Last reviewed: February 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
A small Devon primary with results that remain strong, and a clear sense that learning is meant to be enjoyed as well as mastered. In the current 2025 dataset, 80% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, while 10% reached the higher standard. Ranked 3,120th academically out of 14,978 primary schools and 3,006th overall in England, with a 2nd-place local ranking in Ivybridge, performance remains a positive part of the picture without the older top-10% claim.
Daily life is shaped by village-school practicality, with wraparound care and a clear structure to the day, plus a set of enrichment touches that stand out for a school of this size, including Greenpower, Ten Tors preparation, and regular coding and robotics references in the school’s wider work.
The latest inspection (25 June 2024) judged the school Good overall, with Personal Development rated Outstanding.
Ermington Primary School serves a semi-rural community near Ivybridge, and it presents itself as a village school that still wants to stretch pupils academically. That combination tends to suit families who want the social ease of a smaller setting, but do not want learning to be “small” in ambition.
Leadership is also part of the story. The school lists Mr Dan Kay as Headteacher, and Westcountry Schools Trust communications describe him as appointed Executive Headteacher for Ermington and Buckfastleigh Primary Schools for a one-year period, announced in April 2025. In practice, that reads as a trust model where leadership capacity is shared and standards are kept consistent across schools, while individual schools keep their own identity.
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.
Culture signals show up in the choices the school makes about curriculum and enrichment. Rather than relying only on generic clubs, there is a noticeable emphasis on outdoor learning and structured challenge, such as Ten Tors preparation and Greenpower activities, alongside mainstream sport and games. For pupils, the implication is a school experience that can feel purposeful, with opportunities that reward commitment and teamwork, even in a small cohort.
Ermington's outcomes remain strong in the context of England primary data. In the current 2025 dataset:
80% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
10% reached the higher standard in reading, writing and maths combined.
Scaled scores are high, with reading at 112, maths at 110, and grammar, punctuation and spelling at 108.
Rankings reinforce the picture, though less emphatically than the older review suggested. In the current FindMySchool ranking based on official data, the school is ranked 3,120th academically out of 14,978 primary schools and 3,006th overall in England, with a 2nd-place local ranking in Ivybridge.
For families, the most useful way to read this is not as “hot-housing”, but as evidence of consistent teaching and strong basics. When almost all pupils reach the expected standard across reading, writing, maths and science, it usually signals that gaps are identified quickly and addressed early, rather than being allowed to compound.
Parents comparing nearby schools can use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to view these results side-by-side against other local primaries.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
79%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum looks designed to build knowledge carefully, while still leaving room for projects and real-world application. A good example is humanities in Key Stage 2, where the school references Opening Worlds, a knowledge-rich programme for history, geography and religion in Years 3 to 6. The value for pupils is clear, it can help children hold onto what they learn because content is revisited and connected, rather than taught as isolated topics.
STEM is not treated as a bolt-on. The school describes a track record of Erasmus-linked work and mentions progressive coding and robotics development across year groups, plus participation in the First Lego League. The implication is twofold. First, pupils who enjoy making and building get legitimate status for those interests. Second, pupils who are not naturally drawn to STEM still gain confidence with technology, teamwork, and presenting solutions.
The latest inspection outcome supports a generally positive academic picture, with Quality of Education judged Good.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As a primary school, the key “destination” question is transition. The admissions documentation notes links to Ivybridge Community College as the named secondary in the policy context (while also recognising that admissions priorities can change). In practical terms, many families locally will look first at Ivybridge for a straightforward transition, with travel patterns that work well from the village and surrounding area.
What Ermington can offer at the primary stage is preparation rather than selection. Strong Key Stage 2 outcomes matter because they widen options at 11, whether that is confidence for a larger comprehensive, readiness for high-attaining sets, or simply a calmer start because core literacy and numeracy are secure. Pupils also benefit from the kind of enrichment that tends to smooth transition, outdoor learning, teamwork projects, and structured clubs that build independence.
Admissions sit within the Devon coordinated system for Reception entry. For families, early planning still matters, even for a small village school, because priority categories, catchment and the latest published admission number can all affect how realistic a place may be.
The school's published admissions policy sets out the practical dates and criteria for each admissions round. Families should check the latest Devon timetable for the relevant entry year, alongside the policy detail on catchment and priority categories such as looked-after children, exceptional medical or social need, catchment and siblings, then other children.
