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.
A smaller-than-average secondary serving Barnoldswick and the surrounding Lancashire and Yorkshire border communities, this is a school that talks plainly about what it is trying to achieve. Its stated direction is summed up through the ASPIRE values and the idea that pupils should be known well as individuals, then supported to aim high.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (2 and 3 July 2024) rated the school Requires Improvement across Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, and Leadership and Management.
For families, the practical headline is that this is a state-funded school with no tuition fees, a structured school day running 8.45am to 3.15pm, and admissions coordinated by Lancashire for Year 7 entry.
The school positions itself as community-focused and deliberately personal. In his welcome, Principal John Bates emphasises that its small size means students are known, understood, and cared for, which is a meaningful promise for families whose children may need close day-to-day oversight during early secondary years.
Values are presented as a practical operating system rather than wall text. The ASPIRE set is spelled out in full, Ambition, Supportive, Positivity, Independence, Resilience, and Equality, with the school stating that these were selected by students. That combination matters because it signals two priorities at once, raised expectations (ambition, resilience) alongside relational culture (supportive, equality).
The school also uses a clear motto to set a long-term tone. Ad Vitam Paramus (We are preparing for life) is described as the headline for its educational philosophy, tying day-to-day learning to employability and future pathways rather than only examinations.
As context, governance and support sit within Pendle Education Trust, with the academy conversion date recorded as 1 September 2016. For parents, trust membership can shape consistency of curriculum planning, staffing support, and school improvement capacity, particularly when a school is working through a multi-year improvement plan.
Academic outcomes, as captured by the FindMySchool ranking, indicate performance that is below England average overall. The school’s GCSE outcomes ranking is 3,626th in England (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), which sits within the bottom 40% band in England. It is ranked 1st locally within the Barnoldswick grouping on the same measure.
On core measures, the school’s average Attainment 8 score is 33.7, and its Progress 8 score is -0.99. In plain terms, Progress 8 is designed so that 0 is broadly average progress from pupils’ starting points, and a score close to -1 indicates that, on average, outcomes have been substantially below what would be expected from prior attainment.
For families, the implication is that it is sensible to ask detailed questions about consistency between subjects. A school can have pockets of strength alongside weaker delivery in other areas, and a headline progress measure at this level usually points to variation in teaching impact and curriculum implementation across departments.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum intent is framed as a five-year plan, organised into sequenced learning designed to be engaging, well planned, and oriented to lifelong learning. It also states that the curriculum is delivered by subject specialists through defined pathways of study.
That phrasing matters because it implies a deliberate approach to building knowledge over time, rather than a short-term focus on Year 11 only. For pupils in Years 7 to 9, a well-sequenced curriculum is often the difference between “coping” and genuinely building confidence in foundations such as literacy, numeracy, and subject vocabulary.
External evidence from the most recent report reinforces that the ambition of the curriculum has been designed with care, but that delivery has not been consistent enough across subjects, particularly where expectations and activity choice have not matched curriculum ambition. For parents, the practical takeaway is to look for clarity on how the school is standardising lesson routines and assessment checks so that weaker areas become less dependent on individual staff members.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Requires Improvement
Personal Development
Requires Improvement
Leadership & Management
Requires Improvement
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As an 11–16 school, the key transition is post-16. The school’s published materials place notable emphasis on careers education and employability. It has been recognised with a Skills Builder Bronze Award, and the school links this work to broader careers benchmarks and impartial guidance.
There is also a clear focus on employer engagement. The school has actively sought two-week work experience placements for Year 10 students, with placement dates published as 16 March to 27 March (academic year referenced on the school site). Work experience at this stage can be particularly valuable for students who benefit from linking classroom learning to real settings, and it often supports more confident decision-making about post-16 routes.
Given local geography, many pupils will typically consider sixth forms and colleges within commutable distance, alongside apprenticeships and training routes. The school also references regular opportunities to meet local employers and to visit colleges as part of its personal development and careers provision.
Year 7 admissions are coordinated by Lancashire, and the school’s admissions page gives unusually clear timing for the 2026 entry cycle. Applications for September 2026 entry are stated as open from 1 September 2025 to 31 October 2025, with national offer day on 1 March 2026.
For families moving into the area or seeking a mid-year transfer, the school explains that in-year applications are made directly to the school, and that outcomes are normally provided within 15 days of receipt. It also notes that where year groups are full, oversubscription criteria are applied and waiting lists do not guarantee a place.
