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.
A school that wears its village roots openly, but has had to adapt to modern pressures quickly. Killinghall Church of England Primary sits on Otley Road in Killinghall, serving the village and nearby farms, with an admission number of 30 pupils per year group.
The latest inspection gives a clear headline: the school is Good overall, with Early years provision rated Outstanding (inspection dates 28 to 29 September 2022). That combination matters for families deciding between schools, because it suggests Reception is a particular strength, and that the wider school has a consistent baseline of quality. The leadership model is also distinctive, with two headteachers named on the school’s own staff information.
Results are mixed rather than headline grabbing. In 2024, 71.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared to an England average of 62%. At greater depth, 25% achieved the higher standard, compared to 8% across England. The school’s FindMySchool ranking places it 10,481st in England and 20th in Harrogate for primary outcomes, which equates to below England average performance overall. (These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.)
Admissions are competitive. For Reception entry, the school shows 76 applications for 29 offers, which is 2.62 applications per place, and an oversubscribed status.
Killinghall’s identity is explicitly Christian, and it is woven into how the school describes itself, with a stated vision anchored in John 8:12 and a focus on “strive, share, shine” language. For families who value collective worship and a Church of England framing for school life, that clarity helps. For families looking for a more secular tone, it is something to weigh early, especially because ethos in a small primary tends to be felt day to day rather than confined to assemblies.
There is also real historic continuity here. The school records that the Church School in the village opened in 1852, and describes how a second “Board School” opened in 1876, before the two were merged, with the Board School sold in 1937 and becoming the village hall. The practical implication for parents is that this is not a brand-new build with a single design moment, but a site that has expanded over time, including major extensions in 1994 to bring services under one roof.
Recent years have required resilience as well as tradition. The 2022 inspection report notes that the roll had increased significantly, and that the building was severely damaged by a flood, which provides context for why systems and routines may have been a focus for leaders and staff.
Leadership is presented as a shared model. The school website names Mrs Besharati and Mr Holmes as headteachers, and also lists them as the designated safeguarding leaders. That is unusual in a small primary and can work well when roles are clearly divided. The implication is often greater availability for parents and staff, and more capacity to keep a close eye on behaviour and wellbeing, provided the partnership remains stable and well understood across the community.
The most recent published KS2 data points to outcomes that are broadly solid, with some notable strengths at the higher standard. In 2024:
71.67% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined (England average 62%).
25% achieved the higher standard (England average 8%).
95% met the expected standard in science.
Scaled scores are listed as 103 for reading, 103 for maths, and 104 for grammar, punctuation and spelling.
Rankings add an important layer of interpretation. Ranked 10,481st in England and 20th in Harrogate for primary outcomes, the school sits below England average overall when compared to all primaries. (These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.)
How should parents read that combination of facts? The higher-standard figure stands out as a strength worth probing. A school can be below England average on the overall ranking while still doing a strong job of pushing higher attainers, especially if cohort size swings outcomes year to year. The practical next step for parents is to look at consistency over time, ask how reading and writing are developed across year groups, and check how the school supports pupils who are not yet secure with core skills.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
71.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Curriculum intent is set out on the school website, with subject areas broken down and a clear emphasis on core knowledge and practical learning in science, computing, and wider curriculum subjects.
The 2022 inspection describes a school where pupils feel safe, where expectations are high, and where children get off to an excellent start in early years. That has an obvious implication for Reception families: early routines, phonics foundations, and behaviour norms are likely to be established quickly, which tends to reduce settling time and supports faster progress in the first year.
Day-to-day structure is also described in class information. For example, the school day is presented as beginning at 8:45am, with pupils starting with short tasks such as spellings, times tables, grammar, or reading, before moving into core subjects and collective worship. The school day is described as ending at 3:30pm. The implication is a fairly typical primary rhythm, with predictable early-morning routines that support fluency and retention.
Technology and online safety are treated as a shared responsibility with parents. The school’s “Smart Technologies” page references parent workshops on smartphones and digital devices for primary-aged children, including discussion of messaging platforms and social media, and a plan to survey parents to shape next steps. For families who want clear boundaries around devices, it is useful evidence that the school is trying to build a consistent home-school approach rather than leaving it entirely to families.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a village primary, the main transition point is into local secondary schools. The school describes active Year 6 transition arrangements, working with secondary colleagues and other local primaries, and holding a Year 6 leavers’ service for families. The practical implication is that transition is treated as a planned programme rather than a single visit, which can matter for pupils who find change hard.
The school itself points families to the local authority catchment map resource.
This is a state primary with places allocated through North Yorkshire’s coordinated admissions process.
Key facts from the school’s own admissions page:
The school’s annual pupil admission number is 30.
The catchment is described as Killinghall village plus part of a neighbouring village and surrounding farms.
