A school with “Grammar School” in the name, but a modern admissions model: this is a state-funded academy free school for ages 11 to 19, and it does not operate as a selective grammar. Instead, Year 7 entry uses a fair banding assessment alongside the usual Local Authority application route, which changes both the feel of admissions and the shape of each intake.
Heritage still matters here. Founded in 1509, the story includes Royal Charter status, long-standing traditions like the “Big School” hall, and later additions such as Singleton House (the sixth form centre) and dedicated sports facilities at Lammack.
Academic results sit around the middle of England schools for GCSE outcomes in the FindMySchool ranking, while sixth form outcomes sit lower in England in the FindMySchool ranking. The strongest day-to-day signal is ambition paired with structure: clear expectations, busy co-curricular life, and a culture that expects students to commit, whether that is to debates, the arts, or Saturday sport.
The tone is set by the school’s stated ethos, Disce Prodesse (Learn to be of service). It is used explicitly as a framing for leadership, teamwork, and a sense that education should translate into contribution, not just qualifications.
A second thread is the school’s “independent-school ethos” positioning, paired with the practical reality of being state-funded. In plain terms, families get a culture of high expectations and a strong emphasis on conduct and participation, without tuition fees. That combination can appeal to students who like clear boundaries and a busy timetable, and it can feel demanding for those who prefer a looser approach to school life.
Leadership continuity is a notable feature. Mrs Claire Gammon is listed as headteacher, and the trust’s own reporting records her appointment as Head from June 2017, after a period as Acting Head from January 2017. Stability at the top usually helps with consistent implementation, but it also means the school’s current strengths and weaknesses are clearly attributable to the same leadership era, rather than being explained away by frequent changes.
The physical environment reinforces the mix of tradition and expansion. The school history sets out named spaces and phases of growth, including the “Big School” hall, the Queen’s Wing, the swimming pool at West Park Road, and the purpose-built sixth form centre, Singleton House. For many students, these named places matter because they anchor routines: sixth form has its own centre; sport extends beyond the immediate site; arts have dedicated rooms rather than being squeezed into general classrooms.
GCSE outcomes, as represented by the FindMySchool dataset, place the school in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile) for GCSE performance. In the FindMySchool ranking, it is ranked 1,776th in England and 8th locally in Blackburn for GCSE outcomes. (These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.)
On headline measures, the average Attainment 8 score is 46.7 and the Progress 8 score is -0.22. The EBacc average point score is 4.29, and 17.1% of pupils achieved grades 5 or above in the EBacc measure. Taken together, this points to a school where attainment is respectable, but where progress (as measured by Progress 8) is slightly below average, so outcomes may be uneven across subjects and cohorts.
In sixth form, FindMySchool ranks the school 2,049th in England and 6th locally in Blackburn for A-level outcomes. (Again, these are proprietary FindMySchool rankings based on official data.) A-level grades show 4.21% at A*, 7.28% at A, 18.77% at B, and 30.27% at A* to B. Compared with England averages the A* to B proportion (30.27%) sits below the England benchmark (47.2%).
For families, the practical implication is that the school’s strongest value proposition is not “results at any cost”. It is the combination of a structured culture, breadth of provision, and clear expectations. Students who thrive tend to be those who respond well to consistent routines, use staff support effectively, and take advantage of the enrichment that builds confidence and maturity alongside grades.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
30.27%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Curriculum ambition is explicit, and the school has been working on curriculum design and delivery in response to identified inconsistencies. Strong subject knowledge among staff is highlighted, particularly where explanations are clear and content builds well on prior learning. Where the model is less successful, the issue is not lack of ambition, but implementation: not every subject area has the same coherence and depth, and checking what pupils know and remember is not consistently strong across classrooms.
Reading is treated as a priority rather than a box-ticking exercise. The school library, structured reading lessons, and a bookmark club are part of the strategy. Support is described as effective for many pupils, with a clear area to strengthen for older pupils who still struggle with fluency and confidence. For parents, that matters because weak reading in Years 9 to 11 can quietly cap performance across most GCSE subjects, even when a pupil is otherwise capable.
