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.
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.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 small primary with a big academic footprint, this is the kind of village school that feels personal and purposeful at the same time. With a published planned admission limit of 20 in each year group, pupils tend to be well known by staff, and routines can be consistent across the school.
Leadership stability is another anchor. Headteacher Catherine Souch took up post in September 2018, and the most recent inspection confirms the school continues to be Good.
Results are more mixed in the 2024-25 / 2025 data. In the latest KS2 figures, 60% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The school’s primary academic rank is 9,732nd of 14,978 schools, and it ranks 14th locally in the Witney area.
For families who need wraparound, breakfast and after-school care are offered on site, with published session times and prices.
The school’s identity is closely tied to its Christian vision and to the idea that every child matters. The parable of the lost sheep is used as a framing story for ethos and inclusion in formal reports, and it shows up repeatedly in how the school describes community life and expectations.
That ethos is not presented as “church on top of school”. Instead, it is used as a practical lens for daily behaviour, belonging, and how adults respond when pupils struggle. The 2023 inspection describes pupils as feeling safe, and it paints a picture of kind relationships, rare bullying, and confidence that issues will be taken seriously.
Because this is a small primary, terminology and routines can feel distinctive. Class names are used across the school, including Little Minster for Reception, then Dovecote, Wenrisc, Charterville, Cotswold, and Lovell through the year groups. For many families, that adds a sense of place and continuity, especially for children who respond well to familiar labels and structures.
The physical site is also part of its story. Local archive records note that a new school building, St Kenelm’s, was built on Wenrisc Drive in 1968. That makes it relatively modern by village-school standards, and it helps explain why the school is not centred on a single historic building footprint.
Faith is present in a way that is likely to suit many, but not all, families. A SIAMS inspection dated 14 October 2019 graded the school’s distinctive Christian vision as Good, and collective worship was also graded Good. The report links that to partnerships with local clergy and to the way worship and religious education are used to support spiritual and personal development.
The headline KS2 measure for many parents is the combined expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics. In the latest 2024-25 / 2025 data, 60% of pupils met that expected standard. That is a more modest profile than the previous headline suggested, so families should look at the subject breakdown rather than relying on one combined measure.
Depth matters too, but the current combined higher-standard figure is 0% for reading, writing and mathematics. In plain terms, the latest profile no longer supports a claim of an unusually high proportion working beyond the expected level by the end of primary.
Subject indicators also stack up strongly:
Reading: average scaled score 106, with 80% reaching the expected standard and 30% achieving the higher standard.
Mathematics: average scaled score 103, with 70% reaching the expected standard and 10% achieving the higher standard.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling: average scaled score 104, with 70% at the expected standard and 20% at the higher standard.
Science: 90% met the expected standard.
Parents comparing schools should treat these as one part of the picture. The strength here is the consistency across core measures, plus the unusually high “higher standard” proportion, which can be a marker of stretch and academic ambition alongside secure basics.
Rankings help contextualise that performance. The school ranks 9,732nd of 14,978 schools in England for primary academic outcomes, while the local Witney ranking is 14th. This is now a middle-to-lower national position rather than a top-quartile signal, so the latest results should be read with more caution.
If you are comparing several local primaries, the FindMySchool local hub and comparison tools can help you line up outcomes side by side, rather than relying on impression alone.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
57%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school’s own description of the day offers a useful clue about teaching priorities. Mornings are dedicated to English and mathematics, with afternoons used for topic-based learning that integrates subjects such as science, geography, history and art, alongside discrete provision in music, design and technology, Spanish, computing and physical education.
That structure can work well for children who benefit from a predictable rhythm. Concentrating literacy and numeracy earlier in the day can help maintain attention and reduce cognitive switching. It also gives space later for wider curriculum work where writing and reading can be applied in context, rather than taught only as isolated skills.
Curriculum ambition is supported by external evidence, with leaders described as having designed a broad curriculum and an enrichment programme that extends beyond the classroom. The important nuance is the improvement point: in some subjects, checks on how securely pupils have learned the intended curriculum were not yet systematic enough, leading to the risk of small gaps going unnoticed.
For parents, the implication is straightforward. If your child is confident in core subjects and enjoys topic learning, they are likely to thrive. If they need extra support in recalling or consolidating subject knowledge outside English and maths, it is worth asking how assessment is being strengthened across foundation subjects, and what that looks like in practice for your child’s year group.
Early reading looks like a clear strength. The 2023 inspection describes a carefully sequenced phonics approach from Reception, taught by staff with secure subject knowledge, with targeted support for pupils who need help to become fluent readers. That matters because early reading is one of the strongest predictors of later curriculum access.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
A high-performing primary still needs to prepare pupils for the social and organisational shift to secondary. In this case, leaders describe the curriculum as building in a logical sequence from Reception to Year 6, with the explicit aim of ensuring pupils are ready for the next stage.
Because this is a state primary in Oxfordshire, secondary transfer will be shaped by local authority arrangements and, for many families, catchment realities. The school’s own admissions page also signals that proximity becomes the final tie-break within categories, which is a useful reminder that location and transport planning often become more, not less, important over time.
If you want a more precise sense of realistic secondary options, start by mapping likely catchment patterns from your address, then cross-check with published secondary admissions rules. This is exactly where FindMySchool’s Map Search can be helpful, especially for families balancing several plausible routes.
This is a voluntary controlled primary, with admissions coordinated by the local authority rather than managed directly by the school. The school states it must follow the county admissions policy and that allocations are made by the county.
The intake size is small. Recent admissions evidence has indicated that demand can outstrip available places, so families should treat oversubscription as a real possibility and check the latest local authority allocation information before relying on availability.
