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.
Perton Primary Academy is a state primary in Perton, serving children from age 2 through to Year 4, with most pupils moving on to local middle schools for Year 5. It is a relatively small setting by capacity, which tends to make day to day routines feel familiar for families, particularly across early years and Key Stage 1.
The school’s most recent inspection judgement is clear and consistent. The November 2023 Ofsted inspection rated the school Good for overall effectiveness, as well as Good in quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years.
For admissions, the data points in the local picture suggest competition for places at Reception entry, with 95 applications for 51 offers in the most recent admissions. That ratio usually translates into a process where timing, address stability, and criteria matter, even where a school feels community rooted rather than selective.
A distinctive feature is the wraparound and childcare offer, which is explicitly built into the school’s model, alongside an early years set up that begins at age 2 and includes a range of session options.
This is a school that places a lot of weight on shared language and belonging. The inspection evidence describes a warm and welcoming culture, with pupils’ behaviour typically meeting expectations and adults resolving disagreements quickly. The same report links that climate to high expectations for both learning and conduct, with pupils concentrating in lessons and talking enthusiastically about what they know.
The day to day feel is also shaped by the school’s age range. Because the provision includes pre school from age 2 and nursery from age 3, families often have a longer runway to get to know routines and staff well before Reception. Session patterns for early years are clearly set out, and the before and after school offer runs alongside it, which can reduce friction for working families who need consistent childcare around the school day.
Leadership is clearly identified in the official record. The headteacher is Victoria Jackson, and the inspection report states she joined the school in September 2022. The school is part of Staffordshire University Academy Trust, which frames governance and support structures beyond the site itself.
A practical, physical sense of the environment comes through most strongly in the school’s own descriptions. The website references twelve classrooms, a separate library cabin, a music area, a large playground, a sports field, and an outdoor classroom. It also states that Forest School is led by trained staff, which typically signals regular outdoor learning rather than a one off enrichment add on.
For this school, does not include published Key Stage 2 outcome measures or FindMySchool ranking positions, and the primary ranking flag indicates it is not currently ranked in that results. In practice, that means parents should avoid over weighting league table style comparisons for this specific profile and instead focus on curriculum quality, teaching consistency, and how well the setting fits their child’s needs and temperament.
A useful way to interpret this in parent terms is to translate what Good tends to look like at classroom level. The report describes pupils concentrating in lessons and enjoying their studies, which usually correlates with clear routines and predictable learning structures. It also notes that where curriculum organisation is strongest, pupils talk with depth about what they know, which is a marker for knowledge sticking rather than short term task completion.
The same report identifies a specific improvement priority around ensuring staff have the skills and knowledge to select and use learning activities and resources effectively to extend and challenge pupils. That is a meaningful detail for families with high attaining children, or those who need consistent stretch to stay engaged.
Curriculum intent and delivery are best understood here through a combination of inspection findings and the school’s own published emphasis on a broad offer, including computing access and outdoor education. The website states pupils have access to iPads and laptops to support computing curriculum links, which points to regular device use rather than occasional visits to a shared trolley.
The inspection narrative gives a more diagnostic view. When teaching sequences are coherent and activities align well to the intended learning, pupils can explain knowledge securely and with enthusiasm. Where sequence and activity choice are weaker, some pupils become muddled or cannot recall learning well enough. That pattern often shows up in schools that are developing subject leadership depth, particularly in foundation subjects, and it is one reason why parent conversations with leaders about curriculum organisation can be high value in a visit.
Early years is a particularly important part of this school’s identity. The childcare page references a refurbished nursery with sensory play equipment and dedicated outdoor areas, and that fits with an early years approach where provision is not treated as an add on but as a central phase.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school’s age range runs through to Year 4, transition happens earlier than in many primary models. The school states that most pupils transfer to middle schools within the area in Year 5, and specifically references Perton Middle School as the typical next step.
For families, this has two implications. First, it is worth understanding how Year 4 prepares pupils for the expectations of a Key Stage 2 curriculum that continues in a different setting. Second, it makes it sensible to research the likely middle school pathway at the same time as researching this school, since the “next school” decision arrives sooner.
For younger children, early years entry can be a form of soft transition. A child who starts in pre school or nursery is likely to experience a more gradual familiarisation with routines, adults, and expectations before Reception begins, which can matter for confidence and attendance patterns in the first term of formal schooling.
Perton Primary Academy sits in Staffordshire’s local authority admissions context, even though its postal town is Wolverhampton. For Reception entry, the school’s published information is unusually specific about the 2026 intake timetable. Applications for September 2026 open on 1 November 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with decisions issued on 16 April 2026 via Staffordshire County Council.
The admissions demand data for the Reception route suggests the school is oversubscribed, with 95 applications for 51 offers, and 1.86. applications per place In plain English, that implies roughly two applications per place offered in the snapshot provided, which can make proximity and criteria decisive.)
