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SchoolsAylesburyAylesbury High School|Best Secondary Schools in Aylesbury
State School
Aylesbury High School
Walton Road, Aylesbury, HP21 7SX·Buckinghamshire·URN: 136846A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary & Post-16
Grammar School
Sixth Form
Girls
Ages 11-18
Religious Character: None
A-levels Ranking
266
Academic
226
Overall
1
Local
GCSE Ranking
190
Academic
163
Overall
1
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
160
England
FMS Inspection Score

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.

Elite
10/10
Application Demand
63%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewA-levelsGCSEOxbridgeOfstedApplication DemandAttendance Heatmap

Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Aylesbury High School Review 2026: Academic Excellence in North Buckinghamshire

At a Glance

When actress Claire Foy walked through these gates at the age of twelve, she joined a school that had been shaping exceptional students for nearly seven decades. The Victorian-era buildings of the original Aylesbury Grammar School may have disappeared, but their legacy lives on here in the purpose-built campus designed by Princess Alexandra in 1959, occupying a site that still retains its distinctive gardens where girls gather between lessons. Today, Aylesbury High School remains a rare girls' grammar school in North Buckinghamshire, serving approximately 1,358 students from age eleven through eighteen, with a sixth form of around 400. The school's standing in the academic landscape is formidable: ranked 190th out of 3,895 in England for GCSE academic performance (FindMySchool ranking), placing it comfortably in the elite tier of selective schools. This is a state-funded institution, meaning families pay no tuition fees, yet the academic calibre rivals many of England's most celebrated independent schools. Most recent Ofsted inspection judged every category as Outstanding. The school's values of Boundless Aspiration, Resilient Bravery, Curious Engagement, and Selfless Generosity are not mere slogans; they shape daily interactions across the six houses that form the backbone of pastoral care.

Character and Atmosphere

The physical campus reflects its modernist heritage: the red-brick buildings, designed with clean lines typical of 1950s educational architecture, sit within grounds that give the school a spacious, unhurried quality. Pupils arrive for morning lessons at 8:50am to an atmosphere of purposeful calm. Teachers greet them by name. The house system creates vertical communities where girls from Year 7 through Year 9 spend most of their time together, taught almost exclusively within their house for core subjects. The six houses, Ascott, Claydon, Hughenden, Missenden, Stowe, and Waddesdon, are named after local Buckinghamshire landmarks, connecting the school to its regional identity. Paired houses work together for practical subjects like Design Technology and Art, building broader friendships while maintaining the intimacy of smaller tutor groups. From Year 10 onwards, the house system loosens as girls specialize in GCSE options, but the House Cup competitions and inter-house assemblies ensure the house identity persists throughout school life.

Headmistress Marieke Forster leads the school as both headteacher and chief executive officer of the Aylesbury High School Trust, which became an academy converter in 2011. Under her leadership, the school has emphasized ambitious education that "stimulates creative and critical thinking" rather than rote learning. The 2023 Ofsted inspection noted that "pupils love learning and embody the school's values," a statement grounded in observable reality. Along corridors during lessons, you notice an engaged quietness, a sense that students take their education seriously without being oppressed by pressure. The inspection praised the school for creating "a calm and joyful place" where "relationships between staff and pupils are warm and kind."

A particular strength identified by inspectors is the school's inclusive approach to academic excellence. Support for pupils with special educational needs or disabilities is described as "excellent," with the school maintaining "the same high academic expectations for these pupils, ensuring they receive carefully adapted support where appropriate." This is not tokenism; the inspection specifically noted that the school has "strategically adapted the curriculum" for students with additional needs, meaning brilliant teaching is tailored rather than diluted.

Results

GCSE Performance

The 2024-25 / 2025 GCSE dataset demonstrates the academic calibre of the school. 51% of published grades were awarded at 8 or 9, with 70% at grades 7-9. The Attainment 8 score of 74.3 is very strong, with an average Progress 8 score of 0.81 indicating that pupils make above-average progress from their starting points. In the English Baccalaureate (a measure of breadth across humanities and sciences), 58.6% of pupils entered all five subject areas, with an EBacc APS score of 6.8.

