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 an infant school serving ages 5 to 7, with Reception through Year 2 in a Church of England setting. The tone is clear from the language the school uses about its purpose, it places Christian values, wellbeing, and a sense of belonging at the centre of day-to-day routines.
The most recent inspection evidence describes a warm, caring culture with high expectations for behaviour and a strong emphasis on early reading. It is also part of a wider federation, which matters for continuity and for how support is organised across schools.
Admissions are competitive by infant-school standards. The latest demand data shows 72 applications for 57 offers, which points to steady local pressure for places. Families should plan early and use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense how realistic daily travel would be if you are weighing up several nearby infant and primary options.
The school frames its identity around Christian values, explicitly naming love, joy, and hope, and presenting these as practical behaviours rather than abstract ideals. That shows up in the way the school talks about how pupils are welcomed, how they are helped to settle, and how the community is encouraged to look after one another.
Day-to-day expectations for pupils are described in simple, age-appropriate language, be kind, be ready to learn, stay safe. In the most recent inspection record, behaviour is described as calm and aligned with those expectations, and staff are shown handling conflict quickly and fairly, with bullying positioned as unacceptable.
Leadership is structured across the federation. The executive headteacher is Mrs Cathy Draper, and the day-to-day head of school role at Rosedale is held by Mrs Vicki Stephen. That combination often suits schools where consistency matters, because strategy and specialist capacity can sit across a group, while pastoral and operational leadership stays close to the pupils.
Infant schools sit in a slightly different accountability context from junior schools, and published, standardised results are typically less prominent than at key stage 2. In practice, the most useful evidence here is not league positioning but what the school prioritises, and what external evaluation says about how well that priority is delivered.
Reading is treated as a headline priority. The most recent inspection record describes a structured phonics programme, staff training to deliver it consistently, and a curriculum that uses “treasured texts” to anchor writing and wider learning. The strength for parents is clear, routines and shared language make it easier for pupils to build fluency quickly, and for staff to spot gaps early.
There are also clear next steps identified. The same evidence notes that some pupils are not moved through phonics as quickly as they could be, and that opportunities to practise sounds are sometimes missed. For parents, that is a useful prompt, ask how often phonics is assessed, what happens when a child is ready to accelerate, and how reading practice at home is supported.
Curriculum thinking is shaped across the federation, with planning described as sequenced from early years through to the end of key stage 2. That matters even in an infant school, because the best infant provision is not just about confidence and care, it is about building the concrete knowledge and language that junior teachers can build on.
The curriculum is made tangible through themed learning journeys in Year 1 and Year 2. Examples published by the school include units focused on oceans and Antarctica, heroes (including real-life figures), traditional tales and woodland topics, flight and space, London and the Great Fire of London, and a geography-rich summer unit linked to Kenya and map-making. The implication is breadth, but also repetition of key skills, vocabulary, storytelling, and explanation.
Teachers are also encouraged to introduce challenging vocabulary rather than simplifying language. A small example given in inspection material, using precise terms in physical education, illustrates the bigger point, pupils are expected to speak accurately, not just complete tasks. Over time, that can make a noticeable difference to confidence and comprehension in reading and writing.
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 main transition point is into Year 3. Rosedale sits within the Short Heath Federation, alongside Lane Head Nursery School and Short Heath Junior School, which creates a natural pathway for many families.
Even in federations, transfer into junior is still an admissions process rather than an automatic roll-over. In Walsall, families of Year 2 pupils at an infant school apply for Year 3 in the normal admissions round, with the same national closing date and offer day as Reception admissions. The practical implication is simple, do not assume the move is guaranteed, diarise the deadlines early and submit the junior transfer application on time.
Reception entry for September 2026 is handled through Walsall Council’s coordinated system rather than direct allocation by the school. The published deadline for on-time applications is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026 (Primary National Offer Day).
A key detail that catches some families out is the nursery-to-Reception misconception. The school is explicit that having a place at Lane Head Nursery does not guarantee a Reception place at Rosedale, a separate application is still required. That is particularly relevant for families trying to keep siblings together or keep childcare logistics stable.
