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A village green location, a very small roll, and a school day that runs with the precision you would expect from a close-knit staff team. Slingsby Community Primary School is a state, mixed primary for pupils aged 4 to 11, with a published capacity of 95 and around 88 pupils on roll in Ofsted’s 2025 profile.
The most recent inspection (29 April 2025) awarded Good across all reported judgement areas, including early years, with Ofsted noting that the post September 2024 framework no longer gives an overall effectiveness grade.
On outcomes, the school’s 2024 Key Stage 2 picture includes 78.67% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics, above the England average of 62%. The higher standard figure is 9.33%, slightly above the England average of 8%. Taken together with a small cohort, this is a profile that will appeal to families who want strong baseline attainment and a steady, traditional primary experience, without the scale of a large town school.
The school’s setting is part of its identity. Slingsby’s primary school sits on the village green, closely associated with local traditions, including the maypole. External sources describing the village note a school on The Green dating to the 1860 period and still in use, and this tallies with the sense of continuity that small village primaries often carry.
Day to day culture, as reflected in recent official reporting, points to warm relationships and a strong sense of belonging. The latest inspection report describes pupils valuing kindness and positive relationships with adults, with pupils reporting that bullying is rare and that staff respond when issues arise.
With a smaller roll and mixed-age dynamics, parents should expect children to be known well by staff, and for older pupils to take visible responsibility. In schools of this size, the practical implication is often that confidence and independence can develop early, because pupils repeatedly share space, routines, and roles with children outside their own year group.
This section uses the provided performance results for attainment and rankings.
Expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined: 78.67%, compared with an England average of 62%.
Higher standard in reading, writing and mathematics: 9.33%, compared with an England average of 8%.
Science expected standard: 86%, compared with an England average of 82%.
Scaled scores (which help parents see whether attainment is comfortably above the national benchmark of 100) show:
Reading: 104
Mathematics: 102
Grammar, punctuation and spelling: 103
These are all above 100, indicating attainment above the national reference point.
The school is ranked 11,072nd in England for primary outcomes, and 66th locally (York) ’s local area grouping. The results places the school’s overall ranking band in the below England average range (bottom 40%).
How to read that alongside the attainment figures: the combined attainment measures above are strong on expected standards, while the ranking is a composite positioning across many schools. Parents comparing options should look at both the “expected standard” line (useful for a clear sense of baseline attainment) and the higher standard and scaled score detail (useful for stretch and depth), rather than relying on any single headline.
A practical way to use this, if you are shortlisting: compare Slingsby against similar sized rural primaries, then check how outcomes sit against the England averages already shown above. For side by side comparison across nearby schools, FindMySchool’s Local Hub comparison tools are designed for exactly this kind of check.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
78.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The strongest publicly available indicators relate to early reading and curriculum sequencing. The most recent inspection report states that phonics starts as soon as children begin Reception, with staff teaching the programme confidently, and pupils building early reading fluency quickly.
For parents, the implication is simple: if your child is at the stage where early decoding, reading confidence, and consistent routines matter most, you should expect a structured approach from the start of school life. In a small primary, that consistency can be particularly helpful because pupils often learn in smaller groups where staff know precisely what each child has mastered.
Beyond English and maths, the school’s curriculum pages indicate subject specific planning and intent, including for arts and design technology, which usually signals that leaders have thought carefully about progression rather than relying on ad hoc topic work.
As a village primary, Slingsby’s main transition point is into secondary education at age 11. External local information about the village notes that the primary school is within the catchment area for Malton School for secondary education.
What this means in practice: families often prioritise two checks early.
Confirm the current secondary allocation pattern for your address (because patterns can shift with local demand).
Understand transport implications, especially if you are weighing a village primary against a town option.
The school’s small size can also be a positive here: transition work tends to be very individual, because staff have the capacity to know pupils and families closely, and to liaise tightly with receiving schools when needed. Where children would benefit from extra support at transition, small primaries can often provide that continuity more easily than larger settings.
Slingsby is a state primary, so there are no tuition fees. Admissions for Reception are handled through the local authority process for North Yorkshire.
