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 junior school that does not treat Years 3 to 6 as a waiting room for secondary. The most recent inspection describes a calm, caring culture where pupils live out clear values and support one another through formal peer roles.
Academically, published Key Stage 2 outcomes show a mixed picture: a strong proportion meeting the expected standard across reading, writing and mathematics, alongside an overall performance profile that sits below England average when benchmarked through FindMySchool’s ranking model based on official data. That combination usually points to a school where day-to-day learning feels purposeful and supportive, and where the focus is on securing foundations rather than chasing a narrow top-end outcome.
For families in and around Wigton, the practical appeal is obvious. It is a state school with no tuition fees, wraparound care is available, and there is an unusually explicit emphasis on play, outdoor learning and residential experiences across multiple year groups.
Thomlinson’s identity is unusually coherent for a junior school. The school sets out four values, respect, tolerance, courage and responsibility, and the latest inspection indicates pupils understand and put these into practice in the way they behave and relate to staff and one another.
Pastoral leadership is visible in the way responsibilities are structured for pupils. The peer support role is defined in practical terms: helping Year 3 pupils settle, looking out for new pupils at playtime, supporting wet play routines, and completing training. Add in school council activity, including involvement in campaigning for a reduced speed limit outside the school, and you get a culture where pupils are expected to contribute, not just comply.
Play is not treated as “time off”. The school’s approach is formalised through Outdoor Play and Learning (OPAL), with an explicit statement that play should be welcoming and accessible to every child, regardless of background or individual needs. Inspection evidence aligns with this, describing lunchtimes and playtimes with structured resources that prompt creativity and physical development.
There is also a clear local flavour. House groups are named after nearby Cumbrian fells, Blencathra, Catbells, Ling and Skiddaw, which is a small detail but one that tends to matter to pupils and families.
Leadership is currently held by Mrs Dawn Maxwell, who is listed as headteacher on both the school website and official records. The most recent inspection notes that a new headteacher has been appointed since the previous inspection, but it does not publish an appointment date, so it is safest to treat the exact start timing as not publicly confirmed.
Because Thomlinson is a junior school (ages 7 to 11), the relevant published outcomes are Key Stage 2 measures.
In 2024, 73.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared to the England average of 62%.
At the higher standard, 16.33% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared to the England average of 8%.
Reading and mathematics scaled scores were 104 and 102 respectively, with grammar, punctuation and spelling at 104.
These figures suggest a broadly secure core, with a higher-standard rate that is meaningfully above the England benchmark in that year.
Rankings can feel counterintuitive next to the percentages above, so it is worth being precise about what is being stated. On the FindMySchool ranking model based on official data, Thomlinson Junior School is ranked 10,556th in England for primary outcomes, and 8th locally (Wigton).
This places the school below England average in the FindMySchool ranking context, which indicates that, across the full national distribution, many schools post stronger overall outcome profiles.
A useful way to interpret the combination is this: the school’s published outcomes show many pupils meeting expected standards, but the broader pattern over time and across measures may not consistently push the school into the top half nationally. For families, that often translates into a school that prioritises consistent teaching, routines, and wellbeing, and that aims to get the majority of pupils to a secure standard, with some pupils reaching higher levels.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
73.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The inspection evidence describes a curriculum with clear ambition and a careful sequencing of knowledge over time, supported by consistent delivery and clear explanations when pupils meet new content. This matters in a junior setting because many pupils are arriving from a separate infant school. Strong transition and curriculum sequencing reduce the “reset effect” that can happen at Year 3.
Reading is positioned as a central priority. Pupils read across a wide range of genres, and the school has systems to identify gaps quickly and close them through an embedded phonics programme delivered consistently by staff. For parents, the implication is practical: pupils who arrive still needing catch-up support in decoding or fluency are less likely to be left to drift, and more likely to receive structured intervention early.
The improvement area flagged in the latest inspection is also specific and educationally meaningful. In some subjects, checks on learning are not consistently sharp enough to identify misconceptions or readiness for more complex work, which can limit how precisely activities are adapted in the moment. For families, this is the kind of point to explore on a visit: ask how teachers use assessment within lessons beyond English and maths, and how they spot and address misconceptions when pupils are working independently.
As a junior school, Thomlinson’s main destination is Year 7 at local secondary schools.
The closest and most obvious pathway for many families in Wigton is The Nelson Thomlinson School, which is also in the town. For pupils, that kind of continuity can make transition smoother: familiar local routes, friendship groups moving together, and easier participation in after-school activities in Year 7.
Beyond Wigton, families in surrounding villages may also consider secondary options in nearby towns depending on transport and admissions criteria. The practical takeaway is that you should treat Year 6 as a structured transition year, and use it to trial the travel routine your child would actually manage daily.
If your priority is a particular secondary school, it is worth checking each school’s admissions criteria early, because “local” does not always mean “automatic”, and junior-to-secondary transfer is not guaranteed by attendance at a feeder junior school.
Thomlinson’s published admissions number is 60, with admission into Year 3 as the normal intake point for a junior school. The school describes an annual admission of 60 into Year 3, with places in Years 4 to 6 dependent on vacancies and the relevant admissions criteria.
For the September 2026 intake, the Cumberland coordinated scheme timetable sets the closing date for Year 3 applications as 15 January 2026, with national offer day on 16 April 2026. It also sets a response-by date of 30 April 2026 and a reallocation date of 7 May 2026 for places that become available.