Appeals information is also explicit. For the normal admissions round (2025–26 reference on the school page), the deadline for lodging an appeal is given as 16 April 2026, with appeals heard by 6 June 2026. Parents considering an appeal should treat this as a process with tight timeframes and prepare evidence early, particularly if the case relies on exceptional social or medical circumstances.
A practical note for open events: Lancashire’s secondary admissions booklet for East Lancashire listed an open event planned for early October in the 2025 cycle, which suggests that open evenings typically run in early autumn. Families should still check the school’s published events listings for the current year’s dates.
Applications
167
Total received
Places Offered
96
Subscription Rate
1.7x
Apps per place
Pastoral culture here is best understood as a combination of raised behavioural expectations and structured support roles. The most recent inspection evidence indicates that expectations around behaviour have been increased and that many pupils behave well, but it also highlights that some pupils have experienced derogatory or discriminatory language from peers, and that not all pupils have felt confident to report it consistently.
The school’s approach to student leadership and peer responsibility appears to be a significant lever. The report references student ambassador roles and training linked to mental health and anti-bullying approaches. Done well, this can strengthen reporting confidence and create visible norms, but it only works if staff follow-through is consistent and pupils see that incidents are addressed quickly.
Ofsted confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For families weighing day-to-day practical support, it is also notable that the inspection report states the school provides a breakfast club, which can be particularly helpful for attendance, punctuality, and morning routine stability.
Extracurricular participation is framed as integral, not optional. The school’s published extracurricular page explicitly states that activities are free, and it flags two specific options with limited spaces requiring registration of interest.
Two named examples provide a useful sense of flavour. Stage Door Drama Club offers a performance-focused route for students who want confidence and teamwork through theatre, while Imogen’s Dance School is positioned as open to beginners as well as those with prior interest. For students who do not immediately connect with traditional team sports, these kinds of structured creative options can be a major engagement driver.
The inspection evidence also points to wider participation through clubs, competitions, and responsibility roles. The implication for parents is that enrichment exists across different pupil profiles, but it is worth asking how staff encourage take-up among quieter pupils, and whether the school monitors participation by year group and pupil premium status.
The school day is published with precise timings. Tutor period starts at 8.45am, and the day ends with registration finishing at 3.15pm. Lesson periods run from 9.05am to 3.05pm with a mid-morning break and lunch at 12.25pm.
Transport is referenced through school bus information and guidance, with a reminder that routes and timetables can change ahead of September starts. For families outside walking distance, it is sensible to confirm arrangements early, particularly if a pupil will rely on a specific bus connection for after-school commitments.
Term dates for 2025–26 are also published, which supports planning around travel, childcare for younger siblings, and holiday commitments.
Inspection profile and improvement pace. All four judgement areas were rated Requires Improvement in July 2024. Families should ask what has changed since then, and how leaders are ensuring consistent curriculum delivery across subjects, not only in the strongest departments.
Behaviour consistency and reporting confidence. External evidence points to improved expectations and many pupils behaving well, alongside incidents of discriminatory language and uneven confidence in reporting. Parents should ask how staff respond, how repeat issues are tracked, and what pupils are taught to do if an incident is not addressed first time.
Post-16 planning matters. With education ending at 16 on site, the transition to college, sixth form, apprenticeships, or training is central. The school highlights careers provision and work experience, but families should still ask how destinations are supported for different attainment levels, including those who need a strong Plan B.
West Craven High School is straightforward about its ambition, its values-led culture, and the role it wants extracurricular and careers education to play in keeping students engaged. The current inspection profile and outcomes data indicate that the key question is consistency, particularly whether effective practice in stronger areas has become the norm across the school.
Who it suits: families who want a smaller local secondary with clear values, structured day-to-day routines, and visible emphasis on careers and personal development, and who are prepared to ask detailed questions about how improvement work is being implemented in classrooms.
The most recent inspection (July 2024) judged the school Requires Improvement across the main areas, so it is best understood as a school in an improvement phase. Outcomes data also indicates below-average performance overall in England on GCSE measures, so parents should focus on how consistent teaching is across subjects and what evidence there is of sustained progress since 2024.
Applications are coordinated by Lancashire. The school states that applications for September 2026 entry open on 1 September 2025 and close on 31 October 2025, with offers released on 1 March 2026.
No. It is a state-funded academy, so there are no tuition fees. Families should still budget for typical secondary costs such as uniform, equipment, and optional trips.
The published timetable shows tutor time begins at 8.45am. The day finishes with registration ending at 3.15pm.
The school publishes a programme of free clubs and highlights options such as Stage Door Drama Club and Imogen’s Dance School, noting that some activities have limited spaces and require registration of interest.
Get in touch with the school directly
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