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.
Self-discipline is not treated as a slogan here, it is built into the daily rhythm. King Edward VI King’s Norton School for Boys is a state-funded, non-selective boys’ secondary in King’s Norton, Birmingham, serving ages 11 to 16. It is oversubscribed for Year 7 entry, with 608 applications for 162 offers in the most recent Birmingham entry-round data, which works out at 3.75 applications per place.
The school’s identity is unusually coherent for a large mainstream secondary. Its STRIVE values, Self-discipline, Teamwork, Resilience, Initiative, Vision, Endeavour, are used as the common language for behaviour, personal development, leadership, and outdoor education.
Leadership continuity is a plus. David Clayton has been headteacher since 2019, and the school joined the King Edward VI Foundation on 01 January 2024, a move that signals both stability and a sharper civic-facing profile within Birmingham.
The tone is purposeful, but not joyless. In the most recent full graded inspection narrative, pupils are described as welcoming, behaviour expectations are clear, and disruption is presented as uncommon. STRIVE provides a practical framework, not an abstract set of virtues. It shows up in how rewards and consequences are framed, and it also shapes the school’s outdoor programme, which is treated as character education with muddy boots rather than a bolt-on trip calendar.
Single-sex schooling is part of the overall feel. For many families, boys-only can make adolescence simpler, with fewer social distractions in the early secondary years. For others, it can feel narrower socially, particularly if a family prefers mixed settings throughout. What matters is that the school is explicit about the kind of young men it wants to develop, and it backs that up with routines, roles, and consistent adult expectations.
The move into the King Edward VI Foundation in January 2024 is also relevant to culture. Foundation membership often brings clearer governance structures and a shared set of operational standards, though the day-to-day experience still depends on leadership, staffing, and the clarity of systems. In this case, the continuity of headship since 2019 reduces the risk of identity drift.
At GCSE level, the available performance indicators point to outcomes that are comfortably positive. The school’s Attainment 8 score is 49.4, and Progress 8 is 0.23, which indicates pupils make above-average progress from their starting points across eight subjects. The school’s EBacc average point score is 4.56, above the England EBacc average shown (4.08). The share achieving grades 5 and above in EBacc is 27.6.
A FindMySchool England GCSE ranking is not currently available for this school, so it should be assessed on its underlying outcomes, progress, and the fit of its curriculum and expectations, rather than a headline league-table position.
The July 2023 Ofsted inspection rated the school Good and confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The curriculum story here is best understood as structured ambition plus steady checking for understanding. The inspection narrative describes a curriculum designed to build learning over time, with subject leaders aiming beyond minimum national expectations. A specific example given is the study of Oedipus Rex in Year 9 English as a way to deepen understanding of tragedy, which is a useful signal of intellectual stretch in a mainstream comprehensive context.
Assessment and responsive teaching are an explicit improvement lever. The inspection report indicates consistency in unit-level checking, but less consistency in identifying misconceptions in the moment. For parents, the practical implication is that the experience can vary by subject and by teacher, especially for pupils who need rapid correction to stay confident. The flip side is that the weakness is precisely defined, which usually means leaders can train to it and monitor it.
Support for weaker readers is described as intervention-led and targeted, with broader reading-for-pleasure work still developing. That matters in a secondary that wants to build vocabulary across the curriculum. If your child is a reluctant reader, you would want to ask how reading is supported in Key Stage 3 now, and how the school measures improvement beyond isolated interventions.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because the school finishes at 16, the key question is pathways after Year 11. The inspection report highlights a strong careers programme, framed around helping pupils understand options and make informed choices for their next steps.
In practical terms, many pupils in Birmingham will progress into school sixth forms, sixth form colleges, or technical routes. What you should look for here is whether the school is strong at matching pupils to appropriate post-16 destinations, not just high-attaining ones. Ask how option choices are guided in Key Stage 4, how destinations are tracked, and what support exists for apprenticeships and technical pathways as well as A-level routes.
Year 7 entry is coordinated through Birmingham City Council rather than directly through the school. The school’s published admissions criteria for September 2026 prioritise, in order, looked after or previously looked after children, then boys with a brother already at the school who will still be on roll in September 2026, then boys living nearest the school. Distance is measured as a straight-line calculation between home and the main school gates using the Local Authority’s system.
For September 2026 entry into Year 7 across Birmingham, applications opened on 01 September 2025 and the statutory closing date was 31 October 2025. National Offer Day is 02 March 2026.
The demand picture matters. With 3.75 applications per place in the most recent data, competition is meaningful. If you are relying on distance as your main lever, it is wise to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check your exact home-to-gate distance and sense-check it against recent patterns for the area, remembering that patterns move each year as local cohorts change.
