Biddick Hall Infants' School
Catchment Area, Reviews and Key Information

Primary
PUPILS
238
AGES
3 - 7
GENDER
Mixed
TYPE
Community school
SCHOOL GUIDE RATING
Not Rated

Can I Get My Child Into This School?

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This pupil heat map shows where pupils currently attending the school live.
The concentration of pupils shows likelihood of admission based on distance criteria

Source: All attending pupils National School Census Data, ONS
0191 424 7746

This School Guide heat map has been plotted using official pupil data taken from the last School Census collected by the Department for Education. It is a visualisation of where pupils lived at the time of the annual School Census.

Our heat maps use groups of postcodes, not individual postcodes, and have naturally soft edges. All pupils are included in the mapping (i.e. children with siblings already at the school, high priority pupils and selective and/or religious admissions) but we may have removed statistical ‘outliers’ with more remote postcodes that do not reflect majority admissions.

For some schools, the heat map may be a useful indicator of the catchment area but our heat maps are not the same as catchment area maps. Catchment area maps, published by the school or local authority, are based on geographical admissions criteria and show actual cut-off distances and pre-defined catchment areas for a single admission year.

This information is provided as a guide only. The criteria in which schools use to allocate places in the event that they are oversubscribed can and do vary between schools and over time. These criteria can include distance from the school and sometimes specific catchment areas but can also include, amongst others, priority for siblings, children of a particular faith or specific feeder schools. Living in an area where children have previously attended a school does not guarantee admission to the school in future years. Always check with the school’s own admission authority for the current admission arrangements.

3 steps to help parents gather catchment information for a school:

  1. Look at our school catchment area guide for more information on heat maps. They give a useful indicator of the general areas that admit pupils to the school. This visualisation is based on all attending pupils present at the time of the annual School Census.
  2. Use the link to the Local Authority Contact (above) to find catchment area information based on a single admission year. This is very important if you are considering applying to a school.
  3. On each school page, use the link to visit the school website and find information on individual school admissions criteria. Geographical criteria are only applied after pupils have been admitted on higher priority criteria such as Looked After Children, SEN, siblings, etc.

How Does The School Perform?

Good
NATIONAL AVG. 2.09
Ofsted Inspection
(03/11/2022)
Full Report - All Reports



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Galsworthy Road
Biddick Hall County Infant School
South Shields
NE34 9JD
01919330830