Application round opens: 12 October 2025
Closing date: 15 January 2026
Last date to change or submit a late application before national offer day: 22 February 2026
The school’s own admissions page directs families to North Yorkshire’s admissions service for application and guidance.
For the primary entry route, the figures record 36 applications for 15 offers, and an oversubscribed status, which implies competition for places in the most recently captured admissions return. If you are relying on proximity, it is sensible to treat any village primary with this demand pattern as one where timing and accurate paperwork matters.
Because distance offered is not provided for this school, the review does not quote a last distance figure.
100%
1st preference success rate
12 of 12 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
15
Offers
15
Applications
36
The public sources available for 2025 point to a calm, supportive pastoral picture. The inspection report states that pupils feel supported, and that they believe staff respond to concerns, with bullying described by pupils as rare.
The head teacher’s safeguarding leadership role is explicitly stated by the school, which is useful for parents who want clarity on responsibility and escalation.
In a smaller primary, pastoral systems often work through routines rather than layers of staffing. The practical implication is that issues can be spotted quickly, and communication with families can be direct, but it also means that parents should expect a community feel, where relationships and shared expectations matter.
For a small primary, Slingsby’s published clubs offer is refreshingly specific.
The school’s clubs page lists a weekly after school pattern that includes:
Lego and Games Club (Monday)
Art Club (Tuesday)
Film Club (Wednesday)
Sports Club (Thursday)
Those details matter because they show what pupils actually do at 3:30pm, not just the generic claim of “lots of clubs”. The implication for families is that a child can find a regular interest point each week, and that wraparound time is structured rather than purely supervisory.
The village’s May Day traditions also intersect with the school in visible ways, with school choir and maypole dancing featuring in local event programming.
That is not just a charming detail. In village schools, these traditions often translate into confidence in performance, belonging across age groups, and strong links between families, school, and community organisations.
School day timings are published by the school, including registration at 8:50am, lessons from 9:00am, and a standard finish consistent with an after school programme.
Wraparound care is also clearly stated. The school indicates wraparound availability from 8:00am to 5:30pm on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, and 8:00am to 4:30pm on Monday and Friday, with families directed to the clubs section for detail.
For transport and travel, expect a pattern typical of a village green site: many local families will walk, while others will drive in from surrounding rural areas. If you are visiting at pick up time, ask about parking expectations and how the school manages safety around the green, because this is often where rural primaries differ most from town schools.
Small school dynamics. A small roll can be a strength, but it also means peer groups are small. For some pupils, that is reassuring; for others, especially those who want a very wide friendship pool, it can feel limiting over time.
Competition for places. The admissions results indicates oversubscription, with more applications than offers in the recorded return. Families should apply on time and keep documentation tidy, particularly if relying on criterion based allocation.
Rural practicalities. Wraparound hours are a positive, but transport may still shape your experience if you are commuting from outside the village. A ten minute drive in good weather can feel very different in winter.
Slingsby Community Primary School looks like a traditional village primary done well: structured early reading, clear routines, and a culture where pupils feel known and supported. Good grades across the 29 April 2025 inspection judgement areas support that view, and the 2024 Key Stage 2 attainment data is above England averages on the expected standard line.
Who it suits: families who want a smaller primary where wraparound care is available, staff know children closely, and community traditions are part of the rhythm of school life. The biggest practical constraint is likely to be admissions competition, rather than the experience once a place is secured.
The most recent inspection (29 April 2025) reported Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and early years. Attainment at Key Stage 2 (2024) shows 78.67% reaching the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, above the England average of 62%.
Reception applications are made through North Yorkshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 12 October 2025 and close on 15 January 2026, with late change deadlines also published by the local authority.
Yes. The school publishes wraparound care availability, including morning provision from 8:00am and after school coverage up to 5:30pm on some weekdays, with club options also listed.
In 2024, 78.67% reached the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, and 9.33% met the higher standard, both above England averages. Reading, maths, and grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled scores are all above 100.
The school publishes a weekly club pattern that includes Lego and Games Club, Art Club, Film Club, and Sports Club across the week, providing regular structured options after school.
Get in touch with the school directly
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