The same policy detail can change by entry year, including the Published Admission Number. If you are applying for a year where numbers are tighter, it is worth reading the current determined policy and using FindMySchoolMap Search to check how your address sits relative to the school and catchment assumptions.
Applications
30
Total received
Places Offered
13
Subscription Rate
2.3x
Applications per place
A strength in the latest inspection profile is Personal Development, rated Outstanding. That tends to align with schools that take pupils’ wider development seriously, not only behaviour compliance, but participation, responsibility, and confidence in learning and social situations.
Pastoral quality in a small primary often shows up in speed of response and consistency of adults. The staff structure published on the school site highlights clear safeguarding roles, including a designated safeguarding lead and deputy safeguarding leads. For parents, the implication is a school that expects safeguarding to be everyone’s business, with named accountability.
Ermington does well here, largely because activities feel specific rather than generic.
Example: Structured “challenge” clubs appear built into the culture.
Evidence: The club list includes Junior Ten Tors Club for Year 6 by invitation, plus GreenPower Goblin Club, also invitation-only, and Outdoor Learning as a regular after-school option.
Implication: Pupils who enjoy physical challenge, practical problem-solving, and teamwork can find their place, and pupils who are less confident can build resilience in a supported way.
Cricket and benchball feature in the timetable, with football offered through a professional link (PAFC listed as the provider for a Year 3 to 4 group). This matters because it gives pupils variety, not only the traditional team games, but also options that suit different confidence levels and coordination strengths.
Breakfast Club and After School Club operate five days a week in term time. Published session times run from 07:45 in the morning, with after-school options up to 17:45, and costs listed by time block. For working families, that practical reliability can be as important as any single club.
The school day is clearly set out. Doors open at 08:30 for registration at 08:45, and the day finishes at 15:15.
Wraparound care is available through Breakfast Club and After School Club, with published times ranging from 07:45 to 17:45 depending on the session booked.
School meals follow the universal infant free school meals entitlement in Key Stage 1, and Key Stage 2 meals are priced at £2.53 per day (booked in advance through the school’s booking system).
For travel, most families will think for village access by car and local bus routes, with rail connections typically routed via Ivybridge for wider journeys.
Competition for places. Families who are "nearby but not close" should treat catchment, priority categories and the latest published admission number as meaningful constraints.
Policy detail matters. Admissions policies can include catchment priority and changing published admission numbers. Families should read the latest determined policy carefully for the year they are applying.
Small-school fit. A smaller primary can feel brilliantly personal, but it also means fewer children per year group. For some pupils that is calming and confidence-building, for others it can feel socially limiting if friendship dynamics are tricky.
Stretch comes with expectation. With outcomes this high, pupils who find literacy or numeracy difficult may need targeted support and steady reinforcement to keep pace, even if teaching is careful.
Ermington Primary School combines a village-school footprint with results that place it among stronger primaries in England. The offer is at its best for families who value high academic standards, enjoy outdoors and STEM-style enrichment, and want wraparound care that is clearly organised.
Who it suits: pupils who respond well to structure, and families who want strong basics plus specific enrichment like Ten Tors preparation and Greenpower style projects. The main challenge is admission, because demand is meaningfully higher than the number of places available.
The evidence points to a strong primary. In the current 2025 dataset, the school ranks 3,120th academically out of 14,978 primary schools and 3,006th overall in England, with a 2nd-place local ranking in Ivybridge. The most recent inspection judged the school Good overall, with Personal Development rated Outstanding.
Applications follow the Devon coordinated admissions route for Reception. Dates change each year, so families should check the current admissions timetable and determined policy for their entry year.
Reception entry can be competitive, especially where catchment, siblings and the latest published admission number affect priority. That does not mean every year will look identical, but it does mean families should check the current admissions criteria before applying.
Yes. The school publishes Breakfast Club and After School Club sessions in term time, with morning provision from 07:45 and after-school options up to 17:45 depending on the session booked.
Beyond mainstream sports clubs, the published list includes Outdoor Learning, Junior Ten Tors Club (invitation), and GreenPower Goblin Club (invitation), plus cricket, benchball, and football delivered through a professional provider for a specific year-group band.
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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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