If you are comparing options or weighing a move, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for testing real-world routes and distances, then pairing that with the admission authority’s published criteria for your specific year of entry.
. A sensible next step for families is to check the relevant Cumberland admissions booklet and the school’s own admissions arrangements page, then ask directly about recent demand patterns for Year 3.
The inspection evidence emphasises positive relationships between pupils and staff, calm behaviour, and pupils supporting one another through peer roles. It also notes that staff run programmes to help pupils manage emotions, that attendance and punctuality are treated as high priorities, and that the school works to remove barriers where families face challenges.
Safeguarding is reported as effective in the latest inspection. (This is one of the few points where the official wording carries real weight for parents, because it speaks to baseline safety processes and culture.)
SEND provision is a significant part of the school’s profile. The Ofsted report confirms a specially resourced provision for up to nine pupils aged seven to 11 with severe learning difficulties or profound and multiple learning difficulties, with nine pupils currently attending at the time of inspection. The same report highlights strong transition processes with the feeder infant school so that needs are identified and supported from the moment pupils join.
For families of children with additional needs, that combination is meaningful. A resourced provision changes a school’s day-to-day expertise: staff are more likely to be confident with differentiated routines, communication support, and consistent behaviour expectations that work for a wider range of pupils.
Thomlinson’s enrichment offer stands out because it is not just a list of clubs. It is integrated into the way the school thinks about play, outdoor learning and experiences.
The school describes a well-established programme of outdoor activities, with every child having the opportunity to take part in residential experiences across each year group, alongside curriculum-linked outdoor learning days and a focus on team building and outdoor pursuits.
The latest inspection adds detail: pupils take part in residential visits in Years 4, 5 and 6, including a London visit. For a junior school, that matters. Residentials tend to accelerate independence, social maturity and confidence, particularly for pupils who have not travelled much outside the local area.
OPAL is a declared strategic focus, with the school stating that play should enable exploration, problem-solving and influence over the environment, and should be accessible to every child. Inspection evidence describes high-quality play at social times, including activities like group games, den building, role play and even pupils playing piano duets outside.
The implication for parents is simple: if your child learns best when movement and practical problem-solving are part of the day, this setting is more likely to suit than a tightly desk-bound model.
The school lists a set of specific extra-curricular activities, including fell walking, canoeing, hockey, athletics, badminton and chess, and notes that Wigton Gymnastics Club is also based at the school. The inspection report adds further examples, including art, choir and sports clubs, plus a talent show and external performances.
School day structure is clearly published. Official start time is 8:45am, with the school day ending at 3:20pm, and break and lunch times varying slightly by year group.
Wraparound care is available on site: breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:40am, and after-school club from 3:15pm to 5:30pm. The school also offers a walking bus arrangement between the infant school and the junior school for wraparound sessions, which can be a practical solution for working families managing split sites.
Transport is addressed in school communications. The school notes that buses are provided for pupils coming from outlying areas, with some circumstances allowing free transport. For drop-off and pick-up, the school security guidance asks that vehicles do not enter the gates around the start and end of day when pupils are moving through the area.
Food is also clearly costed. School lunches are listed at £11.50 per week, with payment handled through the school’s normal payment process.
Junior-school entry at Year 3. Joining at age seven is a fresh start, and it can be a very positive reset for pupils who have not thrived in a previous setting. It also means transition matters, so ask how Year 3 induction is handled and how friendship and routine settling are supported.
Assessment consistency beyond the core. The latest inspection highlights that, in some subjects, checks on learning do not always identify misconceptions early enough to adapt tasks. This is worth exploring if your child needs tight scaffolding or if you want clear stretch planning in foundation subjects.
Costs are not fees, but they exist. There are no tuition fees, but weekly lunches, wraparound sessions, clubs and some trips can add up over a year. It is sensible to ask for an overview of typical optional costs by year group.
Resourced provision shapes the environment. The SEND resourced provision is a strength for many families, but it also means the school serves a wider range of needs and learning profiles. If your child prefers very quiet, uniform routines, ask how classrooms balance sensory and behavioural needs across the cohort.
Thomlinson Junior School comes across as a purposeful, grounded junior setting: clear values, calm behaviour, strong attention to reading, and an unusually explicit commitment to play and outdoor learning. The latest inspection supports this picture, including effective safeguarding and a broad curriculum with good-quality delivery.
Best suited to families who want a junior school where wellbeing, responsibility and practical experiences sit alongside the core basics, and where children are expected to contribute to the life of the school. For shortlisting, FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature is a practical way to track this option alongside nearby alternatives and keep application timelines in one place.
The most recent inspection (11 and 12 March 2025) graded the school as Good across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. The report describes a calm, caring school culture and positive behaviour.
For the normal intake, families apply for Year 3 through the local authority coordinated process for Cumberland. The published timetable for September 2026 entry sets a closing date of 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:40am, and after-school club runs from 3:15pm to 5:30pm. The school also offers a walking bus arrangement between the infant school and the junior school for wraparound sessions.
In 2024, 73.67% met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. At the higher standard, 16.33% achieved greater depth across reading, writing and mathematics, compared to the England average of 8%.
The school publishes a range of activities including fell walking, canoeing, hockey, athletics, badminton and chess. The latest inspection also references clubs such as art, choir and sports, plus performances and a talent show.
Get in touch with the school directly
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