So I live rurally, and there are three primaries in various villages that are each about a 5 minute drive from our house, and which are all 1 form entry, and all start at reception (none of them habe a nursery), and all have the same ethnic makeup. We are only considering primaries one and two, as Primary three has a reputation for bullying.
Primary 1 has a new (less than a year old) Ofsted outstanding rating, and since it received that the three schools have gone from all being equally slightly under subscribed, to Primary 1 being oversubscribed, taking a mix of local children and children commuting to the school from other areas, and the other two schools only having about 18-22 kids per year group.
Primary 1 has quite shabby facilities and very little green space, but is in an affluent area (only 3% of the kids are FSM), and has wraparound as well as an assortment of daily afterschool clubs. Parents who have kids there seem neutral/mildly positive about the school. However the school seem very rigid when it comes to the curriculum (I.e: they have an expectation that all kids read every book 3 times from their reading scheme), so there doesn't seem to be much differentiation. Sats are good, 70-80% are working at the expected standard, and 30-40% are working at the higher standard. If my child goes there, they will be one of 30 in their year.
Primary 2 is a cute little village primary in a more middle class area (14% FSM) with a "good" ofsted rating. It has wraparound, but no extracurricular clubs after school. They are part of a multi academy trust and get funding from a very active PTA. The school has lots of green space and the children garden and keep chickens and tortoises and do nice enrichment activities as part of the school day. The school seems very nurturing, the head knows every pupil by name, and parents are extremely positive about the school and the values the school instills in the children. SATs results are good, 90% reaching the expected standard, 20-30% reaching the higher standard. They seem quite flexible about helping children who struggle, or stretching children who are higher achieving. My child would be one of 22 at that school.
We are in a grammar school area, and Nursery have noted that my child is inexplicably very ahead of expectations for their age, so I am a bit torn about which school would be best for my child.