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Chelmsford County High School for Girls 11+ guide

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May 11, 2026

Are you thinking about applying to Chelmsford County High School for Girls? Find out everything you need to know about the entry process and how to help your daughter prepare for the 11+ exam.

Key information about Chelmsford County High School for Girls

Important dates for 2027 entry

  • Monday 13th April 2026: test registration opens
  • Wednesday 3rd June 2026: test registration closes
  • Thursday 3rd September 2026: CCHS entrance test
  • Mid-October 2026: parents receive test results
  • Saturday 31st October 2026: deadline to apply for secondary school places
  • Monday 1st March 2027: secondary school national offers day

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How to apply to Chelmsford County High School for Girls

Chelmsford County High School for Girls is a selective school. This means that your child will need to take the 11+ exam to be eligible for a place.

To register your daughter for the exam, you must complete an online registration form via the school's admissions pages. Registration opens at 9am on Monday 13th April 2026 and closes at 4pm on Wednesday 3rd June 2026. Late registrations will not be accepted.

Unlike the other grammar schools in Essex, CCHS is not a member of the Consortium of Selective Schools in Essex (CSSE). If you are also considering other Essex grammar schools, your daughter will need to register and sit the CSSE exam separately. The CCHS entrance test and the CSSE exam are two different tests.

The CCHS entrance test will take place on Thursday 3rd September 2026. You'll receive your daughter's results in mid-October. If she achieves an eligible score, you can apply for a place by naming CCHS as one of your preferred schools on your common application form. This must be submitted to your home local authority by Saturday 31st October 2026.

Important note: achieving an eligible score does not guarantee a place. There are likely to be more girls with eligible scores than places available. After the 31st October deadline, the school uses its admissions criteria to allocate places.

What will my child be tested on?

Girls applying to Chelmsford County High School for Girls take an 11+ exam created by Future Stories Community Enterprise (FSCE). The test covers subjects from the Key Stage 2 curriculum up to and including the Year 5 programme of study, including English, maths and creative writing, as well as other KS2 subjects such as science, history, geography, computing and the arts.

The test is designed to assess how well your daughter can apply her knowledge and think creatively, rather than to reward specialist preparation. Once all applicants have completed the exam, the papers (except creative writing) are marked and age-standardised. Girls who meet the qualifying standard then have their creative writing assessed by a panel of trained CCHS staff.

The school will confirm an eligible score based on the cohort's performance each year. To be eligible for admission, your daughter must achieve an eligible score in each element of the test.

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How are places allocated at Chelmsford County High School for Girls?

In mid-October, you'll receive your daughter's results. These will confirm whether she has achieved an eligible score. If she has, you must name Chelmsford County High School for Girls as a preferred school on your common application form to be considered. This must be submitted to your home local authority by Saturday 31st October 2026.

Where more girls achieve an eligible score than there are places available, places are allocated in the following priority order:

  1. Looked after children and previously looked after children who have achieved a score up to 5 marks below an eligible score
  2. Girls with an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) who have achieved an eligible score
  3. Of the next 144 places: up to 30 are prioritised for girls in receipt of Pupil or Service Premium who have achieved a score up to 5 marks below an eligible score and live within the school's 12.5-mile priority area; the remaining places in this group go to girls who have achieved an eligible score and live within the priority area
  4. All remaining places (up to 36) are allocated in descending score order, regardless of where girls live

Does Chelmsford County High School for Girls have a catchment area?

Chelmsford County High School for Girls has a priority area covering a 12.5-mile radius (measured in a straight line) from the school. Children who live within this area are prioritised for places under the oversubscription criteria outlined above.

Up to 36 places are available to girls who live outside the priority area, allocated in descending score order. So while living within the priority area increases the likelihood of being offered a place, it does not automatically guarantee one.

If a tie-break is needed (e.g. there is one place left and two children have the same score), the child living closest to the school will be prioritised for a place.

If you don't live close to the school, it's important to think about how your child will get there every day. How long will the journey take? What transport options are available? Will they be travelling independently or with support?

A longer or more complex journey can affect your child's daily routine, including how much time they have for homework, rest, and after-school activities.

It's a good idea to think about how manageable the school run will be and whether it will work for your family day to day.

How can I help my child prepare for the test?

The CCHS entrance test can feel like a big milestone, but preparation doesn't have to be overwhelming. Here's how you can help your daughter prepare for test day.

Stay on track with a clear plan

One of the hardest parts of 11+ preparation is knowing what to focus on, when, and how to make steady progress without it taking over family life.

A clear, structured plan helps your child feel less overwhelmed and more in control. It ensures they build skills in the right order, cover everything they need, and avoid last-minute cramming.

Atom's exam plan makes this easier. Enter your child's target schools and exam dates, and we'll create a personalised weekly plan tailored to the topics they'll be tested on. It shows them what to work on and when, adapts as they improve, and helps them build progress in a calm, manageable way — little and often.

That means less guesswork for you, less stress for them, and a clearer path all the way to exam day.

Build smart exam technique

As your child's knowledge grows, practice tests can help them feel more comfortable with the real exam format.

Atom's 11+ practice papers are exact replicas of real 11+ exams. They're also unlimited — you can download the same paper again and again, and your child will get new questions each time. This helps them practise without repeating the same content.

We've made marking easy for you, too. Simply photograph your child's answer sheets and upload them to Atom. The papers are marked instantly, showing your child's standardised age score (SAS), where they're doing well, and what they should focus on next. You'll also learn how they compare to other children applying to the same school.

Encourage regular reading

Strong reading skills play a big role in 11+ preparation.

Encourage your daughter to read every day, even for just 10–15 minutes. The key is variety. Mix fiction and non-fiction, different genres, and a range of authors. This helps her become more confident in understanding tone, purpose, and meaning across different texts.

Over time, regular reading will:

  • broaden her vocabulary
  • improve comprehension and inference
  • build confidence in tackling unseen texts

And just as importantly, it can help her enjoy reading — not just see it as exam preparation.

Looking for inspiration? Atom's recommended reading lists have suggestions spanning fiction and non-fiction for Years 3–6.

Celebrate progress, not just scores

When you're supporting your child through 11+ preparation, what really matters is knowing they're moving in the right direction — not just how they scored on a single test.

Atom's progress tracking gives you a clear, simple picture of how your child is doing in each topic and the direction they're moving in. You can see where they're on track, where they might need more practice, and spot progress as it happens.

That makes it easier to give meaningful encouragement, keep motivation steady, and focus on what matters most: consistent improvement, not just one-off results.

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Take control of your child’s 11+ preparation.

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