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SchoolsCambridgeElsworth CofE VA Primary School|Best Primary Schools in Cambridge
State School

Elsworth CofE VA Primary School

Broad End, Elsworth, Cambridge, CB23 4JD·Cambridgeshire·URN: 110830A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Primary
Mixed
Ages 4-11
Church of England
Primary Ranking
2,801
Academic
Based on 2025 KS2 results
Based on 2025 KS2 results
2,825
Overall
Combines KS2 results with Ofsted-based inspection score
Combines KS2 results with Ofsted-based inspection score
12
Local
FMS Inspection Score

The FMS Inspection Score is FindMySchool's proprietary analysis based on official Ofsted and ISI inspection reports. It converts ratings into a standardised 1–10 scale for fair comparison across all schools in England.

Disclaimer: The FMS Inspection Score is an independent analysis by FindMySchool. It is not endorsed by or affiliated with Ofsted or ISI. Always refer to the official Ofsted or ISI report for the full picture of a school’s inspection outcome.

Excellent
7.6/10
Application Demand
100%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewPrimaryOfstedApplication DemandAttendance Heatmap

Last reviewed: January 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Elsworth CofE VA Primary School Review 2026: A small village primary with strong Key Stage 2 outcomes

At a Glance

Small schools live or die on relationships, and the most convincing detail here is how often responsibility is shared out. Older pupils take on roles such as eco-council members and junior travel ambassadors, and the school’s outdoor learning is structured enough to run regularly across year groups.

Academically, the picture remains above average. Key Stage 2 outcomes are secure across the main measures, and the current FindMySchool overall primary ranking places it 2,825th of 14,978 schools in England. The latest inspection confirms the school remains Good (inspection date 04 May 2023).

Character & Atmosphere

This is a primary where being known matters. The most recent official evaluation describes a close-knit culture, with pupils positive about belonging to a small school where they feel accepted and cared for. That sense of familiarity shows up in how the school organises daily life, including mixed year group classes, which tend to sharpen peer support and encourage older pupils to model routines for younger ones.

The school is Church of England, but it is not framed as an insiders-only community. Collective worship and church links are part of the rhythm of the year, and school materials emphasise respect for other faiths alongside the Christian foundation. The recent inspection also highlights weekly visits from the reverend as part of assemblies and curriculum life, with an explicit focus on compassion, justice, and celebrating difference.

Leadership is stable and visible in day-to-day safeguarding and pastoral systems. The school’s published staff information names Mrs Elizabeth Bennett as headteacher and designated safeguarding lead. Local community information indicates she took up the headteacher post in September 2021, which matters in a small setting because expectations and routines are typically shaped quickly by a single consistent lead.

A final identity point is history, which the school itself foregrounds through anniversary work. A school newsletter marking the 70th anniversary states the school opened in 1954, and pupils used the celebration to compare learning then and now. That long local continuity is often attractive to families who want a village school that feels anchored rather than transient.

Results / Academic Performance

Key Stage 2 outcomes are the main academic indicator for a primary, and they are a clear strength.

In the 2025 dataset, 80% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. The higher-standard figure is now more modest, with 10% reaching greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics. That still points to a secure core-skills picture, but with less exceptional stretch than the previous dataset suggested.

The component measures back this up. Reading, mathematics and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores are all strong, and the proportions reaching the expected standard across those subjects sit at a level consistent with a school where core skills are taken seriously.

Rankings help parents compare like-for-like locally. Ranked 2,801st of 14,978 schools in England academically and 12th in Cambridge for primary outcomes, this places the school within roughly the top fifth nationally (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). Families comparing nearby schools can use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages and comparison tools to see how these outcomes stack up across the local area.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

Reading, Writing & Maths

77%

% of pupils achieving expected standard

Teaching & Learning

Two things stand out in the most recent evaluation of teaching. First, reading is treated as a priority, with leaders introducing a systematic phonics and reading programme and building regular reading into daily practice. Second, staff training is used to improve consistency, particularly in core subjects.

