St Stephen’s CofE School

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About St Stephen’s CofE School


Name St Stephen’s CofE School
Website http://www.st-stephens.lancs.sch.uk/
Inspections
Ofsted Inspections
Headteacher Ms Helen Wright
Address South Meadow Lane, Preston, PR1 8JN
Phone Number 01772556306
Phase Primary
Type Voluntary controlled school
Age Range 3-11
Religious Character Church of England
Gender Mixed
Number of Pupils 319
Local Authority Lancashire
Highlights from Latest Inspection

What is it like to attend this school?

Pupils, including children in the early years, are proud to attend this friendly school where everyone is made to feel welcome.

Pupils benefit from the kind and caring relationships that they have with staff and each other. This helps them to grow in confidence.

Pupils know that staff will always listen to any worries or concerns that they may have.

Pupils said that this helps to make the school a happy, safe and harmonious place.

From the moment that children join the early years they are encouraged to follow the St Stephen's Way. The school has high expectations for pupils' achievement and behaviour.

Pupils do their best to live up to thes...e expectations. They are polite, respectful, kind and gentle towards others. This creates a calm and purposeful atmosphere in which all pupils, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND), achieve well.

Pupils relish the wide range of leadership opportunities available to them. For example, pupils who act as representatives of the school council and those who act as 'values leaders' take their roles seriously. They know that they can make a difference to the lives of others.

Pupils understand that it is important to be diligent when they take on these extra responsibilities. They explained that these opportunities help to prepare them for life beyond school.

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

The school has designed a suitably broad and ambitious curriculum which meets the needs of pupils, including those with SEND, well.

Across subjects, the school has identified the key knowledge that pupils should learn and the order in which this content should be taught.

The school's unvalidated published data for 2023 shows that the proportion of pupils who met the expected standards in reading, writing and mathematics at the end of Year 6 was below the national average. A high proportion of pupils in this year group joined the school partway through the academic year.

As a result, some of these pupils joined the school too late in key stage 2 to benefit fully from the school's well-designed curriculum. In the main, current pupils achieve well across a range of subjects.

The school provides high-quality training so that teachers, for the most part, can deliver the curriculum effectively.

Teachers use their strong subject knowledge to explain new learning clearly to pupils. Added to this, teachers typically design activities that enable pupils, including children in the Reception Year, to remember the intended curriculum.

In most subjects, teachers use the school's assessment strategies well to identify gaps in pupils' knowledge and check their understanding of subject-specific vocabulary.

However, in a small number of subjects, these strategies are not used as effectively as they could be. This hinders some pupils from building their knowledge securely over time.

The school ensures that the additional needs of pupils with SEND are identified swiftly and accurately by well-trained staff.

Staff receive appropriate training to enable them to adapt their delivery of the curriculum to meet these pupils' needs well. This allows pupils with SEND to learn successfully alongside their classmates and achieve well.

Reading is a whole-school priority.

Staff read to children in the Nursery classes often and check that children understand the words in the stories that they hear. Reading areas in all classrooms are warm and inviting spaces. Pupils benefit from access to a wide range of high-quality books.

They said that they enjoy reading and they know that it is important to read widely and regularly. For example, class librarians encourage pupils to read more often by setting weekly challenges to inspire their peers to take part in a range of reading tasks.

Phonics begins as soon as children join the Reception classes.

Well-trained staff deliver the phonics programme consistently well. Pupils practise their reading with books that are suitably matched to the sounds that they know. Most pupils quickly become confident and fluent readers.

Those pupils who struggle to keep up with the phonics programme are given appropriate help by staff.

The school has established clear routines for pupils' behaviour. Pupils behave well in lessons and around school.

They are polite and welcoming. For example, pupils were keen to talk to inspectors about their learning. They understand the importance of respect and acceptance of those different to themselves.

Attendance remains a high priority for the school. Staff have taken effective action to reduce the number of pupils who are absent from school too often. The school ensures that, when necessary, pupils and their families receive carefully tailored support to improve their rates of attendance.

The school has an extremely well-thought-through programme of personal, social and health education that meets the diverse needs of pupils well. Pupils have a deep understanding of how to keep themselves healthy and safe, both physically and mentally. The school's values programme provides pupils with regular opportunities to celebrate diversity, both within and beyond its locality.

For example, older pupils spoke sincerely about how important it is to understand other cultures and faiths within school.

Governors know the school and its community well. They provide an appropriate balance of challenge and support to school.

The school has taken positive action to reduce staff's workload, for example by revising its assessment policy. The school also ensures that staff are provided with the resources that they require to fulfil their roles effectively.

Safeguarding

The arrangements for safeguarding are effective.

What does the school need to do to improve?

(Information for the school and appropriate authority)

• In a small number of subjects, the school has not ensured that some teachers use assessment strategies to identify the gaps in pupils' knowledge, including their understanding of some subject-specific vocabulary. This hinders some pupils when they come to apply this knowledge to more complex tasks. The school should ensure that, in these subjects, learning is designed so that pupils can revisit the knowledge that will be most useful for future learning.


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