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.
Small-by-design primaries can drift into “cosy” rather than “stretch”; Welburn avoids that trap. With only around half the school’s 95-place capacity typically filled, the scale is intimate, but the academic story is decidedly ambitious. In 2024, 89% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average of 62%. The school’s own language leans into outdoor learning and curiosity, with Forest School, allotments and a wildlife pond used as day-to-day curriculum assets. Leadership is stable and visible, with Abby Pennick named as headteacher on the school website and on official registers.
Welburn’s identity is tightly tied to place. The school sits within the Castle Howard estate and positions this as more than scenery; it frames learning as exploration, with extensive grounds used for Forest School, gardening and nature study. This matters in a small rural primary, because outdoor space is not just “nice to have”; it can become a consistent thread that joins early language development to science, geography, and writing.
The tone described in the most recent inspection is calm, studious and relationship-led. Pupils are described as happy and safe, with behaviour consistently positive and older pupils taking on leadership roles, including via the school council. In practical terms, this usually shows up as older pupils being trusted with real responsibilities, rather than token badges. For families, it signals a school where children are known well enough for staff to intervene early, and where “small” is an operational advantage rather than a limitation.
The staffing model also reflects the school’s scale. Classes are organised as mixed-year groups, with named class structures and staff listed publicly. That is helpful for parents, because it clarifies the day-to-day reality: your child is likely to learn in a mixed-age classroom, with routines designed to keep progress coherent across year groups.
Welburn’s latest published Key Stage 2 outcomes (2024) are strong by any measure. The headline figure is the combined expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics: 89% at Welburn, compared with the England average of 62%. On higher attainment, 33.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%. Those are the kinds of numbers that typically reflect tight curriculum sequencing and consistent teaching routines, not short-term intervention.
The scaled scores reinforce the picture. Reading averaged 112 and maths 105, alongside a grammar, punctuation and spelling score of 111. As a set, these results suggest reading is a particular strength, and that pupils are leaving Year 6 with secure literacy foundations.
In the FindMySchool primary rankings (based on official data), Welburn is ranked 783rd in England and 5th in York for primary outcomes. That places it well above the England average and within the top 10% of schools in England on this measure. Parents comparing nearby options can use the FindMySchool Local Hub page to view these results side-by-side using the Comparison Tool.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
89%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
Reading and language development are treated as core priorities from the earliest stage. The latest inspection notes a clear focus on phonics from Reception, with adults supporting children to build the knowledge and skills needed for fluent reading, alongside language and vocabulary development. In a small school, this kind of consistency is often easier to deliver, because training and practice can be aligned quickly across a single team.
Curriculum design is described as carefully planned, with “common learning threads” linking subject areas. In primary terms, this usually means that knowledge is revisited and deepened, rather than taught once and forgotten. The implication for families is a school that aims to build understanding over time, which can be especially valuable for pupils who need structure and frequent reinforcement.
There are also two clear improvement priorities identified in the most recent inspection. First, pupils are not consistently given enough opportunity to apply maths knowledge in problem solving and reasoning, which can limit depth of understanding. Second, pupils’ understanding of fundamental British values and protected characteristics is not developed as strongly as it should be. These are specific curriculum and pedagogy issues rather than broad behavioural or safeguarding concerns, but they are still worth asking about on a visit: parents should expect to hear what has changed in maths lesson design and how personal development content is sequenced across year groups.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Transition planning matters in a small rural primary because pupils may disperse across several secondary options, and travel time can become a bigger factor than in an urban setting. Welburn’s own communications show structured links with Malton for secondary transition and sports events. In 2025, the school diary listed multiple “taster days” at Malton for Year 6, plus transition sessions earlier in the summer term.
For parents, the practical takeaway is that Malton appears to be a key partner secondary route, with repeated transition touchpoints rather than a single induction day. Families considering other secondary schools should ask how the school supports those pupils, particularly around pastoral handover and travel planning.
Admissions are coordinated by the local authority. In the most recent, Reception entry shows 16 applications for 5 offers, indicating oversubscription, with around 3.2 applications per place. With small cohorts, year-to-year demand can swing, but this still signals that entry is competitive relative to the number of places available.
For September 2026 entry, the school states that children born between 1 September 2021 and 31 August 2022 should start in September 2026, and that applications need to be submitted by 15 January 2026. That date matters, because late applications can significantly reduce the chance of receiving an offer at an oversubscribed school.
