St Francis CofE Primary School

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About St Francis CofE Primary School


Name St Francis CofE Primary School
Website http://www.stfrancis.swindon.sch.uk
Inspections
Ofsted Inspections
Headteacher Mrs Hester Millsop
Address Aiken Road, Taw Hill, Swindon, SN25 1UH
Phone Number 01793727624
Phase Primary
Type Voluntary aided school
Age Range 3-11
Religious Character Church of England
Gender Mixed
Number of Pupils 451
Local Authority Swindon
Highlights from Latest Inspection

What is it like to attend this school?

Pupils at St Francis CofE Primary describe the school as a friendly place where there is something for everyone. They talk confidently about how the school's values help them to develop a love of learning, be kind and appreciate what makes everyone unique.

Pupils respond well to the new systems that are in place to promote positive behaviour.

They understand and follow the school rules, both in and outside the classroom. This starts in the Nursery, where children are polite and respond well to the routines that are in place. Pupils enjoy earning bronze, silver and gold tokens when they work hard or behave well.

Staff build positive relationships with pupils. ...This helps pupils feel safe. Pupils say that adults are kind and willing to listen.

As a result, they trust adults to help them with any worries or concerns they may have.

Pupils participate in a wide range of clubs and sporting opportunities, such as football, gardening and cooking. They are keen to take on responsibilities by becoming house captains, assembly monitors and play rangers.

Pupils say these roles build their confidence and give them a sense of achievement.

What does the school do well and what does it need to do better?

The school has a clear vision for what all pupils can achieve. An ambitious and broad curriculum has been designed well.

It makes clear the precise knowledge and skills that pupils need to learn and when.

The school prioritises teaching pupils to read. Staff and pupils share a love of reading.

Pupils read a range of texts with increasing fluency and accuracy. They say that reading helps them to create new worlds in their minds.

As soon as children start in the Nursery, adults help them to develop their language and communication skills.

Children in the Reception Year benefit from this positive start. They learn and remember new sounds well. The school ensures that the books that pupils read are well matched to the sounds they are learning.

This helps them to gain confidence and fluency. If pupils fall behind, they receive the support they need to help them to catch up quickly.

Teachers develop pupils' mathematical understanding well.

They explain new concepts clearly and model mathematical vocabulary effectively. This starts in the early years, where children confidently use words such as 'bigger' and 'taller' when comparing objects. As they move through the school, pupils build on this.

For example, older pupils use their mathematical knowledge well to solve more complex problems involving line graphs.

In some wider curriculum subjects, the school is developing the systems to check on what pupils know and remember. Assessment in these areas is not yet used well enough to identify gaps in learning or to deepen pupils' understanding.

For example, in computing, while some pupils can recall their current learning about databases, others struggle to remember what they have learned before about creating simple computer programmes. This hampers the progress that some pupils make through the curriculum.

The school has effective systems in place to identify the needs of pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND).

Adults know these pupils well. Most individual support plans are precise and routinely reviewed. Adaptations to learning enable most pupils with SEND to progress well through the curriculum.

Pupils show positive attitudes to learning. They take pride in their work and are eager to share their learning with adults. Pupils across the school play well together.

They enjoy the range of activities available to them during social times that develop their teamwork skills and creativity. Attendance is a high priority for the school. Any pupil absence is followed up quickly.

When pupils do not attend often enough, the school takes appropriate and swift action to address this.

The school supports pupils' personal development well. Pupils develop a mature understanding of different faiths and cultures.

They talk confidently about protected characteristics. Pupils know why tolerance is important in the modern world they live in. There are numerous opportunities for pupils to learn new skills during the enrichment days.

As a result, pupils are very well prepared for life in modern Britain.

Governors have a clear understanding of their responsibilities. They use this understanding well to support and hold the school to account.

Staff value the training they receive, which helps them to deliver the curriculum well.

Most parents speak highly about the school. Many comment on the school's role in the local community and the positive start children make.

However, some parents feel that their concerns are not considered carefully enough.

Safeguarding

The arrangements for safeguarding are effective.

What does the school need to do to improve?

(Information for the school and appropriate authority)

• Assessment is in its infancy in some wider curriculum subjects.

Sometimes, it is not used well enough to check that pupils have remembered the knowledge they have been taught. As a result, some pupils have gaps in their knowledge and do not build their knowledge well over time. The school needs to ensure that assessment is used effectively across all subjects and use this information to inform future learning.

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