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SchoolsRichmondMiddleton Tyas Church of England Primary School
State School

Middleton Tyas Church of England Primary School

Kneeton Lane, Middleton Tyas, Richmond, DL10 6SF·North Yorkshire·URN: 144167A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Primary
Mixed
Ages 2-11
Church of England
Primary Ranking
274
Academic
Based on 2025 KS2 results
Based on 2025 KS2 results
1,132
Overall
Combines KS2 results with Ofsted-based inspection score
Combines KS2 results with Ofsted-based inspection score
1
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
7.5/10
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Middleton Tyas Church of England Primary School Review 2026: A high-performing village primary with a two-site model that works

At a Glance

This is one of those small primaries where the numbers stop you mid-scroll. In the 2025 dataset, 90% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics at the end of Key Stage 2. Scaled scores were also notably high (111 in reading, 110 in mathematics, 108 in grammar, punctuation and spelling). Ranked 274th academically among 14,978 primaries in England and 1st in Richmond in the local primary table (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), it sits among the strongest primaries nationally.

Operationally, it is unusual. The school runs alongside Trinity Academy Eppleby Forcett as one school across two sites, with pre-school and early years based at Eppleby Forcett and pupils in Year 1 to Year 6 taught at the Middleton Tyas site. A school-funded bus supports catchment children moving between sites, which is a material practical advantage for working families.

For parents, the headline question is fit rather than quality. The quality is clear. The fit depends on whether you want a smaller, tightly knit school experience with a strong academic core and a distinctive approach to early years and transition across sites.

Character & Atmosphere

The school’s identity is shaped by its structure. Early years children are educated at the Eppleby Forcett site and then transition to the Middleton Tyas site for Year 1, a move the school frames as seamless and purposeful. The detail matters here: the two-site model is not a loose partnership, it is designed around continuity of routines, staff collaboration, and consistent expectations.

Daily life also has a strong pupil voice element. The school council is not described as decorative. Pupils have been credited with shaping the environment, including creating a reading den in the playground and establishing an eco-club, which gives a useful clue about how leadership is distributed and how seriously pupils’ ideas are taken.

Behaviour is a defining feature. The most recent inspection graded Behaviour and Attitudes as Outstanding, and the supporting narrative describes pupils as articulate, confident and highly positive about learning, with bullying described as rare and dealt with quickly when concerns arise. That tends to translate, in practice, into calmer classrooms and more learning time, particularly in mixed-age or smaller cohort contexts where one pupil’s behaviour can otherwise dominate.

Faith is present, but it is not presented as exclusionary. As a Church of England school, the language of values, collective worship and Christian ethos appears consistently in school documentation, and the school’s church links are openly described. For families who value a clear moral framework and regular reflection, this can feel grounding. For families who prefer faith to sit lightly, it is worth reading the school’s vision and values carefully before deciding whether it matches your preferences.

Leadership is clearly established. Mrs Debbie McLean is named as headteacher in official documentation and inspection reporting, and she leads within the Dales Academies Trust governance structure. The trust’s involvement matters because it shapes professional development, curriculum support and oversight.

Results / Academic Performance

The 2025 dataset is unusually strong for a state primary. At the end of Key Stage 2:

  • Expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics: 90%.

  • Higher standard (greater depth) in reading, writing and mathematics: 20%.

  • Reading scaled score: 111.

  • Mathematics scaled score: 110.

  • Grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score: 108.

These are not marginal gains. They point to a school where core skills are taught systematically and pupils finish Year 6 very secure in the building blocks that matter for secondary school transition.

In FindMySchool’s proprietary rankings based on official data, the school is ranked 274th academically among 14,978 primaries in England and 1st in Richmond in the local primary table, placing it among the strongest primaries nationally.

An important nuance is breadth. High core outcomes are valuable, but parents should also look for evidence that foundation subjects are not treated as an afterthought. The most recent inspection material indicates that significant work has been done to strengthen foundation subject curriculum planning and sequencing, with some subjects more embedded than others.

For parents comparing nearby options, it is often helpful to use a side-by-side view. FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and Comparison Tool are designed for exactly this sort of decision, where results are strong and small differences in approach, size and practicalities become decisive.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

Reading, Writing & Maths

94%

% of pupils achieving expected standard

Ranking figures update automatically as our data refreshes and are the definitive source. Any rankings quoted in the review text were accurate when it was written and may since have changed.

Teaching & Learning

The teaching model is strongly anchored in early reading and mathematics, and the school’s own and external descriptions align on that point. Reading is positioned as a priority, with staff training, structured phonics teaching, and a culture that goes beyond decoding into depth and enjoyment. The inspection narrative includes examples of older pupils talking confidently about demanding texts, a sign that reading is treated as a habit and a skill rather than purely a test outcome.