School Description

The leadership team has maintained the good quality of education in the school since the last inspection. Since taking up headship in September 2016, you have focused resolutely on the pupils in your care. You have a steely determination to secure the best possible outcomes for each and every pupil, in terms of their well-being and academic achievement. The pastoral team that you have put in place supports pupils and their families effectively. Pupils make very good progress in their personal, social and emotional development. You have also ensured that pupils’ basic skills in reading, writing and mathematics develop apace. Pupils are polite, confident and very cheerful. They feel well looked after in an environment that you have made inclusive and welcoming. Their behaviour is good and their attitudes to learning are excellent. You are extremely proud of the community that you serve and your commitment to building positive partnerships with families is evident. You have introduced various innovative means of keeping parents and carers better informed about the school’s work and their children’s progress. Several parents told the inspector that you and staff are in the playground every morning, and are always available to answer their questions or listen if they want to talk. The vast majority of parents who spoke with the inspector, or responded to Ofsted’s survey, feel assured that their child is happy, safe and making good progress under your compassionate and watchful eye. Parents were excited at the prospect of sports day and disappointed that the inspection got in the way. Many are hopeful that it can be rescheduled. Your aspirations for improvement are high yet realistic. While teaching and learning are good, you envision them evolving further. For example, you quite rightly believe that pupils deserve opportunities to read more regularly with adults in school. You are raising the profile of reading and are developing a new library area to entice and excite pupils into becoming life-long readers. You seek the highest possible quality of teaching and learning and expect the utmost effort from everyone in school. You feel that it is important to lead by example and therefore strive to model high expectations consistently. Governors and staff are fully committed to your ambitious vision because you have communicated your aims in a clear, convincing manner. Teachers told the inspector that, ‘children and families are at the heart of our values.’ Staff feel proud to be a part of your team. They are excited about the picture you paint for the future. One adult’s comment encapsulated the wider views of staff under your leadership: ‘I have never felt more challenged, supported or had such high expectations placed upon me.’ You have tackled recommendations from the previous inspection with success. Alongside governors and other leaders, you monitor the quality of teaching and learning in all classes in a fair and transparent manner. You secure good-quality training and professional enhancement opportunities for staff. They value and appreciate your investment in them. Most adults have their individual development needs addressed effectively. Teachers know precisely where their strengths lie and what they need to do to improve their skills and knowledge further. Teachers’ expectations of what pupils can do and achieve have risen as a result of your endeavours. You have correctly identified that you now need to tighten procedures for managing the performance of other adults working in classrooms. You seek to pinpoint the contributions that they make to pupils’ learning and outcomes more precisely. The previous inspection report also challenged you to strengthen improvement planning. On your appointment, you worked diligently with senior leaders and the local authority to create development plans that focused on the correct priorities. You set targets that secured good outcomes for all groups of pupils. Careful evaluation of the school’s progress across the year means that leaders are well prepared to build upon these gains. The capacity for further improvement is good. You have rekindled teachers’ passion for the wider curriculum by restructuring the leadership team and defining roles and responsibilities clearly. Supported by your two recently appointed assistant headteachers, subject leaders now insist that all statutory subjects such as science, geography, history, music and art, feature prominently in teachers’ planning. The leaders of English and mathematics monitor teaching and learning closely, keeping a careful note of pupils’ progress each term. They have rapidly improved the accuracy of their assessment, which you found had previously been overgenerous. Several subject leaders report their findings to you and governors. However, not all subject leaders are confidently tracking pupils’ progress against the national curriculum requirements in their areas of responsibility. You agree that subject leaders need to accurately capture and evaluate pupils’ progress and outcomes across the foundation subjects. Safeguarding is effective. Safeguarding arrangements are robust. Checks on the suitability of adults working with pupils are thorough. Staff scrutinise the identification of any visiting adults carefully for authenticity, informing visitors of the safeguarding arrangements they must abide by on site. The site is secure and kept in very good condition, meaning it is hazard free. You are particularly mindful of the need to keep pupils safe and free from harm. Staff and governors benefit from regular training which equips them with the information and awareness needed to protect pupils effectively. Adults know the signs to look out for in their duty to care for pupils and are appropriately vigilant. You have tightened record keeping procedures. Staff understand and adhere to the systems you have put in place; records are well maintained and appropriately detailed. Along with your team, you are fully committed to ensuring that families and pupils get the individual attention they need, when they need it. Your work with external agencies attests to this; you signpost families to other services and promptly secure additional support where needs arise. Your decision to appoint family support workers enhances this aspect of the school’s provision. The range of subtle day-today actions that you and your pastoral team take in your work with families demonstrate the importance that you place on pupils’ safety and well-being. Inspection findings Staff respect pupils and pupils know that their opinions count. The vast array of playtime resources and equipment that you have invested in are highly valued by pupils. The six-hole golf course and outdoor reading and writing materials are particular favourites. Pupils’ warm, positive relationships with you and staff are notable. Several pupils during the inspection said that the staff were one of the best things about their school. Staff play, chat and interact with pupils sociably during break times. One pupil’s view captured the opinions expressed by several: ‘I love our teachers… they help us learn.’ You are a strong advocate of positive behaviour management techniques and have embedded a culture whereby staff manage pupils’ behaviour in an encouraging and enabling manner. Pupils understand the need for rules, what these entail and, on those rare occasions of misbehaviour, the consequences. As a result, pupils behave in a friendly and respectful manner around this calm, welcoming environment. Pupils’ social, emotional and personal needs are met effectively. A large proportion of pupils enter the early years with skills of communication, language and literacy that are below those typically expected for their age. You and staff work diligently to address this area of need. Your aim is to foster a life- long love of reading in pupils. You have ensured that staff and parents have regular access to information and training in the teaching and learning of phonics and early reading. Teachers and additional adults articulate clearly the sounds that letters make. They introduce new, increasingly demanding vocabulary and technical terminology to expand pupils’ knowledge and skills. Several parents told the inspector that reading homework is regular and appropriate. Working with your English leader, you are examining the amount of reading opportunities and the range of reading materials that staff offer pupils. Pupils who read to the inspector did so with skills appropriate to their age and stage of development. You have, however, quite rightly identified that some pupils need to read more frequently with adults in school. You and your pastoral team carefully scrutinise patterns and rates of pupils’ attendance. Together, you have tackled individual issues that have led to some pupils being too regularly absent from school. Your work is paying off; fewer pupils are now hindered in their learning and development by poor attendance. In 2016, the proportion of pupils who were regularly absent was 13.7%. This figure has dropped to 9.4%. You are mindful that your work in this area needs to continue if attendance rates are to improve and match averages seen nationally. With this in mind, you have recently employed an additional adult to start in September 2017 to support and challenge pupils and families further. Teaching and learning are good. Teachers make clear to pupils the precise focus and purpose of the learning taking place. They explain new concepts and vocabulary carefully to pupils and address promptly misconceptions where these arise. Most adults are skilful in their use of questioning to assess pupils’ understanding and to encourage pupils to think deeply about their learning. Pupils’ attitudes to learning are splendid; their perseverance and ability to concentrate for sustained periods of time are particularly impressive. Teachers usually make good use of additional adults to support pupils’ progress. At times, however, additional adults wait for teachers’ direction and/or fail to intervene promptly to support and challenge pupils in their learning. You agree and have already begun to investigate means of managing the performance of additional adults more robustly. Next steps for the school Leaders and those responsible for governance should ensure that: pupils have increased opportunities to read regularly with adults in school procedures for managing the work and performance of additional adults are tightened subject leaders closely track the progress and achievement of pupils across the wider curriculum. I am copying this letter to the chair of the governing body, the regional schools commissioner and the director of children's services for South Tyneside. This letter will be published on the Ofsted website.

