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 first school that tries to do two things at once, and largely succeeds. It keeps expectations clear and routines tight, while also putting disproportionate energy into children’s confidence, feelings vocabulary, and play that is genuinely purposeful. The scale helps, this is a relatively small school (capacity 150) serving pupils from Reception to Year 4, with transfer to St Michael’s CE Middle School at the end of Year 4.
The latest Ofsted inspection (March 2023) judged the school Good overall, with Personal Development graded Outstanding. That split tells you a lot about the style here. Families looking for a first school where emotional development and positive behaviour are taught deliberately, not left to chance, will recognise the priorities quickly.
The school’s own values language is specific and used in day to day life: Respect, Reflect, Resilient. It is not just branding, the school explicitly says the values are used in conversations with children, and that time is built in for reflection and repair when behaviour slips.
That approach shows up strongly in how pupils talk about themselves as learners. In the 2023 inspection, pupils were described as understanding feelings and being able to describe them, with staff helping them to stay positive about learning. For parents, the implication is practical. Children who need help naming emotions, handling frustration, or bouncing back after a wobble are likely to find this culture supportive, because it is taught explicitly rather than treated as a vague aspiration.
Leadership is also unusually clear for a small first school. Mrs Sharon Staddon is the Executive Head Teacher, and the inspection report records her appointment as September 2022. A defined leadership team sits underneath, including a Deputy Headteacher for Teaching and Learning, which signals a school that takes pedagogy seriously, not just pastoral tone.
This review relies on the published performance results for attainment measures, and the available headline indicators for this school do not include Key Stage 2 figures. The most useful academic signal to lean on, therefore, is how clearly leaders articulate curriculum intent and how consistently teaching converts that intent into secure learning.
The 2023 inspection describes strong character work and a positive learning culture, alongside a specific improvement focus: in a small number of subjects, curriculum knowledge was not broken into small enough steps, and teaching could over focus on completing end tasks rather than securing precise knowledge. For parents, this is a helpful nuance. The school is not presenting itself as narrowly results driven, but it is expected to keep tightening sequencing and subject leadership so pupils build knowledge steadily, not in bursts.
Day to day learning is framed around consistency and core habits. The school sets out a daily commitment to reading and maths within its description of an average day, and the inspection’s description of pupil attitudes suggests that the basics of learning behaviour are well embedded.
Where the school looks most distinctive is how it tries to make “learning how to learn” explicit. In inspection evidence, pupils were described as collaborating well and supporting one another in discussion and tasks. That is usually a by product at this age, here it is treated as a taught skill. The likely upside is confidence in group work and talk rich lessons. The trade off, as the inspection makes clear, is that some foundation subjects still need sharper sequencing so that enthusiasm is matched by retention.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is a first school serving Reception to Year 4. Transfer is described by the school as taking place to St Michael’s CE Middle School at the end of Year 4, and both schools sit within Initio Learning Trust.
For parents, that clarity matters. It helps you plan the full local journey in the three tier system, and it makes it easier to ask practical questions early, for example about transition visits, curriculum continuity, and how support plans follow a child through to middle school.
Admissions are coordinated through the local authority, with Reception entry explicitly referenced for September 2026 starters. The school also signals a predictable pattern for visits, open days are typically in October and November, and tours are available during the Autumn Term.
Competition looks meaningful. Recent admissions figures show 105 applications for 30 offers, with the school described as oversubscribed. That equates to about 3.5 applications per place, which is high for a small first school and reinforces the need to treat timings and preferences seriously.
For 2026 entry specifically, the school’s published deadline is 15 January 2026, with on time offers on 16 April 2026. Late applications (16 January 2026 to 15 April 2026) are linked to offers on 14 May 2026. In year applications are also described as going via the local authority route.
93.1%
1st preference success rate
27 of 29 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
30
Offers
30
Applications
105
Pastoral systems are structured rather than improvised. The school’s ethos statement talks about explicit strategies to help children regulate and to bring down stress, and about repairing relationships after incidents so that adult child relationships stay positive.
Safeguarding is described in the 2023 inspection report as effective, with a culture of vigilance, agreed recording systems, and appropriate use of external agencies for support. For parents, the practical implication is confidence in the basics: children have trusted routes to raise worries, and leaders have oversight systems that are routinely checked.
This is an area where the school is unusually specific, which is always a good sign. The current club list includes Foundation Sports Fitness and Boxing, Kids With Bricks, Artikids, Dodgeball, Mini Handball, and Football. Bikeability Level 1 is offered every other summer, which fits the local first school age range and gives a practical life skill before transfer to middle school.
Outdoor play is treated as part of the educational offer rather than a break between lessons. The school reports achieving OPAL Platinum Standard on 8 July 2025, and describes playtimes with defined zones and resources, for example den building, mud kitchen, wheels, small world, and structured rough and tumble play. The implication for families is that break times are not left to chance, which can particularly suit children who need support with social play, confidence, or physical regulation.
The school gates open at 08:40 and the school day starts at 08:55, with pick up at 15:15. Lunchtime starts at 12:00 and is organised in sittings by year group.
Breakfast club is available via Colehill Nursery, running 07:45 to 08:45, priced at £4.50 per session. The school also references a range of after school clubs, although detailed timings vary by term, so parents should check the current club list when planning wraparound care.
A small first school can feel competitive at the entry point. With 105 applications for 30 offers in recent figures, admission is likely to be the main constraint for many families, especially those applying late.
Outdoor play is a major feature. OPAL playtimes and outdoor learning are central. That suits many children; families who prefer a quieter, more classroom weighted day should explore how much time is spent outside in different seasons.
Colehill First School suits families who want a small, structured first school where character education, emotional vocabulary, and high quality play are treated as part of the curriculum, not extras. The overall judgement and the Outstanding personal development grade point to a setting that takes wellbeing and behaviour seriously, while continuing to refine curriculum sequencing so learning is consistently secure across subjects. Entry is the hurdle; for families who secure a place, the early years experience is likely to feel purposeful and warm, with clear routines and plenty of opportunity to build confidence.
The latest inspection outcome is Good overall (March 2023), with Personal Development graded Outstanding. The school places strong emphasis on values, behaviour expectations, and character, alongside a broad curriculum and structured outdoor play.
Reception entry is via local authority coordinated admissions. The school publishes a closing date of 15 January 2026 for on time applications, with offers released on 16 April 2026. Late applications are linked to a later offer date.
Yes. Recent admissions figures show 105 applications for 30 offers, indicating strong demand relative to places.
Pupils transfer at the end of Year 4 to St Michael’s CE Middle School.
Breakfast club is available via Colehill Nursery from 07:45 to 08:45, priced at £4.50 per session. The school also references a range of after school clubs that vary by term.
Get in touch with the school directly
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