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-only setting (Years 3 to 6) that has clearly tightened routines and expectations in recent years. The latest Ofsted inspection (13 and 14 December 2023, published 29 January 2024) judged the school Good across all areas, with safeguarding effective.
Academically, the headline Key Stage 2 picture in 2024 is encouraging, especially for combined reading, writing and maths, where 79.67% reached the expected standard, compared with the England average of 62%.
The distinctive feature is specialist support within a mainstream context. The on-site Autism Support Centre (ASC) is an enhanced provision for 12 pupils, designed to help autistic pupils with an Education, Health and Care Plan access mainstream learning with structured support, regulation time, and gradual increases in classroom participation.
The school’s own language centres on “Growing Minds…Unlocking Potential”, with a values set that includes Teamwork and Friendship, Exploring and Learning, Bravery and Honesty, Love and Kindness, and Love of Life and Our World. These are the sort of values that work best when they translate into predictable routines, consistent adult responses, and pupils who understand what good conduct looks like.
That translation is visible in the latest inspection narrative. Pupils are described as rising to clear expectations and behaving well around the school and in lessons; a calm, purposeful feel is reinforced by structured support for social and emotional needs and by adult guidance when behaviour wobbles.
Leadership is presented to parents as a joint endeavour. The school website sets out a co-headteacher model, naming Mr D Sheehan and Mrs M Harrington. The inspection report also references co-headteachers Daniel Sheehan and Maxine Harrington, and notes that two new co-headteachers were appointed since the previous inspection.
A final element of “feel” is pupil responsibility. The Pupil Parliament framework includes elected representatives and a wider set of roles, such as Playground Buddies, House and Sports Captains, Assembly Monitors and Librarians. For many pupils, these roles are the first structured taste of responsibility beyond the classroom, and they can be a useful signal of a school that wants pupils to take ownership of the community, not just comply with rules.
Witham Oaks Academy is a Key Stage 2 provider, so the most useful lens is end of primary attainment and the underlying scaled scores.
In 2024, 79.67% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with the England average of 62%. At higher standard, 14.67% achieved greater depth across reading, writing and maths, above the England average of 8%.
The supporting indicators point to a broadly positive profile:
Reading scaled score: 104
Mathematics scaled score: 102
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 104
On the combined high score measures, the proportions reaching high scores include 21% in reading, 17% in maths, and 19% in GPS.
In FindMySchool’s primary ranking (based on official outcomes data), the school is ranked 10,432nd in England and 5th in Witham for primary outcomes. This sits below England average overall, in the lower performance band (60th to 100th percentile).
How to read that as a parent: the attainment percentages and scaled scores suggest many pupils are doing well at the expected standard, and the higher standard figure is above England average, but the broader comparative ranking indicates that, across the full results and method, the school is not yet consistently outperforming the wider system. Families comparing nearby options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to view these measures side by side, and to sanity-check what matters most for their child.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
79.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The strongest evidence here is around curriculum construction and classroom practice. The most recent inspection describes an ambitious curriculum that is carefully constructed and becomes more complex as pupils move through the school. It gives a concrete example in history, where older pupils independently research the American civil rights movement because they have learned how to conduct historical research.
The implication is twofold. First, this is a junior school that is thinking beyond immediate test preparation and is building disciplinary knowledge and methods, such as historical enquiry. Second, the sequencing point matters for pupils who arrive in Year 3 from varied infant settings. A carefully constructed curriculum with explicit foundations can reduce the chance that gaps from earlier years silently widen.
Teaching is described as clear and underpinned by strong subject knowledge, with adults checking pupils’ understanding and whether they remember what they have been taught. Teachers are also said to correct misconceptions quickly. For pupils, the practical experience of that should be lessons that do not drift, with regular retrieval and a sense that teachers notice when learning has not landed.
Reading is treated as a core priority. The inspection report describes a carefully structured reading curriculum and effective extra support for pupils at an early stage of reading, or those who find reading difficult, so that they catch up with peers. Adults regularly read to pupils to widen exposure to books. The implication for families is that weaker readers arriving into a junior setting are less likely to be left to muddle through, and stronger readers should still see reading as a daily, valued habit.
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 junior school, the next step is secondary transfer at the end of Year 6. Admissions for secondary places are coordinated through Essex County Council and follow a separate timetable from primary and junior admissions. The Essex secondary application deadline for September 2026 entry is 31 October 2025.
What matters at this stage is not only the eventual destination school, but the readiness pupils have for Year 7 expectations. The inspection evidence points to pupils being attentive and well behaved, comfortable talking to adults when worried, and used to routines of good conduct. Those are the foundations that usually make secondary transition smoother, especially for pupils who find change difficult.
For pupils with SEND, the school’s stated approach is mainstream inclusion with additional support where needed. pupils with SEND achieve well alongside peers and that needs are identified quickly, with adaptations made promptly and effective collaboration with external agencies. For families of autistic pupils, the ASC model is explicitly designed to increase mainstream lesson attendance over time, while keeping a supervised safe space and timetabled regulation built into each pupil’s day.
Witham Oaks Academy is an academy within Inspires Multi-Academy Trust.