100%
1st preference success rate
4 of 4 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
5
Offers
5
Applications
16
Welburn’s scale naturally supports a “known well” model, but the key question is whether that translates into consistent systems. The latest inspection describes pupils who can readily identify trusted adults and report that issues are resolved quickly. It also notes that attendance is not an issue and that leaders act effectively to reduce persistent absence, which is often a good indicator of firm routines and strong home-school communication.
The 25 June 2024 Ofsted inspection confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For parents of pupils with additional needs, the inspection also describes swift identification and adaptations that allow pupils with SEND to access an age-appropriate curriculum alongside peers, with appropriate support for those who experience difficulties with learning. That points to a school that treats inclusion as everyday practice rather than a separate track.
Outdoor learning is the most distinctive strand. Forest School is not presented as an occasional enrichment day; it is described as a regular feature of school life, alongside allotments and a wildlife pond. That kind of provision can be particularly powerful for pupils who learn best through practical work, and it can also strengthen writing and vocabulary by giving children shared experiences to draw on.
Sport and competition appear as another pillar, with repeated fixtures and events connected to Malton across year groups. In the 2025 summer term diary, pupils had scheduled activities including mixed sports events in Malton, a netball event, and intra-school tournaments, plus add-on experiences such as a climbing wall and archery. This is useful context for parents weighing a small school; it shows deliberate effort to widen experiences beyond what a tiny cohort could generate on its own.
Wraparound care is clearly structured. Breakfast club runs from 7.30am to 8.45am, and after-school club runs from 3.30pm to 6.00pm. In a rural setting where travel and work patterns can be difficult to square with a short school day, this is a practical advantage.
A final note on early years. The headteacher’s welcome states that nursery provision is available from September 2025, and class information also references nursery children within Oak Class. Parents considering nursery should check the school’s latest published arrangements directly, including session patterns and eligibility for government-funded hours.
The school day starts at 9.00am and ends at 3.30pm, with pupils able to arrive from 8.45am. The stated school week is 32.5 hours.
Wraparound care extends the day meaningfully, with breakfast club from 7.30am and after-school provision until 6.00pm.
For term dates and training days, the school publishes a calendar for the 2025 to 2026 academic year.
Very small cohorts. Small year groups can be a strength for individual attention, but it can also mean a narrower immediate peer group. Ask how the school manages friendships, group dynamics, and mixed-age teaching to keep both the most able and those needing more support moving forward.
Maths depth is a stated development area. The latest inspection identifies inconsistent opportunities for problem solving and reasoning. Parents of pupils who love maths should ask what has changed in lesson design and how depth is built across mixed-age classes.
Personal development curriculum needs strengthening. The inspection also flags pupils’ understanding of British values and protected characteristics as not developed strongly enough. This is worth exploring, particularly for families who prioritise structured PSHE and wider world understanding.
Competitive admissions for a small intake. Recent demand data indicates oversubscription for Reception entry. Families should treat the application deadline as non-negotiable and read the local authority criteria carefully.
Welburn Community Primary School pairs the advantages of a small rural primary with outcomes that look more like a high-performing larger school. Results at Key Stage 2 are well above England averages, and the curriculum is supported by consistent early reading practice and a strong use of the local environment as a learning asset. Entry remains the primary hurdle, and parents should also scrutinise how the school is strengthening maths reasoning and its personal development curriculum. Best suited to families who value a close-knit setting, outdoor learning, and high academic expectations in a small school context.
The most recent inspection confirmed the school continues to be good, and published Key Stage 2 outcomes in 2024 were well above England averages. The atmosphere described is calm and purposeful, with pupils feeling safe and supported, and with leadership opportunities available even in a small setting.
Admissions are coordinated by the local authority, and places are allocated using the published criteria for the area. Because recent distance-offer data is not included here, families should check the local authority guidance and use distance tools to understand how their address compares with typical offer patterns.
Yes. Breakfast club runs from 7.30am to 8.45am, and after-school club runs from 3.30pm to 6.00pm.
In 2024, 89% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 33.67% achieved the higher standard in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%.
The school’s published diary shows structured transition links with Malton, including taster days and transition sessions for Year 6. Families considering other secondary options should ask how the school supports those routes, including pastoral handover.
Get in touch with the school directly
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