Westende Junior School is a two-form entry junior school serving Years 3 to 6 in Emmbrook, Wokingham. It was established in 1974 and sits in mature grounds a short walk from Wokingham town centre.
Academic outcomes are a clear strength. In 2024, 80% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average of 62%. The higher standard picture is also strong, with 39% reaching the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with 8% across England.
The April 2025 Ofsted inspection graded Behaviour and attitudes as Outstanding and Personal development as Outstanding, with Quality of education and Leadership and management rated Good.
Respect, happiness and resilience are not presented as marketing lines here, they read as working values that shape daily routines and expectations. Pupils are described as focused, studious and enthusiastic about learning, and the wider tone is of a cheerful, busy junior school where children are expected to rise to high standards of conduct.
A practical feature that helps define the school is the sense of space. The grounds are repeatedly referenced in school materials, including outdoor classroom use and structured outdoor learning. The school also has a swimming pool, which becomes part of the annual rhythm, both through lessons and through family access organised via the parents’ association.
Leadership and pupil voice are visible strands. Pupils can take on structured leadership roles, and the house system listed for Year 6 includes Red Kites, Goldfinches, Nightingales, and Kingfishers. These details matter because they create legitimate responsibility rather than token jobs, and they tend to suit children who like purposeful roles and recognition for contribution, not only for attainment.
For families with children who need specialist support, Westende’s identity includes The Acorns, a specialist resource base for pupils with autism, designed around planned inclusion with mainstream classes alongside personalised learning when needed. This is not a bolt-on, it is described as part of the school’s core work and day-to-day organisation.
Westende’s 2024 key stage outcomes place it among the stronger state junior schools in England by performance measures.
80% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined; England average 62%.
39% reached the higher standard in reading, writing and maths; England average 8%.
Reading scaled score: 109.
Maths scaled score: 109.
Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 110.
Ranked 863rd in England and 2nd in Wokingham for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This places the school well above England average overall, in the top 10% of schools in England by this measure.
What this means for parents is that the typical pupil here is leaving Year 6 with secure basics and strong test performance. It also suggests that the school is doing more than getting pupils over a threshold, because higher-standard attainment is materially above the England picture, which usually reflects both teaching precision and consistent pupil habits.
A sensible way to use these numbers is comparison, not reassurance. If you are weighing Westende against other junior schools or all-through primaries in the Wokingham area, the FindMySchool local hub comparison tool can help you see outcomes side by side, using the same official data cut.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
80.33%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum breadth is treated as a priority, and the intent is for pupils to build secure knowledge across subjects, not simply to practise test technique. Teaching is described as emphasising and revisiting key knowledge so that pupils remember it and can apply it, which is particularly relevant in a junior school where pupils are moving from learning-to-learn into greater independence.
Reading is a clear strategic focus. The library is described as extensive and actively used, with regular visits and deliberate text choices intended to broaden pupils’ experiences and help them understand difference. This kind of approach usually suits children who enjoy choice and discussion about books, while also giving structure to those who need a clearer reading pathway.
A helpful nuance for parents is that Westende is a junior school, so it inherits pupils at age 7 with varied early reading backgrounds. A small number of pupils still require phonics teaching, and the improvement point in the most recent inspection is about making that support more consistent. For families with children who have had a wobbly start to reading, this is worth exploring in conversation with the school, including what the phonics approach is and how staff training is kept aligned across adults who deliver it.
Outdoor learning is also part of the teaching story, with a named Forest School lead and planned sessions linked to curriculum learning. That is not just a nice extra, it can be a meaningful lever for children who learn best through practical experiences, movement, and talk, especially in subjects like geography, history and science where concrete experience supports understanding.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Good
As a junior school, Westende’s core job is to prepare pupils for secondary education at 11. The strongest indicator of readiness is academic security plus the habits to manage a larger, more complex setting: independence, organisation and respectful behaviour.
The school’s leadership roles and structured responsibilities help with that transition, because pupils have repeated opportunities to practise being dependable, speaking up appropriately, and representing others.
For destination planning, families in Wokingham typically think in designated areas and admissions criteria rather than fixed feeder guarantees. Wokingham Borough Council provides a designated areas map, and parents can check which secondary schools sit within their address area.
If you are shortlisting secondaries early, it is worth using FindMySchoolMap Search to see how your address lines up with designated areas and historic allocation patterns, then treating that as a planning tool rather than a promise, because secondary admissions can move year to year.
Westende’s main point of entry is Year 3 (age 7). Applications for the September 2026 intake are made through your home local authority as part of coordinated admissions, not directly to the school. The published pupil admission number for Year 3 entry in September 2026 is 60.
Wokingham’s published schedule for junior school entry sets out these dates: online admissions open 13 November 2025, the national closing date is 15 January 2026, and offer day is 16 April 2026.
The admissions arrangements prioritise, in summary:
Children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school
Looked-after and previously looked-after children
Children with a verified medical or social need (with supporting evidence)
Children attending Wescott Infant School by the application deadline (a defined feeder link)
Children of eligible staff
Siblings at Westende or Wescott at the time of entry
Children in the designated area
Other applicants
Distance is used as a tie-break within categories, measured as straight-line distance using local authority mapping methodology.