At sixth form level, expectations shift towards independent work. The published sixth form guidance frames the day as preparation for employment and higher education routines: formal teaching is paired with free periods, and students are expected to manage workload and independent study sensibly.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Good
For many families, the key question is whether the school delivers credible pathways after Year 11 and Year 13. On destination measures, the most recent leaver dataset shows that 71% of the 2023/24 leaver cohort progressed to university, 8% to apprenticeships, 8% to employment, and 5% to further education (with the remainder not specified). These are solid progression indicators for a mainstream 11 to 19 school.
Oxbridge is present but not central. In the most recent Oxbridge measurement period, 11 students applied to Oxford or Cambridge combined; one received an offer and one ultimately secured a place, with that acceptance recorded at Cambridge. The implication is a school that supports high-end applicants, but where the typical “top destination” story is broader: strong applications across a range of universities, degree apprenticeships, and employment, rather than a pipeline dominated by Oxford and Cambridge.
For sixth form students weighing up options, it is sensible to see the school as a strong fit for those who want a smaller sixth form setting with leadership opportunities (prefects, mentoring, and student-led clubs are emphasised), and who are comfortable being proactive about study habits and support.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 9.1%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
Demand is real. For Year 7 entry, the dataset records 546 applications for 140 places, indicating 3.9 applications per place, with the school marked oversubscribed. Competition for places is the limiting factor, especially for families hoping for a straightforward local transfer without engaging carefully with the process.
The most important point of clarity is that admission is not purely based on distance or a single entrance exam. For September 2026 entry, the school set out a two-part process: a Local Authority Common Application Form plus the school’s Supplementary Information Form, which triggers an invitation to the Fair Banding Assessment. For that cycle, applications opened on 03 September 2025, the on-time deadline was 31 October 2025, and national offer day is 02 March 2026. The Fair Banding Assessment for that intake was scheduled for 15 November 2025 and is described as an online assessment of verbal, numerical and non-verbal abilities.
Because today is 25 January 2026, most of those Year 7 deadlines have already passed for September 2026 entry, aside from national offer day. Families planning ahead for later years should treat the pattern as the key takeaway: applications typically open in early September, close at the end of October, and the fair banding assessment tends to follow in mid-November, with offers aligned to the national March timetable. Checking the school’s admissions pages close to your intended entry year remains essential, as the school is explicit that completing both forms matters.
Sixth form admissions are handled directly, and applications for September 2026 entry are stated as open. The school also publishes a “Timetable for Decisions” that indicates the rhythm of the process: open evening in early autumn, preliminary choices during November, an application closing point in February, then confirmation of subject choices and timetabling work in March. The page specifies 21 February as the application closing date, which is best treated as the typical deadline unless the current year’s dates are updated.
Applications
140
Total received
Places Offered
56
Subscription Rate
2.5x
Apps per place
Applications
546
Total received
Places Offered
140
Subscription Rate
3.9x
Apps per place
Pastoral systems place value on students feeling known and supported. Behaviour and attendance are treated as core, not peripheral. The culture described is largely calm and purposeful, with the important caveat that persistent poor behaviour from a small minority can still disrupt learning for others and undermine confidence for some families. Communication about behaviour management, particularly explaining what actions have been taken, is an area where consistency matters and where the school has been asked to strengthen practice.
Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as systematic, with information shared to staff and used to help pupils access the curriculum. For parents, the practical implication is that the school is not positioning itself as a specialist SEND provider, but it is signalling that mainstream support structures are in place and taken seriously.
One clear reassurance is that safeguarding is treated as effective, and the school promotes personal development through structured programmes that cover keeping safe, diversity, and preparation for life after school.
The co-curricular offer is not a vague promise; the school names specific clubs and formats. Alongside the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award, examples include Art Club, Debating Society, Electronics Club, and Chess Club. For students, the benefit is twofold: a route into new peer groups (particularly important in a school drawing pupils from different primary schools), and a way to develop confidence that translates into classroom participation and leadership roles.
Sport has its own infrastructure and traditions. Playing Fields at Lammack are positioned as a focal point for fixtures, including Saturday morning activity. The school’s own description emphasises competitive sport alongside expectations around conduct and fairness, and it publishes named responsibility for teams across cricket, football, netball, cross country, swimming, and Duke of Edinburgh coordination. This matters because it signals organisational seriousness: fixtures, coaching, and a pathway for students who want regular structured sport, not just occasional clubs.
