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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
One-form entry can be a sweet spot for families who want a smaller setting where staff know children well, and routines stay consistent from Nursery through Year 6. Featherstone Academy is a state primary serving the Featherstone area of Wolverhampton, with places from age 2 to 11 and around 256 places overall.
The latest Ofsted inspection, published 24 May 2023 following visits on 28 and 29 March 2023, judged the school Good across all areas, including early years.
In academic terms, the 2024-25 / 2025 Key Stage 2 picture is secure, with 70% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The story behind that number matters, because it suggests that many pupils have the basics secure by the end of Year 6, while the school sits around the stronger side of the national midpoint on FindMySchool’s current primary rankings.
For admissions, the school is state-funded, so the practical reality for families is timing and criteria, not fees. For September 2027 Reception entry in Staffordshire, applications close on 15 January 2027, with offers on 16 April 2027.
A school can feel calm or hectic largely through what happens at the margins of the day, arrival, playtime, lining up, moving between spaces. The evidence here points to orderly habits and clear expectations, with pupils described as calm around school and supported by adults to play games well at breaktimes. Responsibility roles are part of the culture, not just an add-on, with examples such as playtime monitors helping younger pupils manage routines, and pupil groups taking on community-facing tasks.
The school’s library appears to be a genuine focal point for pupil life rather than a seldom-used room. Pupils describe it as the heart of the school and choose to spend breaktimes reading there, which is a useful indicator for families prioritising reading culture and quiet spaces during the day.
Featherstone offers provision from age 2, so the early years atmosphere matters. The inspection evidence supports the idea of high expectations starting early, including attention to phonics from Nursery, and a structured approach to transition between early years phases into key stage 1.
A note on leadership information, because parents often care about stability. The Department for Education’s official records names Mrs Kate Steatham as headteacher or principal. The school website contains older leadership references, so families who want the most current staffing picture should treat the DfE listing as the baseline and then confirm the wider leadership team directly with the school.
For a primary, the cleanest headline is the combined expected standard measure at the end of Year 6.
70% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset.
At the higher standard, 10% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
Scaled scores show a consistent profile: reading 104, maths 104, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 102.
Those figures imply that the typical pupil outcome is above the England benchmark in the core areas, and that a meaningful minority reach higher attainment too. The practical implication for families is that if your child benefits from structured teaching and clear fundamentals, the end of primary outcomes suggest the school can deliver that for many pupils.
The ranking context is now stronger than the older wording suggested. Featherstone’s FindMySchool primary academic ranking places it 5,046th out of 14,978 schools in England, while the overall primary ranking places it 5,860th. Locally, it ranks 35th in Wolverhampton for primary outcomes. These proprietary rankings based on official data point to a school on the stronger side of the national midpoint, with subject strengths in reading and GPS high-score measures.
If you are comparing local options, use FindMySchool’s Local Hub and comparison tools to benchmark results side by side, and pay attention to whether a school’s strengths match your child’s needs rather than relying on a single metric.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
69%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The school’s strongest evidenced teaching thread is early reading. Phonics starts early, including in Nursery, and staff training is described as ongoing and purposeful. Systems are in place to spot pupils who are falling behind in reading and provide additional opportunities so that pupils catch up quickly.
Beyond reading and maths, the curriculum is described as well sequenced, with key knowledge and vocabulary mapped over time. Subject-specific vocabulary is not merely decorative, pupils can use it when talking about what they have learned. For parents, the implication is that lessons are likely to be anchored in explicit teaching, and that the school expects pupils to remember and use precise language, which can be reassuring for children who thrive with clarity.
The main improvement area in the inspection evidence is not about ambition, it is about how consistently teachers check what pupils have actually understood outside English and maths. Assessment is used effectively in core subjects, but not always used well enough in the wider curriculum to identify misconceptions before moving on. For families, this is a useful question to ask on a visit: how do teachers check learning in foundation subjects, and what happens when a child has gaps in understanding?
SEND identification and support are described as careful and structured, with pupils supported in class and learning alongside peers, often with additional resources such as vocabulary lists and planning tools.
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 primary, the school’s destination story is about transition to secondary rather than public exam pipelines. The practical reality for most families is that Year 6 leavers will move on via Staffordshire’s secondary admissions arrangements or neighbouring local authority routes, depending on home address and the secondary school system relevant to where you live.
What the evidence does support is readiness in core skills. With 70% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined in the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset, many pupils should leave Year 6 with the literacy and numeracy foundation that makes secondary transition smoother.
Families who are especially focused on the move to Year 7 should ask about transition work: liaison with receiving schools, any transition days, and how the school supports pupils who feel anxious about the change.
Featherstone Academy is a state school with no tuition fees. Entry is therefore about process, deadlines, and criteria.
Reception admission should be treated as a coordinated local-authority process rather than a school-only application. For September 2027 entry, the Staffordshire deadline is 15 January 2027 and offers are due on 16 April 2027, so families should treat accurate preferences and on-time submission as important.