81.0%
1st preference success rate
136 of 168 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
162
Offers
162
Applications
608
The pastoral model is framed as joined-up rather than siloed. The inspection narrative links pastoral work and safeguarding leadership, and it highlights low exclusion rates compared with national figures, alongside good overall attendance. The nuance is that disadvantaged pupils are described as more likely to experience internal suspensions and persistent absence, which the school was challenged to address through a more cohesive strategy.
For parents, the question is less “is pastoral care present” and more “is it consistently effective for the pupils who need it most”. A useful line of enquiry is how the school identifies early warning signs, how it works with families on attendance, and what alternatives are used before internal suspension, especially for pupils eligible for pupil premium.
Safeguarding is described as a priority, with training, recruitment checks, and a culture where pupils are encouraged to share concerns through the “tell someone” approach.
If you want a school where enrichment is not just a list of clubs, this is one to take seriously. Outdoor education is unusually embedded, spanning multiple years and linking directly to values and confidence-building. The school’s outdoor adventure programme offers activities including climbing, mountain biking, canoeing, and dinghy sailing, and it is structured so that students can specialise as they move through the programme.
This matters because it changes the learning culture. Outdoor programmes reward perseverance, planning, teamwork, and calm risk management. For many boys, that is a powerful counterweight to screen-heavy adolescence. The inspection narrative also describes residential trips as common, and it links outdoor education and leadership opportunities to confidence and resilience.
Clubs are present with a sensible mix of creative, academic, and practical options. From the Autumn Term extracurricular timetable, examples include Coding Club (Years 7 and 8), Drama Club, Film Club, First Responders Club, History Club, Art Club, and a range of music options including ukulele, keyboard, and music tech or vocal band sessions. Sport clubs include football, basketball, and dodgeball, alongside fixtures and house competitions. There is also a Sparx Maths Club, plus Period 6 sessions for Year 11, with additional sessions such as science triple award lessons and further maths for Year 10 option students.
The implication for families is clear. If your child thrives on activity, structure, and being busy for the right reasons, the school offers lots of productive “extra” space. If your child needs downtime and can become overwhelmed by constant programmes, you will want to understand expectations around participation and how homework, intervention sessions, and clubs fit together.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Admissions are Local Authority coordinated for Year 7, with in-year applications handled directly by the school according to the published process.
Transport-wise, the most important practical step is to test the commute at realistic times. In a distance-based admissions environment, families sometimes move for proximity, then underestimate journey friction in winter or when traffic patterns shift.
Competition for places. Demand is significant, and distance is a key tie-break once priority categories are met. If you are outside the likely local radius, you need a realistic Plan B school on your Birmingham application.
Variation for disadvantaged pupils. The most recent graded inspection highlighted that internal suspension and persistent absence were more common for disadvantaged pupils, and it asked leaders to tighten strategy and staff understanding. The question for parents is what has changed since then, and how consistency is monitored.
Boys-only is a choice, not a neutral detail. Many boys do very well in single-sex settings; others prefer mixed peer groups. It is worth considering your child’s social style and maturity, not just academic profile.
Structured expectations can feel demanding. The school leans into rewards, consequences, and clear behaviour norms. For some pupils that is reassuring; for others it can feel restrictive if they need more autonomy early on.
King Edward VI King’s Norton School for Boys suits families who want a mainstream, non-selective boys’ secondary with clear routines, a strong behavioural spine, and enrichment that includes serious outdoor education rather than token clubs. The headteacher’s tenure since 2019 supports stability, and the Good judgement from the most recent graded inspection provides external reassurance.
Best suited to boys who respond well to structure, enjoy active programmes, and benefit from adults who set firm expectations and follow through. The challenge lies in admission rather than what follows, so families should shortlist early and use FindMySchool’s tools to keep a clear view of options and realistic likelihoods.
The most recent full graded inspection judged the school to be Good, with effective safeguarding. Academic indicators show above-average progress and a solid EBacc profile, alongside a strong culture of behaviour and participation.
No. Boys are admitted at age 11 without reference to ability or aptitude, with places allocated by published oversubscription criteria.
Applications are made through Birmingham City Council as part of the coordinated admissions process. After priority categories, places are generally offered based on straight-line distance from home to the school gates.
For Birmingham secondary entry in September 2026, the statutory closing date was 31 October 2025, with offers released on 02 March 2026.
Outdoor education is a major feature, including activities such as climbing, canoeing, mountain biking, and dinghy sailing. Clubs include Coding Club, Drama Club, Film Club, First Responders Club, and music tech and performance options.
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