The school ranks 190th out of 3,895 in England for GCSE academic performance (FindMySchool ranking), and ranks 1st in Aylesbury in the local secondary ranking. This selective position means the cohort entering at eleven-plus has already passed the eleven-plus test, so raw comparison with comprehensive schools is not straightforward. However, within the selective grammar school context, results are impressively consistent, with 98.9% achieving grade 5 or above in English and Mathematics.

A-Level Performance

Sixth form students achieved outstanding results in the 2025 dataset. 50% of A-level entries were graded A* or A, with 80% achieving A*-B across 667 exam entries. The school ranks 266th out of 2,549 in England for A-level academic performance (FindMySchool ranking), and 1st in Aylesbury for sixth form outcomes. This points to a sixth form that combines breadth of entry with consistently strong results.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

76.46%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

70%

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching and Learning

The 2023 Ofsted report emphasized that "teachers' subject knowledge is excellent," which underpins clear explanations and "rich discussions in lessons." The school offers 23 GCSE subjects and 27 A-level options, providing genuine breadth. Languages remain a particular strength, a legacy of the school's former status as a specialist language school until 2011. Every girl must take at least one language to GCSE, and many continue to A-level and university. The curriculum extends beyond conventional academic subjects: the school offers Ancient History, Business, Physical Education, and Food Preparation and Nutrition alongside traditional arts and sciences. Design Technology and Art teaching is structured around collaborative projects in vertical house groups during Years 8-9, allowing younger pupils to learn from older students.

Reading is deliberately embedded throughout the curriculum rather than treated as a primary school concern. Pupils explore "a wide range of academic literature" to develop research, interpretation, and evaluation skills within their subject disciplines. The Learning for Life curriculum (PSHE provision) is carefully crafted to develop character alongside intellect, with Headmistress Marieke Forster describing the goal as creating "global changemakers" equipped to solve world challenges. Inspectors found that "pupils develop strong moral and social characters through the carefully delivered wider curriculum," with discussions of inclusivity and diversity embedded in regular assemblies and across subject areas. Teachers skilfully encourage girls to develop extended written and spoken answers, with pupils knowing they are expected to "think hard and to articulate their ideas and opinions clearly."

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:10/10Elite

Quality of Education

Outstanding

Behaviour & Attitudes

Outstanding

Personal Development

Outstanding

Leadership & Management

Outstanding

FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.

Where Students Go Next

University Progression

The academic base for sixth form progression remains strong in the 2025 dataset. 50% of A-level entries were graded A* or A, 80% were graded A*-B, and the school ranks 266th out of 2,549 in England for A-level academic performance. The school provides "expert unbiased careers guidance," ensuring that choice of university reflects student interest rather than institutional pressure.

Secondary Progression

For pupils completing Year 11 (age 16), most continue within the sixth form. The school has "largest intakes at Year 7 followed by Lower VI," indicating that while some pupils depart for employment or further education college, the majority stay on. Entry to sixth form is selective: "impressive GCSE results are required and competition for these places is high," indicating that not all Year 11 pupils automatically transition to Year 12, and places are offered only to those meeting academic criteria. External applications from other schools are considered, adding further competition.

Oxbridge Success

#158 in England

Total Offers

8

Offer Success Rate: 30.8%

Cambridge

8

Offers

Oxford

0

Offers

Beyond the Classroom

The school offers over 100 different clubs and clinics running throughout the week at lunchtimes and after school. The vast majority are free of charge and are led by teachers and student volunteers giving their own time. Clubs span academic interests, creative pursuits, sporting opportunities, and social causes, creating a genuinely rich co-curricular landscape.

Music: A Defining Strength

Music flourishes across the school. The school hosts vibrant House Music events where each house competes in themed performances, and ensembles regularly perform at external venues including the Waterside Theatre. Named ensembles serve different levels and styles: the Choral Society, Orchestra, Junior Jazz Band, Senior Jazz Band, and specialist small group ensembles including string quartets and wind groups. Instrumental tuition is available in most orchestral instruments and contemporary instruments. The school's specification as a former Language College (until 2011) did not overshadow music; both remain strong. The proximity of Aylesbury Grammar School across the road enables collaboration on large-scale productions, broadening the scope of performance opportunities for girls.

