Prince Albert Junior and Infant School
Albert Road, Aston, Birmingham, West Midlands · B6 5NH
- Ofsted
- Not judged
- KS2 expected stdThe percentage of Year 6 pupils reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
- 79%
- Overall absence
- 7.0%
- Free school mealsFree School Meals: the share of pupils eligible for free school meals — a common measure of disadvantage.
- 52.4%
- Pupils per teacher
- 25.7
- Spend per pupil
- £5,800
- Places filled
- 108%
Feb 2025
Reading/writing/maths · 2024-25
2024-25
2024-25
2025-26
2024-25
715 of 665 places · 2025-26
Ofsted
Last inspected 25 February 2025
- Early years
- Outstanding
- Personal development
- Outstanding
- Quality of education
- Outstanding
- Behaviour and attitudes
- Outstanding
- Leadership and management
- Outstanding
SATs results (Key Stage 2)
End of primary · Year 6
Meeting expected standard (R/W/M)The percentage of Year 6 pupils reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined.↑ +1%
At higher standard (R/W/M)↑ +6%
Average reading scaled scoreKS2 SATs are converted to a scaled score; 100 is the expected standard, so an average above 100 is above the national benchmark.↑ +3
Average maths scaled scoreKS2 SATs are converted to a scaled score; 100 is the expected standard, so an average above 100 is above the national benchmark.↑ +3
Average grammar, punctuation & spellingKS2 SATs are converted to a scaled score; 100 is the expected standard, so an average above 100 is above the national benchmark.↑ +1
Progress since Key Stage 1 · 0 = average
Reading↓ -1.4
Writing↑ +0.6
Maths↑ +1.3
How this school compares
Against Birmingham (its local authority) and England · 2024-25
Meeting expected standardThe percentage of Year 6 pupils reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
+18.7% vs Birmingham average
Average reading scaled score
+3.7 vs Birmingham average
Average maths scaled score
+6.4 vs Birmingham average
Pupil makeup
Spring school census · 2024-25
- Free school mealsFree School Meals: the share of pupils eligible for free school meals — a common measure of disadvantage.
- 52.4%
- English as 2nd lang.English as an Additional Language: pupils whose first language is known or believed to be other than English.
- 65.5%
- SEN supportSpecial Educational Needs support: pupils who get extra help in school but do not have an Education, Health and Care plan.
- 2.1%
- With EHC planEducation, Health and Care plan: a legal document for children with more significant needs, setting out the support a council must provide.
- 17.2%
Gender split
325 girls · 390 boys
Ethnicity
Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.
How this school compares
Against Birmingham (its local authority) and England · 2024-25
Free school mealsFree School Meals: the share of pupils eligible for free school meals — a common measure of disadvantage.
+11.8% vs Birmingham average
English as 2nd lang.English as an Additional Language: pupils whose first language is known or believed to be other than English.
+30.4% vs Birmingham average
SEN supportSpecial Educational Needs support: pupils who get extra help in school but do not have an Education, Health and Care plan.
-9.1% vs Birmingham average
With EHC planEducation, Health and Care plan: a legal document for children with more significant needs, setting out the support a council must provide.
+2.2% vs Birmingham average
Attendance & absence
Share of school sessions missed
Overall absence rate↑ +2.9%
Persistent absenceThe percentage of pupils who miss 10% or more of their possible school sessions across the year.↑ +11.6%
Pupils missing 10%+ of sessions
How this school compares
Against Birmingham (its local authority) and England · 2024-25
Overall absence rate
-0.0% vs Birmingham average
Persistent absenceThe percentage of pupils who miss 10% or more of their possible school sessions across the year.
+1.9% vs Birmingham average
Suspensions & exclusions
As a percentage of pupils on roll
Suspension rateThe number of suspensions (fixed-period exclusions) expressed as a percentage of pupils on roll. A pupil can be suspended more than once.↓ -0.3%
Total suspensions as a share of pupils
Pupils suspended at least once↓ -0.1%
Share of pupils with one or more suspension
Permanent exclusion rateThe percentage of pupils permanently excluded (expelled) from the school during the year.→ +0.00%
How this school compares
Against Birmingham (its local authority) and England · 2024-25
Suspension rateThe number of suspensions (fixed-period exclusions) expressed as a percentage of pupils on roll. A pupil can be suspended more than once.
-2.4% vs Birmingham average
Permanent exclusion rateThe percentage of pupils permanently excluded (expelled) from the school during the year.
-0.05% vs Birmingham average
The local area
Neighbourhood context around the school in Birmingham
- Claimant rateThe share of residents aged 16–64 claiming unemployment-related benefits (the claimant count) — a timely local proxy for unemployment.
- 10.0%
- Recorded crimes
- 69
- Degree-level+
- 20%
April 2026 · England 4.1%
~1 mile · 6m to 2026-04
Residents 16+ · Census 2021
Crime by type
Street-level reports within ~1 mile · 6m to 2026-04
Area figures describe the neighbourhood around the school (LSOA/MSOA), not the school itself. Sources: ONS, Home Office (data.police.uk), MHCLG — Open Government Licence v3.0.
Data last updated 06/06/2026 · URN 142230