Demand signals are meaningful even without distance data. The latest recorded figures show 72 applications for 57 offers, which is around 1.26 applications per place. That does not mean every year is identical, but it does mean families should treat entry as competitive, get the application in early, use all available preferences rather than listing one school only, and make sure any supplementary steps (for example, where applicable for faith places across the borough) are handled correctly.
Applications
72
Total received
Places Offered
57
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
Pastoral care is described as a strength in the most recent inspection material, with pupils supported to develop resilience, independence, and curiosity, and to talk about feelings and celebrate difference. Safeguarding is also described as effective, with clear training and procedures.
Inclusion is a prominent part of the school’s public messaging and practice. The inspection evidence highlights early identification of needs and personalised support for pupils with SEND, and notes very positive parental confidence in that support. That is reinforced by the way the school describes specialist and nurture-style provision on its website, including structured groups designed to help children with transitions, regulation, and social confidence.
It is worth asking, in a calm and practical way, how these supports work day to day. For example, how a child is referred into a nurture or lunchtime group, what success looks like after a half term, and how staff communicate strategies for home as well as school. That tends to be where a strong infant setting makes the biggest difference, because early habits form quickly.
Extracurricular life at infant level works best when it is simple, practical, and inclusive. There is evidence of that here. The inspection report notes a range of clubs including sports clubs, a construction club, and a pom-pom making club, alongside trips and community links.
The school also publishes examples of after-school clubs for Year 1 and Year 2, including Art Club, Sports Club, Singing and Dancing, and Stitch and Style Club. Clubs are listed as running from the end of the normal school day at 3:15pm to 4:15pm, which can be useful for working parents planning pick-up routines.
A final, distinctive thread is how reading is turned into an activity rather than a test. The inspection material describes “treasured texts” as a driver for writing, and the school’s published curriculum approach reinforces a storytelling-rich culture. For many pupils, that is what creates the early habit of choosing books willingly, not just reading because they have to.
After-school clubs for Years 1 and 2 are published as running 3:15pm to 4:15pm. Beyond that, exact daily start time and any breakfast or full wraparound childcare hours are not clearly published in a single, definitive timetable, so families should confirm routines directly before committing to work schedules.
For travel, this is a local infant school serving the Short Heath area of Willenhall within Walsall. Most families will be walking or arriving by car for drop-off, so it is sensible to allow extra time for residential streets and to follow the school’s guidance on safe drop-off behaviour.
Competitive entry. Recent demand data shows more applications than offers (72 applications for 57 offers). That is not extreme, but it does mean late applications are a risky strategy.
Infant to junior transfer still needs planning. Even with a federation pathway, Year 3 transfer is a formal application round in Walsall. Families should diarise deadlines early and not rely on assumptions about automatic progression.
Phonics pace is an area to ask about. External evaluation points to occasional missed chances to move some pupils through the phonics programme quickly enough. It is a fixable issue, but parents should ask how rapid progress is identified and supported.
Wraparound detail needs checking. After-school clubs are clear, broader childcare hours are less clear in one place online. If wraparound is essential, confirm the current offer before you accept an allocation.
This is a small infant school with a clear values-led identity and a strong emphasis on early reading and language. The best-fit families are those who want a Church of England ethos, a calm, caring culture, and a curriculum built around stories and well-chosen themes. Admission is the obstacle rather than what follows, so families considering it should plan applications early and treat deadlines as non-negotiable.
The latest full inspection (20 and 21 June 2023) judged the school Good across overall effectiveness, quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership, and early years. The same evidence describes high expectations for behaviour and a strong focus on reading and phonics.
Applications are made through Walsall Council’s coordinated admissions process, not directly through the school. The published on-time deadline is 15 January 2026, and offers are issued on 16 April 2026.
No. The school is explicit that nursery attendance does not automatically lead to a Reception allocation. Families still need to submit a separate Reception application through the local authority process.
Published clubs for Years 1 and 2 include Art Club, Sports Club, Singing and Dancing, and Stitch and Style Club. Inspection evidence also references clubs such as construction club and pom-pom making, alongside trips and community links.
Many families look to the federation’s junior partner for Year 3, but Year 3 transfer is still part of the local authority admissions round and needs a timely application. Walsall’s published timeline confirms that infant-to-junior transfers follow the same national closing date and offer day as Reception admissions.
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