A junior school has one big job, it takes children part-way through primary and prepares them for secondary with confidence, strong basics, and growing independence. St Paul’s CofE Junior School does that with a notably high academic ceiling and a culture that places behaviour, kindness, and responsibility at the centre.
The most recent Key Stage 2 outcomes are strong. In 2024, 83% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with 62% across England. The school also has a meaningful “greater depth” profile, with 35% reaching the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, versus 8% across England.
This is a Church of England school for pupils aged 7 to 11, in central Wokingham. The latest Ofsted inspection (6 and 7 March 2024) judged it Good overall.
There is a clear sense of community responsibility here. Pupils are encouraged to see themselves as part of a wider whole, where each person matters and everyone is expected to contribute positively. The school’s published values set that tone, from kindness and listening, through to resilience, collaboration, and embracing difference and diversity.
Leadership opportunities begin early. Pupils can take on roles such as reading ambassadors, house captains and sports leaders, and there is also a peer support strand through well-being leaders. The idea is simple: pupils are not just recipients of a school experience, they help shape it.
Pastoral culture is reinforced through deliberate structures. One distinctive feature is the school dog, Nuala, described as a wellbeing dog for pupils, staff and the wider school community. The school also uses the dog’s presence as a way to talk about calmness, routines, and supporting others.
For a Key Stage 2 only setting, results matter because they indicate how securely pupils leave Year 6, especially in reading, writing and maths.
In 2024, 83% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with 62% across England.
35% reached the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England figure of 8%.
Reading scaled score: 108
Maths scaled score: 106
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 108
Reading expected standard: 88%
Maths expected standard: 77%
GPS expected standard: 84%
Science expected standard: 85%
These figures point to a school that performs well above England averages, and not only at the “borderline pass” level.
St Paul’s CofE Junior School ranks 2,781st in England for primary outcomes and 8th in Wokingham. This places it above England average, comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England.
Parents comparing nearby options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool to sense-check results side by side, rather than relying on reputation alone.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
82.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is built with ambition and specificity. In core areas, staff know what pupils must learn, and checking for understanding is systematic, so misconceptions are addressed quickly. English and mathematics are particular strengths, and pupils tend to respond well to clear expectations and timely feedback.
Reading is treated as a whole-school priority, with a sequenced approach and careful text choices designed to build vocabulary and comprehension. A practical nuance for parents is that while reading overall is strong, there is a defined improvement focus for a subset of pupils who need more precise practice in matching letters and sounds, so fluency catches up quickly enough.
The wider curriculum is not an afterthought. Inspection activity in 2024 included subject “deep dives” beyond the basics (reading, maths, history, art), which signals that leaders want consistency across subjects. The development area is about ensuring task design and teacher expertise is equally strong in every subject, not just the headline ones.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
Because this is a junior school (Years 3 to 6), the next move is into Year 7 at 11. In Wokingham, families typically weigh the local comprehensive secondary options alongside selective routes in neighbouring areas (where applicable), and practicalities such as travel time and friendship groups often matter as much as the headline performance data.
The most effective preparation tends to be broad rather than narrow: strong reading and writing stamina, solid number fluency, good learning habits, and the confidence to ask for help. Pupils who have practised leadership roles, collaborative work, and self-management are often more “secondary-ready” than those who have only focused on test technique.
Year 3 entry (age 7) is coordinated through Wokingham Borough Council. A crucial point for families at infant schools is that there is no automatic transfer into the linked junior school, you still need to apply.
For September 2026 entry, the council’s published key dates include:
13 November 2025: online admissions open
15 January 2026: deadline for applications and supporting information
16 April 2026: offer day
1 May 2026: deadline to accept the offer
15 May 2026: closing date for appeals to be heard together
The council also advises families to use designated areas (catchments) as part of the planning process, and to read each school’s admissions arrangements or oversubscription criteria when a school is oversubscribed.
Where catchment questions get technical, families should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check distance and boundaries precisely, then compare that to the council’s published allocation information for the relevant year.
Support is framed as part of the day-to-day culture rather than a bolt-on. Pupils are taught strategies to manage behaviour and understand how their actions affect others, and the social expectation is that older pupils model calm routines and respectful behaviour.
Safeguarding is treated as a non-negotiable baseline. The Ofsted inspection in March 2024 confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Alongside adult support, the school also builds peer capacity through pupil roles (including well-being leaders) and community language about kindness and inclusion, which matters for children who find friendships, confidence, or transitions harder.
Clubs and enrichment are a strong fit for this age range, because pupils are old enough to specialise a bit, but still benefit from trying unfamiliar things.
The school publishes a broad club programme. Examples include chess, running club, netball and badminton, plus more creative and specialist options such as Imagineering, Stop Motion, iRock, Brickies, drama club, and language clubs.
Wraparound provision is delivered through Junior Adventures Group, with breakfast and after-school sessions available on weekdays in term time.
The school week is published as 33.2 hours. Gates (Murray Road entrance) open at 8:30am and close at 8:40am, with registration no later than 8:50am. The school day ends at 3:30pm.
Wraparound care timings listed via the local authority directory are:
Breakfast club: 7:30am to 8:40am (weekdays, term time)
After-school club: 3:00pm to 6:00pm (weekdays, term time)
Travel and parking are worth planning. The school encourages walking where possible, and published guidance notes limited nearby parking and the use of a one-way system at pick-up and drop-off times.
Junior transfer is a real admissions round. If your child is in an infant school, you still need to apply for Year 3. Missing the deadline can change your options materially.
Reading catch-up is a specific improvement focus. Overall reading is strong, but a subset of pupils need more precise phonics practice to become fluent quickly enough. If your child has struggled with early reading, ask what the support pathway looks like here.
A Church of England ethos is present and explicit. The school places Christian distinctiveness and inclusive values at the heart of its identity, and families should be comfortable with that framing, even though the school explicitly welcomes families of all faiths and none.
St Paul’s CofE Junior School is a high-performing junior school with a strong behavioural and values spine, and outcomes that compare very favourably with England averages. It suits families who want a structured Key Stage 2 experience with clear expectations, plenty of chances for pupils to take responsibility, and a Christian ethos expressed through inclusion, kindness, and community contribution. The main hurdle for some families is navigating the Year 3 admissions round correctly and on time.
It is widely seen as a strong junior school academically, with 83% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in 2024 compared with 62% across England. The most recent Ofsted inspection (March 2024) judged the school Good overall.
Applications are coordinated by Wokingham Borough Council. For September 2026 entry, the on-time application window opened on 13 November 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
Wokingham uses designated areas (catchments) as part of admissions planning. Families should check which designated area they live in and read the admissions arrangements for the relevant year, as oversubscription criteria apply when a school has more applicants than places.
In 2024, 83% met the combined expected standard in reading, writing and maths, and 35% reached the higher standard. Scaled scores were 108 for reading and 106 for maths, both above typical national benchmarks.
Yes, breakfast and after-school provision is available on weekdays in term time. Published timings show breakfast club from 7:30am and after-school club running until 6:00pm, though families should always confirm arrangements for the current term when booking.
Get in touch with the school directly
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