Mathematics is described by the school as a mastery-focused curriculum that builds conceptual understanding from early years onwards. In practical terms, mastery approaches work best when assessment is frequent, misconceptions are addressed quickly, and pupils are supported to explain their reasoning rather than relying on speed. In a school producing these results, parents can reasonably expect that lessons follow clear progressions and that gaps are not left to widen.

A distinctive curriculum feature is the decision to teach Latin as the Key Stage 2 language. This is not common in state primaries and signals a particular view of academic preparation. The school’s rationale, including the link to vocabulary development and confidence in pronunciation, will appeal to some families, especially those who value explicit language study and etymology. Others may prefer a modern foreign language for cultural exposure and immediate conversational relevance. The choice is neither right nor wrong, but it is distinctive and worth weighing.

Curriculum breadth has been an improvement focus. Planning and sequencing across foundation subjects are described as stronger than before, with ongoing work in some areas to ensure pupils build connected knowledge over time, rather than recalling isolated facts. That distinction matters because it affects how well pupils can explain their learning and apply it later, particularly once they reach secondary.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:7.5/10Excellent

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

For a primary serving rural villages and a defined catchment list, secondary transition is typically shaped by the local authority’s catchment secondary allocation process and parental preference. North Yorkshire Council provides a catchment map tool for families to confirm the secondary catchment linked to their address, which is the most reliable starting point for planning.

The school explicitly builds transition into its pupil premium planning and wider support approach, which is a useful indicator of how seriously Year 6 readiness is treated beyond test preparation. For children who are academically strong, the combination of high attainment and structured learning habits usually supports a smooth move to secondary. For children who are more anxious about change, the school’s emphasis on routines, clear expectations and planned transition activities can make a meaningful difference.

A specific practical point for this school is the earlier internal transition, early years to Year 1, which happens across sites. The school describes that move as carefully managed. For parents, that can be a positive proxy for how the school will handle the larger move to secondary later on, particularly around communication, preparation, and building independence steadily.

Admissions: How to get in

Admissions are competitive in a small-school context, and families should approach Reception entry as a real application process rather than an assumption. Applications are coordinated by North Yorkshire Council for the relevant entry year.

Catchment is clearly described by the school. The usual catchment area for the Middleton Tyas setting includes: Middleton Tyas, Aldbrough St John, Stanwick St John, Carlton, Moulton, Gatherley, Halnaby and Scotch Corner. Applications from outside the area are possible if places are available, but families should treat catchment as a meaningful factor.

Another unusual feature is transport support across the two-site model. The school states that catchment children are transported by a school-funded bus when their year group is taught on the other site, which can remove a major friction point for working parents who would otherwise face two different drop-off patterns. The school also provides additional transport detail for children travelling between sites in Years 1 to 6.

For September 2027 Reception entry in North Yorkshire, key local authority dates are clear: applications open on 12 October 2026, the closing date is 15 January 2027, and National Offer Day is 16 April 2027. Families applying for later intakes should check the equivalent timetable annually, as it follows a consistent pattern but is date-specific each year.

For parents planning ahead, the practical recommendation is to use a distance and catchment check early. FindMySchool’s Map Search can help families sense-check their location against the school’s catchment logic and local alternatives before they rely on a single outcome.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
All offered

Applications

20

Total received

Places Offered

8

Subscription Rate

2.5x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Pastoral care in small schools tends to be either a major strength or a pressure point, depending on consistency and staffing. Here, the evidence points to a structured approach with clear expectations. Pupils are described as safe and happy, and safeguarding is recorded as effective in inspection reporting.

The school also publishes signposting for mental health and wellbeing support, including external resources for families. This is increasingly common, but its usefulness depends on how well it is integrated into everyday practice. What stands out more here is the combination of calm routines, very strong behaviour, and a culture where pupils take responsibility through roles such as play leaders and reading leaders. Those structures typically help children feel known and supported, particularly in rural settings where community connections are strong and anonymity is rare.

SEND information is presented in a standard four-area framework aligned to the SEND Code of Practice. The school also describes intervention time as part of its approach, though inspection evidence suggests leaders have worked to sharpen the focus on the specific knowledge and skills pupils need during intervention, rather than letting it become a generic support block. For parents of children with additional needs, the key question to explore is how support is targeted and reviewed, and how communication works across the two-site structure if a child starts in early years and then transitions to Year 1.