Essex County Council’s primary admissions booklet for September 2026 explicitly covers transfer from infant to junior school in Essex. Applications open on 10 November 2025 and the national closing date is 15 January 2026. National offer day is 16 April 2026.
The practical implication is straightforward. If you are planning a Year 3 start (junior transfer) for September 2026, you should work to the 15 January 2026 deadline, even if you are still visiting schools. Where distance matters in a given year, families should use FindMySchool Map Search to check their address precisely, then cross-reference with the admissions policy and the Local Authority’s current guidance.
For in-year moves, the school asks families to download and complete its application form, submit it to the admissions email, and notes that applications will be processed within 15 school days. If a place is not available, the child is added to a waiting list ranked according to the admissions policy.
The oversubscription criteria listed by the school are, in order: looked after and previously looked after children; siblings; children living in the priority admission area; then remaining applications.
The inspection evidence is strong on day-to-day safety and belonging. Pupils are described as feeling safe and happy, confident about talking to an adult if worried. Safeguarding is judged effective.
A useful specific is the reference to daily “Meet and Eat” sessions, described as popular and helping pupils feel settled and ready to learn. Programmes like this typically matter most for pupils who arrive dysregulated, anxious, or socially uncertain, and they can make the difference between a child who tolerates school and one who is ready to learn by mid-morning.
For pupils who need additional help with behaviour, the report describes clear adult guidance and well-tailored support for social and emotional needs, valued because it helps sustain a calm, purposeful learning environment.
For autistic pupils with an EHCP, the ASC approach is explicitly regulation-aware. It includes supervised safe space access, timetabled regulation time, visual timetables tailored to interests and needs, and planned increases in mainstream lesson time as barriers reduce.
A junior school’s extracurricular offer can easily become generic, so it is worth focusing on what is explicitly evidenced.
Leadership and citizenship are given real weight. Pupil Parliament is positioned as active citizenship and positive contribution to the wider community, with elected representatives working alongside senior leaders. Beyond that, pupils can apply for structured roles including Playground Buddies, House and Sports Captains, Assembly Monitors and Librarians. The implication is that pupils who enjoy responsibility, or who need a defined role to feel part of the community, have multiple routes to belonging.
Environmental action is also explicitly branded. The Eco Team describes a remit to improve the school environment and reduce the carbon footprint, with simple routines such as turning lights and taps off, plus a pupil-facing “School ECO system update” presentation. For many pupils, this kind of team is the first time “doing the right thing” is linked to a shared project rather than a classroom rule.
The inspection report adds a broader enrichment layer, referencing carefully thought-out trips and memorable experiences that enrich the curriculum and contribute to wider development, plus a range of clubs, “particularly in sports”.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
The school day officially starts at 8.45am and ends at 3.20pm, with pupils able to arrive from 8.35am.
YMCA Essex operates on-site before and after school provision. Breakfast Club runs from 7.30am, and After School Club runs from 3.00pm to 6.00pm. The school also describes a YMCA walking bus between Witham Oaks Academy and Acorn Academy. Session pricing is listed on the school’s wraparound care page.
Most families will consider walking routes and local road access around Spa Road, plus rail and bus links within Witham for longer commutes. For families relying on wraparound, the early start and 6.00pm finish can materially change travel feasibility.
Junior-only intake can be a big reset. Joining in Year 3 means pupils arrive from different infant schools with uneven foundations. The curriculum is described as carefully sequenced, which helps, but families should still ask how the school assesses gaps on entry and how quickly support is put in place.
Subject leadership consistency is still developing in places. The inspection notes that while many subject leaders know their areas well, a few do not yet have the full depth of understanding to evaluate how well the curriculum is working and to support teachers as intended. This is specific, fixable, and worth asking about when visiting.
ASC placements are structured and criteria-led. The ASC is an enhanced provision for 12 pupils and placements require autism diagnosis, a finalised EHCP with autism as primary need, and the cognitive ability to access mainstream curriculum with support. Requests go via annual review and are considered by the Essex Autism Panel. This will suit some families extremely well, and be unsuitable for others whose child needs a different specialist pathway.
A junior school that reads as more settled and more consistently managed than it was at the previous inspection cycle, with a Good Ofsted outcome across the board and effective safeguarding. Academic outcomes at the expected standard are a clear strength in 2024, and reading support is described as structured and effective.
Best suited to families who want a structured junior-phase experience with clear routines, pupil responsibility opportunities, and, for a small number of pupils, a distinctive autism enhanced provision designed to increase successful mainstream access over time.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (13 and 14 December 2023, published 29 January 2024) judged the school Good overall, with Good grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. Safeguarding was judged effective.
For September 2026 transfer from infant to junior school in Essex, applications open on 10 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with offers issued on 16 April 2026.
Yes. The school has an Autism Support Centre (ASC), an enhanced provision for 12 pupils designed to support autistic pupils with an EHCP to access mainstream learning, with a safe space, structured interventions, regulation time, and a plan to increase time in mainstream lessons over time.
The official start is 8.45am and the school day ends at 3.20pm. Pupils can arrive from 8.35am.
Yes. YMCA Essex operates on-site wraparound provision, with Breakfast Club from 7.30am and After School Club from 3.00pm to 6.00pm during term time (excluding bank holidays).
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