difference between coherence and repetition.
The school’s main improvement points are also worth taking seriously, because they are specific. In a few subjects, curriculum delivery is not yet consistently securing depth of knowledge, and assessment approaches in newer subjects are still being developed. The implication is not that pupils are under-taught, it is that leaders are still tightening how they check what pupils remember before moving on, so that learning builds securely over time.
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 3 to 11 primary, the main transition is into local secondary provision. In this part of Cumberland, families typically consider secondary options across Wigton and the surrounding towns, with travel time often shaping choices as much as school preference.
What St Michael’s can do well in a small setting is transition preparation: careful handover information, pupil confidence with routines, and clear literacy foundations. If your child is likely to need additional support at transition, it is sensible to ask how the school works with receiving secondaries and what preparation looks like for Year 6 pupils.
Admissions are coordinated through the local authority application process for a September start, with the school’s own information pointing families to Cumberland’s forms and a mid-January return deadline.
For Reception entry, check Cumberland Council's current coordinated admissions timetable for the relevant year, including the closing date and offer day.
The school is described in the local admissions documentation as Voluntary Aided, with the governing body acting as the admission authority, and applications made via the local authority common application form.
Demand indicators suggest Reception intake can be tight in some years, even with small absolute numbers. For the most recent year there were 5 applications for 3 offers, a ratio of 1.67 applications per place, recorded as oversubscribed. In a school this size, those numbers can swing sharply year to year, so it is worth checking current patterns with the school and local authority rather than assuming a stable trend.
If you are comparing local options, FindMySchool’s Map Search can help you sanity-check travel distances and practical routes, which often matter as much as admissions mechanics in rural areas.
Applications
5
Total received
Places Offered
3
Subscription Rate
1.7x
Applications per place
A small school has an inherent pastoral advantage when it is well led, staff tend to know pupils quickly, and families often have straightforward access to the adults who matter. The most recent inspection describes a culture of kindness and consideration, with pupils behaving well in lessons, around school and at breaktimes, and following established routines.
SEND identification and inclusion are also framed as a strength. The inspection describes early identification of pupils with SEND and staff supporting them to learn the same ambitious curriculum as classmates, with adaptations designed for mixed-age classes. That combination, early identification plus ambitious curriculum access, is exactly what many parents want to hear, particularly where external services can be slower in rural areas.
Attendance is treated as a priority, with the school described as having a clear understanding of the causes of absence and taking action with families to improve attendance where needed.
The school’s wider offer leans into community, responsibility and outdoor learning. On the curriculum side, the website highlights “wider curriculum” elements including school council, eco-council, gardening and care for the outdoor area, community links, and a partner-school link with India.
The Ofsted report adds useful colour on pupil responsibility and enrichment. Pupils have roles such as school librarians, and the report describes them recommending books to others and taking pride in the library area, a small detail that often signals a reading culture that is lived rather than simply planned. The report also references sports clubs, tournaments and festivals, plus educational visits including trips to museums and to other cities.
For wraparound enrichment, the school runs breakfast club and after-school club. The after-school provision is described as including crafts, indoor and outdoor games, plus occasional themed cooking and film nights, with a named leader who is part of the school’s everyday fabric.
The published timetable states school starts at 9.00am and finishes at 3.30pm, with arrival from 8.50am.
Breakfast club runs from 7.45am each school day and is listed at £4.00 per session, and after-school club runs until 5.30pm and is listed at £3.50 per hour (or part of).
A clearly specified uniform list is published, which helps families plan costs and expectations early.
As a rural school serving surrounding villages, practical transport planning matters. If you rely on school transport or long car runs, ask about drop-off expectations, bus routes and how the school supports children who travel further.
Small cohorts, bigger swings: With a very small pupil population, year-group results and admissions demand can change sharply from one year to the next. Treat single-year figures as signals, not guarantees.
Curriculum consistency in newer subjects: The latest inspection highlights that in a few newer areas, assessment and delivery are still being tightened so pupils build depth and retain key knowledge over time. Ask what has changed since March 2024 and how leaders are checking impact.
Faith character is central: The school’s Church of England identity and values-led framing are part of daily culture. Families should be comfortable with that emphasis.
Rural logistics: Travel time, wraparound use, and weather-related disruptions can matter more than they do in urban settings. Make sure the day-to-day logistics work for your family.
St Michael’s CofE Primary School will suit families who want a small, rural primary with a clear Church of England ethos, a strong reading focus, and the pastoral benefits that can come from a close-knit community. The most recent Key Stage 2 data suggests pupils at the top end can achieve very strongly, and the latest Ofsted inspection supports a picture of positive behaviour, effective safeguarding and a curriculum that is broad and thoughtfully sequenced.
The key decision point is fit. If your child benefits from being known well, enjoys reading, and you value a values-led environment, this is a sensible school to shortlist. If you want guaranteed large-cohort breadth, or you prefer a strictly non-faith setting, you may want to compare carefully with nearby alternatives.
The latest Ofsted inspection, dated 14 March 2024, confirmed the school continues to be Good, and safeguarding is described as effective. Key strengths highlighted include a broad curriculum, strong early reading, and calm behaviour and routines.
Reception entry applications are made through the local authority process for a September start. Check Cumberland Council's current coordinated admissions timetable for the relevant year, including the closing date and offer day.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound provision including breakfast club from 7.45am and after-school club running until 5.30pm on school days, with published session charges.
The current profile flags a very small KS2 cohort and does not provide a refreshed publishable percentage set. Treat older small-cohort results cautiously and ask the school how it supports pupils toward the expected standard, stretches higher attainers and tracks progress across subjects.
Reading appears to be a priority. The latest inspection describes a systematic phonics programme taught consistently well, and a culture that promotes reading across year groups, including pupil roles such as school librarians.
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