For early years places, the route is different. The admissions page states that applications for pre school and nursery are processed by the school office team, rather than through the local authority coordination used for Reception.
Parents trying to judge their chances should treat this as two separate entry points with different mechanics. If you are comparing several local options, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for reality checking travel time and day to day practicality, especially if you are balancing wraparound childcare against commuting.
100%
1st preference success rate
34 of 34 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
51
Offers
51
Applications
95
Wellbeing messaging at Perton Primary Academy is anchored to routine, behaviour expectations, and pupils feeling safe. The inspection evidence describes pupils as kind and considerate, with disagreements dealt with quickly by staff, which is the foundation for most primary wellbeing outcomes.
The report also references pupils’ understanding of being happy, healthy and safe, and an emphasis on mental health alongside physical health. For parents, it is worth listening for how that language translates into practice, for example how staff respond to friendship issues, how they support pupils who struggle with change, and how they handle repeat low level disruption so that classrooms remain calm.
Wraparound provision can also be part of a wellbeing picture, particularly for children who benefit from predictable transitions. The school publishes clear timings for breakfast club and after school club, and states that provision can extend to full day childcare hours for early years children when combined with those clubs, subject to demand and availability.
Extracurricular life at this school is structured across the year, with activities listed by half term. The published club programme includes specific, named options that go well beyond generic after school childcare.
Examples across the year include Makaton, Cross Country, Dance, Book Club, Story Rangers, Craft, Phonics Club, Forest School, Mentoring Club, Choir, Lego, Lego We Do, Mindfulness, Cooking, Outdoor Learning, Rounders, Gardening, and a Founders group.
The practical implication is choice and variety, but the more important question is fit. A child who thrives with movement and team activity has clear options such as cross country, rounders, and outdoor learning. A child who prefers quieter, language rich activities has book club, story based sessions, and phonics club in the mix. Music is also given explicit space, with choir appearing in multiple terms, and the school website references a music area plus peripatetic lessons in instruments and singing as paid options during the school day.
Forest School stands out as a recurring feature rather than a one off. The website states it is led by trained staff, and the club list reinforces that it appears as a named offer across terms. For many pupils, regular outdoor education supports confidence, language, and resilience, particularly for children who learn best through doing rather than extended sitting.
The published school day timings are clear. Breakfast club runs from 7:30am to 8:45am, the school day runs from 8:45am to 3:15pm, and after school club runs from 3:15pm to 5:30pm.
For term dates, the school has published its 2025 to 2026 calendar, including inset days and half term weeks. Autumn term begins on Tuesday 2 September 2025 and ends on Friday 19 December 2025, spring term begins on Tuesday 6 January 2026 and ends on Friday 27 March 2026, and summer term begins on Monday 13 April 2026 and ends on Friday 17 July 2026.
Travel and day to day access are usually straightforward in a local primary setting, but it is still worth planning for peak time congestion at drop off and pick up, especially if you are relying on wraparound care and need punctual transitions between childcare and the school day.
Earlier transition to middle school. This school runs through to Year 4, with most pupils moving to middle school in Year 5. That can suit families who like a staged transition, but it does mean researching the middle school pathway sooner.
Reception entry competition. The admissions shows 95 applications for 51 offers and labels the school oversubscribed. Families should assume that criteria and demand can make outcomes uncertain year to year.
Stretch and challenge consistency. The inspection highlights that in some areas, activity choice and sequencing do not always extend and challenge pupils as effectively as intended. For high attaining children, ask how leaders are tightening curriculum progression and ensuring consistent challenge.
Early years cost details. Nursery and pre school are part of the offer, but early years pricing and session availability can change; use the school’s official information to confirm current options, funding routes, and availability.
Perton Primary Academy offers a coherent early years to Year 4 journey, with clear wraparound childcare, a visible outdoor learning strand through Forest School, and a structured clubs programme that gives pupils real choice. The latest inspection profile is consistently Good across all major areas, and leadership stability since September 2022 provides a clear reference point for the school’s current direction.
Who it suits: families who want an early years pathway starting at age 2, value wraparound care as part of normal life, and prefer a smaller primary setting with a planned move to middle school at Year 5.
The most recent inspection judgement is Good across overall effectiveness and the main inspection areas, including early years. Families who value predictable routines, clear behaviour expectations, and a structured enrichment offer are likely to find it a strong fit.
Reception applications for September 2026 are published as opening on 1 November 2025 and closing on 15 January 2026, with decisions issued on 16 April 2026 via Staffordshire County Council.
Yes. The school publishes that pre school is available from age 2 and nursery from age 3, with defined session times and the option to combine early years attendance with wraparound clubs for longer childcare days. Exact early years pricing should be checked on the school’s official information.
Breakfast club is published as 7:30am to 8:45am, the school day as 8:45am to 3:15pm, and after school club as 3:15pm to 5:30pm.
The school states that most pupils transfer to middle schools in the area in Year 5, and references Perton Middle School as a typical next step.
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