Children in catchment whose parents express a preference are allocated places ahead of those from outside the area normally served, where places are limited.
For September 2026 Reception entry, North Yorkshire’s published timetable gives clear deadlines: applications open 12 October 2025, and close 15 January 2026, with a final date of 22 February 2026 to change an application or submit a late application before offer day processes. (Families should still confirm the current timetable on the council website, but those dates are published as the 2026 round key dates.)
Demand indicators suggest competition for places: 76 applications for 29 offers (2.62 applications per place), and an oversubscribed status. That does not automatically mean entry is impossible, but it does mean families should treat the admissions rules and catchment reality seriously, and avoid relying on hopeful assumptions about “getting in anyway”.
A practical tip: if you are shortlisting multiple local schools, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check how your home location sits relative to the school and nearby alternatives, then sanity-check against published admissions criteria.
93.1%
1st preference success rate
27 of 29 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
29
Offers
29
Applications
76
Safeguarding leadership is clearly signposted on the school website, with the headteachers listed as the designated safeguarding leaders. For parents, the value here is not the job titles themselves, but the clarity: knowing who holds responsibility makes it easier to raise concerns quickly and appropriately.
The latest inspection report describes pupils as happy, feeling safe, and able to talk to adults if worried, with adults acting quickly. It also states that bullying is not a problem in the school. That is useful evidence for families prioritising calm routines and predictable behaviour standards, while still leaving room for the normal primary-school reality of friendship issues and occasional conflict that require adult support.
SEND information on the school site frames support across the four broad areas of need in the SEND Code of Practice, which indicates mainstream inclusive intent rather than specialist provision.
Extracurricular breadth is more specific than many small primaries manage, particularly because the school distinguishes between clubs run voluntarily by teachers (free), clubs run by teaching assistants (which may involve charges), and clubs run by external providers on site. That transparency is useful for parents planning weekly logistics.
Examples of school-run or previously offered clubs listed by the school include:
Choir and gardening
Netball, rounders, running, balance bikes
Science club, board games, storytelling, puzzles, bead workshop
Yoga, French, keyboard, ukulele
Drama and dance
A Blue Peter badge club
The school also lists external providers that have run clubs on site, including Harrogate Town Football Club, Premier Education, martial arts, Atlas Arts Cheerleading Club, and Harrogate Theatre Club. The implication is a mix of “try it” opportunities for younger pupils and more structured provision for families who want regular sport or performance activities without additional travel.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Published timings and care: the school day is described on class pages as starting at 8:45am and finishing at 3:30pm. Wraparound is clearly established through “Funtime Zone”, including a breakfast club described as running daily from 7:30am, with booking via the school’s system and limited places.
Transport and local movement: as a village primary, many families will be thinking about walkability, parking pressure at drop-off, and safe routes. The school points families to the local authority catchment map resource, which is also a practical tool for understanding local school geography beyond this single site.
Competition for Reception places. With 2.62 applications per place, demand looks higher than supply. This tends to make catchment positioning and admissions criteria decisive.
Overall performance is below England average on the ranking measure. The FindMySchool ranking places the school 10,481st in England for primary outcomes. (These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.) Families who want consistently top-end headline outcomes should look closely at how results vary by cohort, and ask how the school is addressing weaker areas.
A clear Church of England ethos. Faith and collective worship are integral to how the school presents itself. For many families that is a positive; for others it may not be the best match.
Some after-school opportunities may involve charges. The school explains that clubs run by teaching assistants can be charged, and some clubs are delivered by external providers. It is sensible to ask for the current term’s programme and costs before assuming a full free offer.
A well-established village primary with strong historical continuity, a clear Church of England identity, and evidence of a particularly strong early years phase. The biggest practical draw is the combination of wraparound provision from 7:30am and a broad menu of clubs that includes both school-led activities and external providers.
Best suited to families who value a faith-grounded primary experience and want structured routines, early years strength, and practical childcare wraparound. Entry remains the main hurdle, and families should approach admissions with realism given the oversubscription indicators.
The most recent inspection (September 2022) judged the school Good overall, with Early years provision rated Outstanding. Results show 71.67% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and maths in 2024, above the England average of 62%, with 25% at the higher standard.
The school describes its catchment as the village of Killinghall and part of a neighbouring village, plus outlying farms, with some families choosing the school from beyond catchment. Families should confirm their own address position using North Yorkshire’s catchment mapping tools.
Applications are made through North Yorkshire’s coordinated admissions process. The council timetable for Reception 2026 indicates applications open 12 October 2025 and close 15 January 2026, with a final date of 22 February 2026 for changes or late applications before offer day processes.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound care through “Funtime Zone”, including a breakfast club starting at 7:30am. Availability is limited and booking is handled through the school’s booking system.
Class information pages describe the school day starting at 8:45am and finishing at 3:30pm.
Get in touch with the school directly
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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.
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