Priority is described in the school’s admissions page as:
catchment with a sibling at the school
catchment
out of catchment with a sibling
out of catchment
Then, within those categories, proximity is used as the final decider.
For September 2027 Reception entry, Oxfordshire County Council publishes key dates: applications open on 3 November 2026, the deadline is 15 January 2027, and National Offer Day is 16 April 2027.
A practical point for summer-born children is explicitly noted on the admissions page: compulsory education begins in the term after a child’s fifth birthday, and there is scope for later full-time starts depending on birth season. Families considering deferred entry should read the county guidance carefully and talk it through early, because timing decisions can affect both transition and childcare planning.
Open events are not presented as fixed annual dates on the pages accessed, but the school encourages families to arrange a visit. If you are aiming for a future cohort, treat visits as something to organise in the autumn term before the January deadline, and confirm dates directly with the school.
Applications
49
Total received
Places Offered
20
Subscription Rate
2.5x
Applications per place
Pastoral care here is framed as both relational and systematic. In the most recent inspection evidence, classrooms are described as calm and purposeful, with staff supporting pupils to manage emotions so learning can happen without disruption. That kind of calm is especially valuable for children who find transitions hard or who need predictable adult responses.
Safeguarding is treated as a whole-school responsibility, with a clear safeguarding structure named on the school’s published safeguarding page. The latest Ofsted report confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
SEND support is positioned as inclusion first: pupils with additional needs are intended to access the same curriculum as peers, with staff adapting tasks and using resources so that barriers are reduced rather than accepted. For parents, the most helpful next step is usually to ask what “adaptation” looks like in your child’s class, for example, scaffolding, pre-teaching vocabulary, alternative recording methods, or small-group interventions.
Wellbeing information signposts external parenting support resources, which suggests the school sees parent partnership as part of the wellbeing plan, not an afterthought.
The extracurricular offer here is not framed as endless choice, but as well-chosen experiences that suit a smaller primary. The 2023 inspection notes a carefully designed enrichment programme and gives concrete examples of clubs and activities including handbells, karate and gymnastics.
Clubs listed on the school’s own pages also include structured after-school sport options. For example, the school promotes sessions such as tag rugby for Key Stage 2 and golf for Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2. The implication for families is that children can try something specialised without needing to travel to a separate club, which is often what makes the difference between “sounds good” and “actually happens weekly”.
A second strand is community-facing activity. The 2023 inspection describes pupils singing for elderly people at Christmas, which aligns well with the school’s stated emphasis on service, relationships, and contributing beyond the classroom. It is a small detail, but it tells you something about what the school chooses to celebrate.
The SIAMS report also links the school’s values to pupil leadership roles, including playground leaders supporting younger pupils at break times. For many children, those responsibilities become formative because they shift pupils from simply following rules to helping set the tone for others.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Families should still expect typical costs for uniform, trips, and optional clubs.
The published school day is structured as follows: gates open 08:35 to 08:45; morning session 08:45 to 12:00; lunch 12:00 to 13:00; afternoon session 13:00 to 15:15.
Wraparound care is available. Breakfast club runs from 07:45 until the start of school, and after-school care runs from 15:10 to 17:00 (with a shorter finish on Fridays). Session prices are published by the school.
For travel, the school sits in Minster Lovell near Witney. For many families, walking and short car journeys will be the norm, but it is worth stress-testing drop-off and pick-up logistics early, especially if you plan to rely on wraparound care or have a commute that makes punctuality tight.
Small intake, real competition. Recent admissions evidence suggests demand can outstrip supply, and oversubscription is part of the picture. Families outside the catchment, or without sibling priority, should plan with alternatives in mind.
Faith is integrated, not optional. As a Church of England school, Christian vision and worship are part of daily life, and external inspection has assessed that ethos directly. Families comfortable with this will likely appreciate the clarity; families seeking a more secular approach may prefer a different setting.
Assessment consistency across subjects is still a development area. The most recent inspection highlights that in some subjects the school was not yet checking learning systematically enough, which can allow small gaps to linger. Ask how assessment is being strengthened across the wider curriculum, not only in English and maths.
Wraparound is available, but it is paid. Breakfast and after-school provision is clearly set out, but costs add up over a term for families using it frequently. Check the published session structure against your weekly routine.
A mixed current KS2 profile, a stable leadership period since 2018, and a clear Christian ethos make this an option many local families will still want to consider carefully. The small planned intake supports a close-knit feel and consistent routines, and enrichment is tangible rather than vague, with specific clubs and community activity named in recent evidence.
Best suited to families who want a small village primary with above-average academic outcomes, clear values, and structured wraparound available when needed. The main constraint is admissions, because demand can exceed places.
Its current primary outcomes are more mixed, with 60% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics in the latest 2024-25 / 2025 data. The most recent Ofsted inspection (dated 1 November 2023, published 11 December 2023) confirms the school continues to be Good.
The school’s published admissions information refers to catchment priority, with siblings and catchment considered before out-of-catchment applicants, and proximity used as a tie-break within categories. For the precise catchment definition used in a given year, check the local authority’s published admissions rules and the school’s admissions page.
Yes. The school publishes a breakfast club running from 07:45 until the start of school and an after-school club running from 15:10 to 17:00 (with a shorter finish on Fridays), with set session prices.
Applications are coordinated by the local authority rather than the school. For September 2027 Reception entry, Oxfordshire’s published dates include applications opening on 3 November 2026, a 15 January 2027 deadline, and National Offer Day on 16 April 2027.
Christian vision and collective worship are central to the school’s identity as a Church of England voluntary controlled school. A SIAMS inspection dated 14 October 2019 graded the school’s Christian vision as Good and collective worship as Good, and it describes strong links with local clergy supporting worship and religious education.
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