Beyond the Classroom: Extracurricular

Extracurricular provision is strongest when it reflects the school’s priorities rather than ticking boxes. Here, there are several distinctive signals. Sustainability is not only a web-page label, it shows up in pupil-led activity through the eco-club and Eco Warriors model referenced in school documentation, and in pupil involvement in improving the environment.

Sport is present in a practical, local way rather than an elite pathway. Historical club information shows options such as cricket and gymnastics, alongside creative clubs like KS1 art. While club lists change termly, this mix indicates an intent to cover sport, creativity, and leadership.

The arts are also visible in how clubs are led and shared. The inspection narrative notes pupils running a dance club and performing later in the year. That is a useful marker because it suggests pupils are not only participants but organisers, which builds confidence and public speaking in a low-stakes way.

Outdoor learning is explicitly referenced via Forest School material. In a rural village context, using the local environment well can materially improve children’s engagement, especially for pupils who learn best through movement, practical exploration and talk.

Practical Information

The Middleton Tyas site school day starts at 8:45am, with drop-off from 8:35am; the school day ends at 3:15pm. Break and lunch times are set out clearly, which is helpful for working families coordinating childcare and transport.

Wraparound is a clear practical strength. Breakfast club and after-school club operate, with published fees and timings. For example, the 2025 to 2026 wraparound policy sets out breakfast club and after-school charges for the Middleton Tyas setting, including a full session option up to 6:00pm on weekdays, subject to booking arrangements.

Transport between sites is built into the model. The school describes an 8:20am bus from Eppleby Forcett to Middleton Tyas for pupils in Years 1 to 6, arriving around 8:35am, and return transport after the end of the day. Families should still confirm the current pattern for their child’s year group, but the presence of structured transport provision is itself a meaningful differentiator.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 174
  • Number of pupils: 106

Things to Consider

  • Two-site structure. The early years setting is based at Eppleby Forcett with Year 1 to Year 6 at Middleton Tyas. Many children handle this well, but some pupils may find the Year 1 move between sites a bigger step than parents expect; it is worth discussing transition support early.

  • Competition for places. As a small primary, Middleton Tyas should be treated as a genuine application rather than an assumption. Families should plan a realistic set of preferences and not rely on a single outcome.

  • Curriculum refinement still matters. While results are extremely strong, official evidence indicates that in some subjects the work of building connected knowledge and checking what pupils remember over time has been an ongoing improvement area. Parents who prioritise broad curriculum depth should ask how this has progressed since the last inspection cycle.

  • Wraparound costs. Breakfast and after-school provision is available, but it is a paid service with booking requirements. This is normal, but families should budget for it if they plan to use it regularly.

The Verdict

For academic outcomes at primary level, Middleton Tyas Church of England Primary School is operating at a very high level, with end of Key Stage 2 results that substantially exceed England averages and a FindMySchool ranking that places it well above typical performance. The school’s distinctive two-site structure, with early years based at Eppleby Forcett and Years 1 to 6 at Middleton Tyas, is not just a logistical footnote, it is central to daily life and to how children experience transition.

Best suited to families who want a small, village-based Church of England primary with strong routines, very strong behaviour, and clear practical support around wraparound and site-to-site transport. The main challenge is securing a place and making sure the two-site transition model fits your child’s temperament and your family’s routines.

FAQs

Yes, on the evidence available it is a strong school. The most recent Ofsted inspection (29 and 30 November 2023) judged the school Good overall and Outstanding for Behaviour and Attitudes. Academic outcomes in the 2025 dataset are strong, with 90% meeting expected standards in reading, writing and mathematics.

The school publishes its usual catchment villages for the Middleton Tyas setting, including Middleton Tyas, Aldbrough St John, Stanwick St John, Carlton, Moulton, Gatherley, Halnaby and Scotch Corner. Families can also use North Yorkshire Council’s catchment mapping to confirm how catchment applies to their address.

Yes. Breakfast club and after-school provision operate, with published timings and charges, including an after-school option that can run up to 6:00pm on weekdays depending on the day. Families should review the current wraparound policy for the most up-to-date charges and booking requirements.

The school operates as one school across two sites. Pre-school and early years pupils attend the Eppleby Forcett site, while pupils in Year 1 to Year 6 attend the Middleton Tyas site. The school states that catchment children are supported by school-funded transport between sites when their year group is taught on the other site.

For North Yorkshire primary admissions, the application round for September 2027 opens on 12 October 2026, with a closing date of 15 January 2027. National Offer Day for primary places is 16 April 2027. Dates follow a consistent annual pattern but should be checked each year.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Kneeton Lane, Middleton Tyas, Richmond, DL10 6SF
01325377285
www.efmt.dalesmat.org
Debbie McLean
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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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