For parents, the practical implication is usually consistency. In a small school, it only takes one uneven approach to create gaps between cohorts. Here, the evidence points in the opposite direction, staff have shared training, subject leadership, and routines intended to reduce variation from class to class.

There is also a clear development edge. The inspection highlights that curriculum work in some foundation subjects was still being refined, especially around making key concepts and prior learning explicit so that pupils build secure long-term knowledge. That is worth knowing if you have a child who thrives on clearly sequenced content, because the direction of travel is positive, but the work is ongoing.

Outdoor learning is not a token add-on. Forest School is described in school materials as a structured programme focused on collaboration, confidence, and practical skills that then transfer back into classroom learning. The prospectus sets out a regular pattern (Reception weekly, Years 1 to 6 every four weeks), which is more credible than ad hoc outdoor days.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:7.6/10Excellent

Quality of Education

Good

Behaviour & Attitudes

Outstanding

Personal Development

Good

Leadership & Management

Good

FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.

Read the official Ofsted reportWhat do Ofsted reports mean?

Where Pupils Go Next

As a village primary, the main transition is into local state secondaries serving this part of Cambridgeshire. The school does not publish a single named destination list in the material reviewed for this report, so parents should expect the usual mix, catchment-linked secondary places plus choices shaped by transport and family preference.

What the school can influence, and does appear to take seriously, is readiness for the next stage. The emphasis on reading, secure core skills, and pupil responsibility (eco work, travel ambassador roles, school council involvement) tends to translate well into Year 7 expectations: organisation, independence, and confidence speaking up.

If you want a practical next step, Cambridgeshire’s admissions guidance is clear that families should research catchment implications and understand how local criteria work. In this context, it is sensible to shortlist likely secondary options early and then check distances and transport patterns in parallel.

Admissions: How to Get In

Admissions are shaped by two overlapping realities: it is a small school with a published admission number of 20 per year group, and demand can exceed that, even in a rural setting. The school’s admissions information states it prioritises its catchment area, which includes Elsworth, Boxworth, Knapwell and Conington, while also acknowledging that its Church status can attract applicants from a wider area.

It is also explicit about process. The governing body is the admissions authority, Cambridgeshire County Council coordinates the application process, and the school notes that interviews for admission are not part of its procedures. Where there are more than 20 applications, oversubscription criteria apply and distance is used, calculated as straight-line measurement, after higher priority criteria.

Demand data reinforces the point. The most recently reported Reception entry figures show 33 applications for 17 offers, which is close to two applications for each place offered. The school is therefore not a casual option where you can assume space will exist.

For Reception entry in September 2027, Cambridgeshire's published timetable gives the national closing date as 15 January 2027, with offers released on 16 April 2027.

The school also publishes visit opportunities for this intake, with tour dates in late September, mid October, and mid November 2025.

Parents looking at distance-sensitive criteria should use the FindMySchoolMap Search to check their exact home-to-school measurement and to avoid relying on approximate postcodes.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
All offered

Applications

33

Total received

Places Offered

17

Subscription Rate

1.9x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Safeguarding is the non-negotiable baseline, and the latest inspection confirms the arrangements are effective.

Pastoral strength in a small primary often shows up in two practical ways: children know who to go to, and adults respond quickly. The inspection describes pupils as feeling safe, with trusted adults available, and also notes a calm approach to behaviour, with incidents resolved promptly and routines taught from the early years upwards.

The school’s wraparound provision also matters for wellbeing, not just logistics. Breakfast club and after-school care are run as an extension of school routines, including clear safeguarding expectations, consistent behaviour standards, and escorted transitions for younger pupils into the after-school setting.

For families with children who need reassurance, the small-school dynamic can be a real advantage, but it can also mean less anonymity. Children who like to keep their heads down often still get noticed, which is usually positive, but worth considering if your child finds attention difficult.

Beyond the Classroom

This is where the school’s size works in its favour, because extracurricular choices are linked to real responsibilities rather than a long menu of clubs.

Three strands are particularly distinctive:

Outdoor learning and practical independence

Forest School is positioned as a structured programme, with specific aims around collaboration and confidence. When it is delivered predictably across year groups, it tends to benefit pupils who learn best through hands-on tasks and managed risk-taking.