Drama and Performing Arts

The performing arts programme is genuinely impressive. The school produces multiple major productions annually, showcasing student talent at professional venues. A notable recent achievement was the staging of complex contemporary drama productions that toured between the two grammar schools. Rock Challenge competitions attract enthusiastic participation from dancers and performers, with students attending regional and national events. The school specifically mentions "engaging competitions, joint productions, concerts, and victorious dance performances" as hallmarks of this vibrant area of school life.

Sports Provision

Sports options cover a genuinely broad range. Field sports include hockey, rugby, and athletics. Court and racquet sports include badminton, tennis, and squash. Team sports include basketball and handball. Aquatics programming includes swimming and water polo. Every girl participates in PE; competitive opportunities are then available for those seeking representation at house, school, or local level. Specific teams achieve notable success; the inspection mentioned that pupils benefit from "the many meaningful leadership roles," with sports being one avenue for developing such responsibilities (house team captains, year group representatives).

Academic and Special Interest Clubs

Beyond these pillars, the directory of over 100 clubs includes specific named societies: the Afro-Caribbean Society, Bollywood Dance Club, Art Clay Club, Book Club, Chess Club, Chill Club, Computer Hardware Club, Geography Club, and Indian Film Club. Pupils are also encouraged to form new clubs based on emerging interests. Named academic clubs enhance classroom learning: Additional Mathematics clinics, Science clubs, and Coding clubs allow deeper exploration of curriculum content. The Debating Society, Philosophy club, and Law Society provide intellectual challenge beyond the formal curriculum. Duke of Edinburgh Awards are available at Bronze, Silver, and Gold levels, with participation particularly strong in Years 10-13.

Community and Service

The school is locally known for taking fundraising to creative extremes. In 2006, pupils set a Guinness World Record by pulling 1,217 Christmas crackers simultaneously, raising over £2,500 for the NSPCC children's charity. The school maintains a strong partnership with the Rosie May Foundation, a UK charity focused on alleviating poverty and empowering women in Sri Lanka. Annual fundraising weeks feature staff-led pantomimes, karaoke performances, and a student talent competition called the "A Factor." In 2022, Year 12 students raised £1,230 during a dedicated online fundraising effort supporting the foundation's Pink Tuk-Tuk project, which trains women in driving and entrepreneurship. This culture of service is not imposed; it is energetically embraced by the student body, reflecting the school value of "Selfless Generosity."

Admissions

Entry to Year 7 is handled through Buckinghamshire Council's secondary transfer route. For September 2027 entry, the current coordinated admissions timetable gives an application deadline of 31 October 2026, offers on 1 March 2027 and an acceptance deadline of 15 March 2027. This level of competition means that entry requires strong preparation; families typically arrange external tutoring to support candidates, though the school does not formally recommend this.

Applications are made through Buckinghamshire Council's coordinated admissions scheme, not directly to the school. For September 2027 Year 7 entry, the current timetable gives an application deadline of 31 October 2026, offers on 1 March 2027 and an acceptance deadline of 15 March 2027.

Entry to sixth form (Year 12) is more selective than primary entry. Minimum GCSE requirements exist, and competition for places from external candidates is intense. The school notes that "a large number of pupils are also admitted in the Sixth Form from both local state and independent schools, though impressive GCSE results are required and competition for these places is high." Sixth form entry from girls not educated at the school previously requires strong evidence of academic capability.

Open events are typically held in October and November for prospective Year 7 families and in November for prospective sixth form students. The school website contains links to booking information and transition details.

