Chorlton High School has an admission number of 300 for entry in Year 7.
Our school will accordingly admit this number of students if there are sufficient applications.
Where fewer applicants than the published admission number(s) for the relevant year group are received, the Academy Trust will offer places at the school to all those who have applied.
Applications for Chorlton High School are made through the Manchester Local Authority (LA) Co-ordinated Admissions Process. Information about the application process and access to the online application form will be sent to parents / carers by the relevant Local Authority. All parents/ carers are required to apply to their home Local Authority regardless of where the school/academy they are applying for is situated.
Manchester residents apply to Manchester Local Authority.
The Local Authority will liaise with other Admission Authorities in Manchester and other Local Authorities where required.
Manchester Local Authority will inform parent/carers of the outcome of their application.
Admission Applications information is available from the link below:
Or can be requested by phone: 0161 245 7166
Please see documents below to read our Admissions policy.
Chorlton High School Admissions Policy September 2025
Admissions Service
Manchester City Council
P.O. Box 532, Town Hall
Manchester
M60 2LA
The closing date for applications for September 2024 is 31st October 2023 at 5:00pm.
Any admission forms received after the closing date will be processed as late applications.
All applications will then be processed by the Admission Authority, applying the oversubscription criteria below if necessary.
All parents will be notified of the outcome of the application process on 1st March 2024.
When the school is oversubscribed, after the admission of students with an Education, Health and Care plan or a Statement of Special Educational Needs naming the school, priority for admission will be given to those children who meet the criteria set out below, in priority order:
Looked after children and children who were previously looked after but immediately after being looked after became subject to adoption, a child arrangements order, or special guardianship order.
Priority will next be given to children based on their exceptional medical or social needs or those of their parents. Each application must include evidence, from a medical specialist or social worker of the child’s/parent’s need and why they must attend this school rather than any other, based on those needs. If evidence is not submitted to the LA with the application, a child’s or parent’s medical or social needs cannot be considered.
Priority will next be given to the siblings of pupils attending the school at the time the application is received, where an older sibling is in Year 11 siblings will not be prioritised under this criterion.
Priority will next be given to the siblings of pupils with a parent who at the time of application/the application closing date has been employed at Chorlton High School for two years or more years, or who were recruited to fill a vacant post for which there is a demonstrable skill shortage.
If in categories 2-5 above a tie-break is necessary to determine which child is admitted, the child living closest to the school will be given priority for admission. Distance is measured from the centre point for a home to the centre point for the school as defined by the Local Land and Property Gazetteer (LLPG) using the Local Authority’s computerised measuring system.
Random allocation undertaken by the local authority will be used as a tie-break in categories 2-5 above to decide who has highest priority for admission if the distance between a child’s home and the academy/free school is equidistant in any two or more cases.’
Late applications are those applications received after the closing date and before the first day of term in September, but not made in time to enable an offer or refusal of a place to be made on National Offer Day. Late applications will be considered after those received on time. If, following consideration of all applicants the school is oversubscribed, the child will be placed on the school’s waiting list.
Admission of children outside their normal age group
Parents may request that their child is admitted outside their normal age group. To do so parents should include a request with their application, specifying why admission out of normal year group is being requested.
When such a request is made, the academy trust will make a decision on the basis of the circumstances of the case and in the best interests of the child concerned, taking into account the views of the headteacher and any supporting evidence provided by the parent.
In the normal admission round, the school will operate a waiting list for the duration of the first term following entry of the cohort until 31 December. The names of all those who were unsuccessful in achieving a place in the normal admission round will be included on the list. Thereafter the list will be cleared, and parents will need to re-apply if they still want to be considered for a place.
For in-year applications, the school will operate a waiting list for the remainder of the term in which the application was refused. Thereafter the list will be cleared, and parents will need to re-apply if they still want to be considered for a place.
Children are ranked on the waiting list by reference to the oversubscription criteria set out in this policy, not by the date their name was added, which means names can go up as well as down as more children with higher priority are added. Being included on the waiting list does not affect parents' statutory right of appeal against the refusal of a place.
Children allocated a place under the Local Authority's Fair Access Protocol will take priority over those on the waiting list.
PAN (Published Admission Numbers)
2023/2024 |
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Year 7 | 330 |
Year 8 | 300 |
Year 9 | 300 |
Year 10 | 300 |
Year 11 | 300 |
2024/2025 |
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Year 7 | 330 |
Year 8 | 330 |
Year 9 | 300 |
Year 10 | 300 |
Year 11 | 300 |