Digital creativity that is genuinely pupil-facing

Computing club for Years 5 and 6 includes stop-motion animation and programming work using a TP:Bot, supported by a named parent volunteer. That is a specific, practical offer, and it often appeals to pupils who like making something tangible rather than simply practising skills in isolation.

Leadership and community roles

Eco council and junior travel ambassadors are not just labels, they are referenced as active roles in school life, alongside responsibilities such as caring for school guinea pigs. For children who gain confidence through responsibility, this can be a powerful part of the week, especially in a small community where their contribution is visible.

Trips and events add texture. The inspection report notes pupils talking enthusiastically about residentials, singing at the O2 arena, and visits such as Duxford Air Museum. These are the kinds of experiences that tend to broaden vocabulary and background knowledge, which then feed back into writing quality.

Practical Information

The published school day runs from 08:45 to 15:00, with gates opening at 08:40.

Wraparound care is a clear feature. Breakfast club runs from 07:45 on weekdays, and the after-school club (The Den) runs 15:00 to 18:00 Monday to Thursday, with a shorter session on Fridays. The Den uses a mobile classroom, plus regular access to the playground, field, willow woodland and the main hall.

For travel, most families will be arriving by car, bike, or on foot from the immediate villages in the catchment. For this kind of rural primary, it is sensible to check the drop-off practicalities during a tour, including parking patterns and whether your child is likely to be walking or cycling as they get older.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 140
  • Number of pupils: 130

Things to Consider

  • Small school dynamics. The benefit is that pupils are known well, and support can be quick. The trade-off is that friendship groups are smaller, so fallouts can feel bigger unless handled carefully.

  • Competition for places. With 33 applications for 17 offers in the most recently reported Reception figures, demand can exceed supply. Families outside the catchment should treat admission as uncertain.

  • Curriculum refinement in foundation subjects. The latest inspection identifies ongoing work to strengthen how key concepts build over time in some foundation subjects. If your child is very driven by clearly sequenced knowledge, ask how this work has progressed since the inspection.

  • Faith character, but a wide intake. The school prioritises its catchment and acknowledges wider demand linked to its Church status. Families comfortable with a Church of England setting will find it aligns naturally; families of other faiths, or none, should ask how collective worship and religious education are experienced day to day.

The Verdict

Elsworth CofE VA Primary School combines the intimacy of a village primary with results that sit clearly above England averages at Key Stage 2. The school’s identity is grounded in Christian ethos, outdoor learning, and pupils taking responsibility in a way that feels authentic rather than performative.

Who it suits: families who want a small community feel, strong core academics, and structured opportunities such as Forest School and responsibility roles. The main limiting factor is admission, especially for families outside the immediate catchment.

FAQs

Yes, it has a current Good judgement, and its Key Stage 2 outcomes sit above the England average, including a notably higher proportion working at the higher standard. The school’s small size also supports a culture where pupils are known well and responsibility is shared.

The school’s published admissions information describes a catchment covering Elsworth, Boxworth, Knapwell and Conington, with places prioritised from the catchment when demand exceeds the published admission number. Families should still check the local authority booklet and mapping tools because criteria and distances matter in oversubscribed years.

Applications are coordinated by Cambridgeshire County Council. The published timetable for September 2027 entry gives the closing date as 15 January 2027, with offers released on 16 April 2027.

Yes. Breakfast club runs from 07:45 on weekdays in term time, and after-school provision runs until 18:00 Monday to Thursday (with a shorter Friday session).

Forest School is structured across year groups, and older pupils can join a computing club that includes stop-motion animation and programming work. Leadership roles such as eco council and junior travel ambassadors also feature prominently.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Broad End, Elsworth, Cambridge, CB23 4JD
01945267272
www.elsworthprimary.org
Elizabeth Bennett
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Disclaimer

Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.

Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.

While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.

FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.

To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.

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FMS Inspection
Score
7.6/10
Excellent
Elsworth CofE VA Primary School
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