Ludham Primary School and Nursery

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School report

Inspection of a good school: Ludham


Primary School and Nursery
School Road, Ludham, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk NR29 5QN

Inspection date: 5 May 2023

Outcome

Ludham Primary School and Nursery continues to be a good school.

What is it like to attend this school?

Children get off to an extraordinarily good start in the early years. They access a well-
conceived, well-resourced and welcoming indoor and outdoor learning environment. Staff
use every opportunity to ensure that children are thoroughly prepared to move on to Year
1.

As they get older, pupils continue to enjoy their learning including through trips and visits.
Pupils learn to read quickly and enjoy books, stories, rhymes, poems and songs. Those
who need extra support to catch up in their reading get precise and effective support
from well-trained staff. Pupils particularly enjoy reading with Bertie the dog.

The value of ‘kindness’ underpins how most pupils treat each other. When a few pupils
struggle to regulate their behaviour, staff deal with issues calmly, kindly and effectively.
Pupils say that staff are also good at helping to solve their disagreements. Some pupils
say it takes a little while to solve bullying disputes but they trust staff to help them. Pupils
feel and are kept safe.

Older pupils are exemplary role models for younger pupils. They enjoy taking on
responsibilities, such as eco-councillors, digital leaders, school councillors and house
captains. Pupils also enjoy the opportunities they get to celebrate each other’s successes,
for example during the weekly celebrations assemblies.

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

In the last 18 months, leaders and governors have worked hard to improve the
curriculum. They have sought external guidance and specialist expertise to do this. From
Nursery through to Year 6, most of this curriculum is planned in detail, organised logically,
appropriately resourced, and delivered successfully by staff. Staff proactively seek support
and training to deliver the intended curriculum, including in those few subjects where
formal written planning is still in development. As a result, pupils access a range of high-
quality learning opportunities. They learn and achieve well.
Staff deliver the school’s chosen phonics and reading programmes very well. They are
trained and provided with resources to deliver these programmes effectively. Staff are
adept at identifying and supporting pupils who are struggling. Pupils learn to read quickly
and fluently. This starts with the youngest children in the Nursery and Reception class.

Since taking on the role, the special educational needs coordinator has worked quickly to
identify pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND). She has
significantly improved the school’s engagement with external agencies to try and get
additional support for pupils with the most complex needs. She provides staff with a good
range of information and strategies about how best to help pupils on a day-to-day basis.
Staff use these strategies appropriately. Most pupils access lessons successfully and learn
well.

For some pupils with less complex needs, leaders are not considering all relevant and
appropriate information when planning provision, setting targets or reviewing pupils’
progress. Leaders do not know how well they are supporting the full range of these
pupils’ needs.

Leaders and governors are unequivocal about the importance of investing in pupils’ wider
well-being. This includes well-organised training for staff, leaders and governors in a
range of different programmes to support pupils’ mental and emotional health, including
through outdoor learning. These programmes are supporting pupils, especially those who
need additional support, to communicate and interact more effectively with one another.

Pupils value the importance of respect and kindness. This learning plays an integral role in
how they treat each other and staff throughout the school day and others in the wider
world. Pupils are listened to. Their views are taken seriously. For example, leaders have
amended the curriculum as a follow up to some pupils’ recent concerns about bullying.

Staff collaborate proactively with each other to best support pupils in their care. They feel
well supported by leaders to manage their workload, and feel that leaders are mindful of
their work-life balance. Most pupils, parents and staff are effusive in the improvements
brought since the headteacher arrived. Most parents feel that leaders and staff go above
and beyond to support their children.

In more recent months, there have been some short-term staffing absence and
governance changes. Leaders, governors and staff have worked closely to cover day-to-
day arrangements and to continue to develop the curriculum. However, leaders and
governors have not been able to develop aspects of their monitoring as they intended. On
occasion, they are overtly reliant on information provided to them, without sufficient
checks and balances on the accuracy of this information. This is especially the case in the
delivery of the new curriculum.

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Safeguarding

The arrangements for safeguarding are effective.

Leaders ensure that appropriate pre-employment checks are made on any adults who
work with pupils. Some minor administrative issues with the record of these pre-
employment checks were resolved while inspectors were on site.

Leaders have ensured that there is good-quality staff training about how to be vigilant to
signs of concern. Staff are proactive and vigilant to pupils’ needs or changes in their
behaviour. They pass on their concerns to leaders appropriately.

Leaders work effectively with external professionals and agencies to ensure that action is
taken to keep pupils safe. On occasion, record-keeping is less detailed than it should be.