Application Demand

Last distance offered:
12.739 miles

Previous Year (2024/25 Entry)

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
13.507 miles

Applications

558

Total received

Places Offered

187

Subscription Rate

3.0x

Applications per place

Practical Information

School hours run from 8:50am to 3:20pm for main school, with sixth form students following a slightly different timetable reflecting their independent study requirements. No boarding provision exists; all students are day pupils. Transport links are reasonable: the school sits on Walton Road, Aylesbury, accessible by bus from surrounding areas. The nearest public car park for parents attending events is in Walton Street, and the school advises allowing ample parking time for open events. The campus was officially opened by Princess Alexandra on 20 May 1960, and the modernist architecture of that era, clean lines, open spaces, gardens, remains distinctive within Aylesbury's secondary school landscape.

The school became an academy converter in 2011 and is part of Aylesbury High School Trust, a single-school trust overseen by a board of trustees co-chaired by Helen Bush and Kate Weir. The CEO is Marieke Forster, the school's headteacher, creating an integrated leadership structure where strategic direction flows directly from the school's head.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,300
  • Number of pupils: 1,358

Pastoral Care and Wellbeing

The house system provides the primary structure for pastoral care in Years 7-9, with form tutors within each house knowing their tutor group well. From Year 10 onwards, form groups shift to reflect GCSE option choices, but pastoral staff remain consistent. Each year group has a Head of Year and Pastoral Assistant who "closely monitor the progress and welfare of their year group." Senior staff oversee different year groups to ensure consistency of approach.

The school employs a dedicated counselor who visits regularly, supplementing the pastoral support available from teaching staff and the welfare coordinator. Bullying is explicitly not tolerated and is "dealt with swiftly and effectively." The school proactively seeks to understand pupils' wellbeing and provides "help rapidly where there is a need." Inspectors found this pastoral approach to be genuine: "When pupils experience difficulties, they know there is a strong pastoral team that will help them."

The student leadership structure is notably extensive. The Head Girl and a pupil "Cabinet" of six Deputy Head Girls are elected annually through nominations and voting by the year group, staff, and senior leadership team. These roles carry real responsibility; the Cabinet works alongside adult leaders to address issues raised by pupils and to organize large events such as graduation ceremonies and school fundraising. House Captains, Form Representatives, and subject-specific student leaders ensure that student voice is heard across the school. This distributed leadership approach aligns with the Ofsted finding that pupils "benefit from the many meaningful leadership roles that they take on."

Things to Consider

Highly Selective Entry: Admission is handled through Buckinghamshire Council's secondary transfer route. For September 2027 Year 7 entry, applications close on 31 October 2026, with offers due on 1 March 2027 and acceptance by 15 March 2027. Families should not assume their daughter will secure a place. The selection process creates a peer group of similarly high-achieving girls, which can be motivating but may also create an environment where academic success is expected rather than celebrated.

Single-Sex Education: The school educates girls exclusively through Year 11, with sixth form remaining girls-only. Some families seek mixed education; others value the research suggesting that girls' schools foster stronger leadership voices and greater engagement in STEM subjects. This choice should align with family preferences and the individual student's learning needs.

Limited Geographic Catchment: While the school draws students from a wide area (as far as Oxford and Milton Keynes), the selective entry process concentrates pupils from families with capacity to prepare children for the eleven-plus. This selection mechanism, while creating academic homogeneity, may not reflect the full demographic diversity of Buckinghamshire.

Pace and Expectations: This is a high-expectations environment. The Ofsted report notes that pupils are "unafraid to tackle difficult work, ably demonstrating the school's value of resilient bravery," but the corollary is that pupils who struggle with pace or who find confidence threatened by high-achieving peers may need additional support. The school does provide this support, SEND provision is described as "excellent", but the cultural default is toward intellectual challenge rather than consolidation.

The Verdict

Aylesbury High School is among the most successful state-funded girls' grammar schools in the country. The combination of selective intake (ensuring an academically able cohort), excellent teaching (confirmed by Ofsted across all subjects inspected), ambitious curriculum, and rich extracurricular provision creates a genuinely excellent education. The school's values of boundless aspiration, resilient bravery, curious engagement, and selfless generosity are lived daily, not merely aspirational.