For September 2027 Reception entry in Staffordshire, the local authority timetable is the key reference point: applications close on 15 January 2027 and offers are made on 16 April 2027. If you are applying from outside Staffordshire, the rule of thumb still applies, you apply through the local authority where your child lives, not where the school is located.
Nursery places can operate differently from Reception places, and the school website indicates that Nursery applications may be handled through a separate application route. Treat Nursery as its own admissions conversation, and confirm current deadlines and availability directly with the school.
Applications
40
Total received
Places Offered
29
Subscription Rate
1.4x
Applications per place
A useful pastoral indicator is whether pupils feel safe enough to report concerns and whether adults act consistently. The evidence here points to a school where bullying is addressed quickly, pupils feel safe, and trusted adults are identifiable. The most recent report confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Wellbeing also shows up in routines and behaviour. Pupils are described as calm and orderly, with adults actively supporting positive play at breaktimes, rather than simply supervising. That tends to suit children who benefit from structure and predictable adult presence, particularly in early years and lower key stage 2.
For pupils who struggle with behaviour, consistency matters more than slogans. The evidence suggests staff support is consistent for pupils who need help managing behaviour.
Small schools sometimes struggle to offer breadth. Here, the evidence points to deliberate efforts to broaden pupils’ experiences, including trips to art galleries and museums, and a set of after-school clubs.
Named pupil leadership and community groups are part of the picture. The eco-council example is concrete, with pupils taking responsibility for local litter picks and fundraising connected to the local community. For parents, the implication is that personal development is not confined to assemblies, pupils have roles that put responsibility into practice.
The school also references structured pupil voice through bodies such as School Council, and wider participation frameworks such as Children’s University on its published information pages. These can matter for children who gain confidence through badges, roles, and incremental achievements beyond the classroom.
Wraparound provision is another part of the “beyond the classroom” picture. The Ofsted report notes that the school has a breakfast club and an after-school club. A linked provider page for Jigsaw’s Kids Club at Featherstone Academy describes breakfast club from 7:45am until the start of school and after-school club running until 5:45pm. Families should confirm current pricing and booking arrangements directly, as wraparound models can change year to year.
Featherstone Academy is in Featherstone, Wolverhampton, with an age range from 2 to 11. As with many one-form entry primaries, drop-off, pick-up, and parking can be the daily friction point, so it is worth checking the school’s expectations around arrival routines and whether there are preferred walking routes for local families.
Wraparound care exists via breakfast and after-school provision, which can be a significant help for working families.
One-form entry means smaller cohorts. This can be brilliant for continuity and relationships, but it also means fewer parallel friendship groups per year. For some children, that is stabilising; for others, it can feel limiting if peer dynamics become tricky.
Assessment consistency beyond English and maths. The improvement focus highlights the need for more consistent checking of understanding in foundation subjects. If your child is strong in core subjects but can be uneven elsewhere, ask how gaps are identified and addressed.
Admissions require timely planning. Families should treat the 15 January 2027 deadline and accurate applications as important for September 2027 Reception entry.
Early years information needs a current check. Nursery admissions and session structures often shift with demand and staffing. If nursery is central to your plan, confirm availability, hours, and how Nursery progression into Reception works in practice.
Featherstone Academy suits families who want a smaller primary with clear routines, a strong reading thread, and practical wraparound options. The current end of primary outcomes show many pupils leaving Year 6 with secure core skills, and the wider school culture includes real responsibility roles, not just token badges.
The right fit is a child who responds well to structure, values calm expectations, and benefits from explicit teaching, particularly in early reading. For families deciding between local primaries, the key due diligence is to ask how the school checks learning in foundation subjects and how it supports pupils who need additional challenge or catch-up outside the core.
Featherstone Academy was judged Good at its most recent inspection (published May 2023), including Good in early years. In the 2024-25 / 2025 Key Stage 2 dataset, 70% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, which suggests secure foundations for many pupils by the end of Year 6.
Reception applications are made through the local authority where your child lives. For Staffordshire, the on-time closing date for children starting in September 2027 is 15 January 2027, with offers issued on 16 April 2027.
The school serves children from age 2 and publishes Nursery information within its year-group structure. Nursery admissions can be handled differently from Reception, so families should check the current Nursery application route, deadlines, and session patterns directly with the school before assuming it mirrors Reception admissions.
Yes. The most recent inspection records both a breakfast club and an after-school club. A linked provider page for Jigsaw’s Kids Club at Featherstone Academy describes breakfast provision from 7:45am and after-school care running until 5:45pm, although families should confirm current arrangements directly as wraparound provision can change.
In the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset, 70% of pupils reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. Scaled scores were 108 for reading, 105 for maths, and 109 for grammar, punctuation and spelling, which indicates secure attainment across the tested areas.
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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Other nurseries and school nursery provision nearby.