Biddick Hall Infants' School Parent Reviews



unlock % Parents Recommend This School
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>68, "agree"=>25, "disagree"=>4, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>4} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>71, "agree"=>25, "disagree"=>4, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>0} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>39, "agree"=>46, "disagree"=>4, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>11} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
My Child Has Not Been Bullied Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"my_child_has_not_been_bullied"=>75, "strongly_agree"=>0, "agree"=>7, "disagree"=>4, "strongly_disagree"=>4, "dont_know"=>11} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>50, "agree"=>39, "disagree"=>11, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>0} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
I Have Not Raised Any Concerns Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"i_have_not_raised_any_concerns"=>39, "strongly_agree"=>32, "agree"=>18, "disagree"=>11, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>0} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>60, "agree"=>10, "disagree"=>0, "strongly_disagree"=>10, "dont_know"=>20} UNLOCK Figures based on 10 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>46, "agree"=>43, "disagree"=>0, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>11} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>46, "agree"=>43, "disagree"=>7, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>4} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>46, "agree"=>36, "disagree"=>11, "strongly_disagree"=>4, "dont_know"=>4} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>64, "agree"=>32, "disagree"=>0, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>4} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>50, "agree"=>32, "disagree"=>4, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>14} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Don't Know {"strongly_agree"=>50, "agree"=>46, "disagree"=>0, "strongly_disagree"=>0, "dont_know"=>4} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022
Yes No {"yes"=>89, "no"=>11} UNLOCK Figures based on 28 responses up to 03-11-2022

Responses taken from Ofsted Parent View

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