For families with daughters who perform strongly on the eleven-plus and thrive in academically rigorous, single-sex, selective environments, Aylesbury High School offers a first-class education at no tuition cost. The school's position as the sole girls' grammar school in North Buckinghamshire gives it a distinctive role, and the evidence (Ofsted judgments, university destinations, GCSE and A-level results) suggests it fulfills that role exceptionally well. The pastoral care is strong, the beyond-classroom opportunities are extensive, and the student experience is genuinely positive.

Those considering entry should prepare thoroughly for the eleven-plus examination, understand the single-sex context, and recognize that this is a school that expects a great deal of its pupils, in return for offering a great deal.

FAQs

Yes, exceptionally. The school was rated Outstanding in December 2023 in every category by Ofsted, including Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, Leadership and Management, and Sixth Form Provision. GCSE results place it 190th out of 3,895 for academic performance (FindMySchool ranking). At A-level, the school ranks 266th out of 2,549 for academic performance. In the current datasets, 51% of published GCSE grades were at 8-9 and 80% of A-level grades were at A*-B. The school has consistently achieved these high standards over many years, making it one of North Buckinghamshire's premier educational institutions.

Entry to the school is determined by the Buckinghamshire Secondary Transfer Test, administered to Year 6 pupils in September. The test has two papers, each 60 minutes long, assessing verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and mathematics. Candidates require a standardized score of 121 or above for automatic qualification; scores of 115-120 may qualify for up to six places reserved for girls in the school's catchment area. The test is age-standardized to ensure fairness. Practice papers and familiarization sessions are available, though the school does not formally recommend external tutoring. Buckinghamshire Council manages the testing in partnership with the grammar schools.

Girls who do not achieve the qualifying score may appeal through Buckinghamshire Council's appeals process. In the fairly unusual event of free places, the school will accept pupils in Year 8 upon success in the twelve-plus examination and thereafter upon reasonable evidence that prospective pupils are academically capable. Many girls who do not secure entry to the school progress to excellent local state comprehensive schools or, in some cases, independent schools in the region.

The school offers over 100 different clubs and clinics throughout the week. Sports include hockey, rugby, athletics, badminton, tennis, squash, basketball, handball, swimming, and water polo. Creative pursuits include orchestras, jazz bands, choral groups, drama productions, and dance. Academic enrichment clubs include Science clubs, Coding clubs, Debating Society, Philosophy club, and Law Society. Special interest clubs include Afro-Caribbean Society, Bollywood Dance Club, Art Clay Club, Book Club, Chess Club, Computer Hardware Club, Geography Club, and Indian Film Club. Duke of Edinburgh Awards are available at Bronze, Silver, and Gold levels. The vast majority of activities are free of charge and are led by staff and student volunteers.

Aylesbury High School is a rare girls' grammar school in North Buckinghamshire, serving a wide geographic area from Oxford to Milton Keynes. The house system, unique among many contemporary schools, creates vertical communities where girls in Years 7-9 are taught almost entirely within their house, fostering deep relationships and peer mentoring. The school's location directly adjacent to Aylesbury Grammar School (the boys' equivalent, founded in 1598) enables collaboration on large-scale productions, events, and learning experiences, providing what leaders describe as "the best of both worlds." The school's selection through the eleven-plus creates a peer group of similarly high-achieving girls, which fosters an academically ambitious culture.

The 2023 Ofsted report specifically praised support for pupils with special educational needs or disabilities as "excellent." The school maintains the same high academic expectations for these pupils while providing "carefully adapted support where appropriate." The school employs specialist staff and has strategically adapted the curriculum to ensure that additional support is integrated into learning rather than provided as isolated interventions. Adjustments can be made for children with disabilities or SEN during the eleven-plus examination to ensure equal opportunity.

In the 2025 dataset, 50% of A-level entries achieved A* or A grades, and 80% achieved A*-B across 667 exam entries. The school ranks 266th out of 2,549 in England for A-level academic performance. The school provides expert, unbiased careers guidance to support each student's progression to their chosen next step.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Walton Road, Aylesbury, HP21 7SX
01296388222
www.ahs.bucks.sch.uk
Marieke Forster
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Disclaimer

Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.

Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.

While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.

FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.

To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.

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