What this means in practice is that Westende can feel particularly accessible for families already in the linked infant school community, while still remaining an option for designated-area families applying from elsewhere.
Demand varies each year, but the school publishes past allocation detail that gives a useful snapshot. For September 2022 Year 3 entry, the school received 85 applications for 57 available places, with the majority of offers allocated under the feeder link criterion. Use this as context, not a prediction for 2026, because cohort size and application patterns change.
For parents who want to plan realistically, the most practical approach is to combine three inputs: your designated area, whether you meet feeder or sibling criteria, and the local authority timetable. If you are comparing options, save your shortlist and track changes to admission arrangements each autumn, since deadlines come quickly.
The school’s wellbeing structure is unusually specific for a junior school, with roles referenced for emotional literacy support and a senior mental health lead in materials for new families. That is reassuring for parents who want pastoral support to be visible and named, not simply implied.
Behaviour expectations are high, and the culture described is one where pupils treat each other kindly and welcome new children successfully. That kind of baseline matters for learning because it reduces low-level disruption and makes it easier for anxious pupils to settle.
Safeguarding is a non-negotiable for any family decision, and the inspection confirmed the school’s safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For children with additional needs, the combination of mainstream adaptation and The Acorns resource base offers a clearer pathway than many junior schools can provide. The Acorns has 14 full-time places for pupils aged 7 to 11, accessed through local authority decision-making processes and with specified criteria linked to autism and inclusion potential.
Westende’s co-curricular offer leans heavily into both sport and creative activities, and it is specific enough to feel like a real programme rather than a generic list.
From the clubs and activities information, examples include Gymnastics Club, Parkour Club, Sideways Drama, Sewing Club, and Djembe Drum Club, alongside football provision delivered through Reading FC community channels.
The school also runs a rich set of curriculum-linked trips and experiences by year group. For example, the published Year 3 to Year 6 plan includes RHS Wisley, Marwell Zoo, Winchester Science Museum, Oxford Castle, and residential trips such as Ufton Court (Year 5) and Devon (Year 6). The implication for families is that learning is routinely extended beyond the classroom, which can be especially motivating for pupils who learn best through real contexts and shared experiences.
Sport is supported by facility and culture. Alongside a multi-use games area and extensive grounds, the swimming pool is a genuine asset, both for lessons and for family access at set times through the swimming association. That tends to suit families who value confidence in water and want swimming to be normal rather than occasional.
The school day is structured and clearly timed: gates open 8:30am, registration at 8:50am, and the school day ends at 3:15pm.
Wraparound childcare is available, with breakfast club running 7:30am to 8:30am and after-school club options running to 6:00pm.
Lunch is offered as either packed or hot lunch; published information for new families includes a charge of £2.40 from September (as stated in the school’s Year 3 information pack).
Location-wise, the school describes itself as on the eastern side of Wokingham and within walking distance of the town centre. For day-to-day routines, that often makes walking a realistic option for nearby families, while those driving will want to understand drop-off expectations and any parking guidance set by the school.
Junior-only entry. With entry starting at Year 3, your child’s early primary experience will have been elsewhere. Transition planning matters, especially for children who need longer to settle into new routines.
Reading support consistency. The school prioritises reading, but the improvement point in the latest inspection is about ensuring phonics support is consistently delivered for the small number of pupils who still need it. Parents of children with weaker early reading should ask how this is organised and monitored.
Admissions criteria can be decisive. Feeder link, sibling status, designated area, and distance are all meaningful levers in allocation. Families outside the strongest criteria should build a realistic plan B early.
The Acorns is a separate pathway. The Acorns resource base is a specialist provision with its own criteria and local authority decisions. It is not a simple in-school support add-on, so families considering it should start discussions early with their SEND caseworker.
Westende Junior School combines strong academic outcomes with a behaviour culture that is unusually settled for a busy junior setting. The co-curricular programme, outdoor learning, and swimming provision add meaningful breadth, while the presence of The Acorns strengthens the school’s capacity to include pupils with autism in a planned, structured way.
Best suited to families who want a high-expectations junior school with clear routines, lots of enrichment, and a calm learning climate. The key challenge is aligning your admissions criteria and timeline with Year 3 entry, especially if you are not coming through the feeder route.
For many families, yes. Outcomes at the end of Key Stage 2 are well above England averages, with 80% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in 2024. The April 2025 inspection profile also points to strong day-to-day culture, particularly around behaviour and personal development.
Apply through your home local authority using the coordinated admissions process for junior school entry. For September 2026 entry, the national closing date is 15 January 2026, with offers released on 16 April 2026.
The Acorns is a specialist resource base for pupils with autism, with 14 full-time places for children aged 7 to 11. Pupils are on roll in a mainstream class, with planned inclusion alongside targeted support, and entry is organised through local authority SEND processes.
Yes. Published information for new families includes breakfast provision from 7:30am to 8:30am and after-school club options running until 6:00pm.
Get in touch with the school directly
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