Leaders have ensured that there is a focus on how pupils keep themselves safe, including
online.

What does the school need to do to improve?

(Information for the school and appropriate authority)

 Guidance to staff on how to support pupils with SEND focuses on the day-to-day. There
is not precise guidance about what success in the short and long term will be for pupils
with less complex SEND, and how this will be achieved. Leaders should ensure that the
‘assess, plan, do, review’ process is fully developed and includes all relevant
information. This should support all stakeholders, including leaders, to have a better
understanding about where pupils are faring well, and when they need more precise
support.
 In some aspects of their work, leaders and governors’ monitoring systems are not fully
developed. This includes in areas such as the single central record checks, in the
delivery of the newer aspects of the curriculum, and on in-class interventions. Leaders
and governors need to establish monitoring systems to ensure that they have a
precise, accurate and up-to-date picture of provision.

Background

When we have judged a school to be good, we will then normally go into the school
about once every four years to confirm that the school remains good. This is called an
ungraded inspection and it is carried out under section 8 of the Education Act 2005. We
do not give graded judgements on an ungraded inspection. However, if we find evidence
that a school would now receive a higher or lower grade, then the next inspection will be
a graded inspection, which is carried out under section 5 of the Act. Usually this is within
one to two years of the date of the ungraded inspection. If we have serious concerns
about safeguarding, behaviour or the quality of education, we will deem the ungraded
inspection a graded inspection immediately.

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This is the second ungraded inspection since we judged the school to be good in
December 2013.

How can I feed back my views?

You can use Ofsted Parent View to give Ofsted your opinion on your child's school, or to
find out what other parents and carers think. We use information from Ofsted Parent View
when deciding which schools to inspect, when to inspect them and as part of their
inspection.

The Department for Education has further guidance on how to complain about a school.

Further information

You can search for published performance information about the school.

In the report, 'disadvantaged pupils' refers to those pupils who attract government pupil
premium funding: pupils claiming free school meals at any point in the last six years and
pupils in care or who left care through adoption or another formal route.

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School details

Unique reference number 120830

Local authority Norfolk

Inspection number 10286262


Type of school Primary

School category Community

Age range of pupils 3 to 11

Gender of pupils Mixed

Number of pupils on the school roll 111

Appropriate authority The governing body

Chair of governing body Carol Willoughby

Headteacher Andrea Goreham

Website www.ludham.norfolk.sch.uk

Date of previous inspection 10 November 2020, under section 8 of the


Education Act 2005

Information about this school

 There have been three headteachers since the previous inspection. The current
headteacher joined the school in January 2022.
 School leaders are not currently making use of any alternate provision.

Information about this inspection

 This is the first routine inspection the school has received since the COVID-19
pandemic began. Inspectors discussed the impact of the pandemic with leaders and
have taken that into account in the evaluation of the school.
 Inspectors conducted deep dives in these subjects; early reading, mathematics and
history. For each deep dive, inspectors discussed the curriculum with the subject
leaders, visited a sample of lessons, spoke to adults teaching and/or supporting pupils,
reviewed pupils’ work and spoke to pupils about their learning. Inspectors also
considered aspects of other subjects on the school’s curriculum.
 Inspectors held discussions with the headteacher and other senior leaders. Inspectors
also spoke to local authority officers and an external adviser commissioned by school

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leaders. The lead inspector met with several members of governing body, including the
chair and vice chair.
 Inspectors considered a range of documentation provided by school leaders, including
documentation related to safeguarding and recruitment checks made on staff.
 There were no responses to Ofsted’s survey for pupils. To gather evidence about pupils’
experiences, inspectors observed them at different times during the school day, spoke
to them during free times, and met with groups of pupils.
 The inspector also took account of 22 responses to Ofsted’s online survey for parents,
Parent View, including comments in the free-text facility. Inspectors also spoke to
parents at the end of the school day.
 To gather the views of staff, the inspector took account of 13 responses to Ofsted’s
survey for staff and spoke to groups of staff during the inspection.

Inspection team

Kim Pigram, lead inspector Ofsted Inspector

Clare Gammons Ofsted Inspector

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The Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted)
regulates and inspects to achieve excellence in the care of children and young
people, and in education and skills for learners of all ages. It regulates and
inspects childcare and children's social care, and inspects the Children and Family
Court Advisory and Support Service (Cafcass), schools, colleges, initial teacher
training, further education and skills, adult and community learning, and education
and training in prisons and other secure establishments. It assesses council
children's services, and inspects services for children looked after, safeguarding and
child protection.

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