The arts have identifiable homes and ensembles. Art is based in Hartley House, with displays of GCSE and A-level work around the school and trips connected to the subject. Music includes named groups such as Jazz Band and School Choir, with rehearsals structured into the week and performances linked to major school events across the year. Drama is described as an important part of school life even without being an examined subject, with opportunities around productions and the use of facilities by external drama provision. The practical implication is that arts participation can be regular and structured, not an occasional add-on.
Sixth form students also have a distinctive role in the wider school ecosystem. The school references student-led clubs such as debates and medical society, and it highlights older students mentoring younger pupils. For a sixth former, that is both enrichment and application advantage: leadership and responsibility are easier to evidence when the school provides clear routes to take them on.
For sixth form students, the published model day starts at 8.40am and formal teaching finishes at 3.50pm, with free periods across the timetable to enable independent work.
Travel is helped by a school-run shuttle that operates from the town centre transport hub area in the morning and returns after the end of the day; this is useful for students commuting by rail or bus.
The school is in the West Park area of Blackburn, close to Corporation Park, so walking routes are realistic for some families, while others will be commuting across the borough. Parking and drop-off arrangements are not clearly detailed in the published material, so families relying on daily car travel should check practical logistics during open events.
Admissions complexity. Year 7 entry requires both the Local Authority application and the school’s Supplementary Information Form to access the Fair Banding Assessment. Missing either step can leave an application classed as late, which is a high-risk mistake in an oversubscribed school.
Behaviour consistency for all pupils. The culture is generally calm, but persistent poor behaviour from a small minority is explicitly identified as disruptive for others, and confidence in how concerns are handled is an area the school has been asked to strengthen.
Sixth form outcomes versus expectations. Sixth form results, as represented by the FindMySchool dataset, sit lower relative to England than GCSE outcomes. Students who want to improve their trajectory should plan for disciplined independent study and make full use of staff support.
A demanding co-curricular culture. The school encourages participation, and that suits students who like to be busy. Those who prefer a lighter rhythm may find the expectation of commitment harder to sustain across the week.
Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School, Blackburn offers something relatively unusual: a state-funded secondary and sixth form with a clearly traditional sense of standards, a strong extracurricular architecture, and admissions designed to create a balanced intake rather than select purely by prior attainment. The academic picture is mixed across phases, with GCSE outcomes sitting around the middle of England in the FindMySchool ranking and sixth form outcomes lower, so the best fit is a student who responds to structure, commits to enrichment, and is ready to take responsibility for independent study as they progress.
Who it suits: families seeking a high-expectation culture without fees, and students who want a busy school life that includes sport, ensembles, clubs, and leadership routes. The main hurdle is admission, not the day-to-day offer.
For many families, “good” here means structure, expectations, and breadth. The school has an established culture around conduct and participation, alongside a wide range of clubs and organised sport. Academic outcomes are solid at GCSE level in the FindMySchool dataset, and progression routes after sixth form include university, apprenticeships, and employment, with a smaller number applying to Oxford and Cambridge.
Despite the name, it does not run standard selective grammar admissions at Year 7. Entry is coordinated through the Local Authority alongside the school’s own Supplementary Information Form, which enables pupils to take a Fair Banding Assessment. This approach is intended to create an intake that is balanced across ability bands rather than selecting only the highest scorers.
Demand is high. The dataset records 546 applications for 140 places for the Year 7 entry route, which equates to around 3.9 applications per place. In practice, this means families need to treat the process as competitive and make sure every required step is completed correctly and on time.
In the FindMySchool dataset, the average Attainment 8 score is 46.7 and Progress 8 is -0.22. The school’s GCSE ranking sits in line with the middle 35% of schools in England, which broadly indicates outcomes that are respectable but not consistently high across every measure.
The published sixth form model runs from an 8.40am start to a 3.50pm end for formal teaching, with free periods built into the day. Students are expected to use that time for independent work, and the structure is framed as preparation for university and employment routines.
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