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 school can be improving and still feel uncertain day to day for families. The Giles Academy stands out because it is doing both parts: raising outcomes, and tightening the routines that make learning work at scale. The most recent inspection judged the academy Good overall, with leadership and management assessed as Outstanding, which is a strong signal that the improvement work is not superficial.
Leadership is structured across the South Lincolnshire Academies Trust, with Miss Katie Belcher serving as Head of School and a wider trust team supporting school improvement. For parents, the practical headline is that this is a mainstream, non-selective, mixed academy with demand for places. The open evening programme is positioned as the main way to get a clear feel for the school’s direction and expectations, rather than relying on individual tours.
Clarity of expectations is the defining feature here. The school’s values are used as a working language, not a slogan, and the daily structure is designed to reinforce habits around punctuality, conduct, and readiness to learn. That matters in a large setting, because the experience for students is shaped as much by corridors, transitions, and shared routines as by what happens in classrooms.
A visible part of the culture is student responsibility. Students can take on roles such as school council membership, reading ambassadors, transition buddies, and prefects, which signals that leadership is seen as something earned and practised, rather than reserved for a small group. Those opportunities are not cosmetic; they are linked to confidence-building and a sense of belonging, especially important for students joining in Year 7 from a wide spread of primaries and villages.
There is also a deliberate emphasis on inclusion and safety. Staff are described as actively caring about students’ education and wellbeing, and the wider safeguarding culture is presented as a consistent thread rather than a compliance exercise. Pastoral systems are central to the school’s identity, and they are repeatedly referenced as a strength in formal reporting.
For GCSE outcomes, the FindMySchool ranking places The Giles Academy 3,070th in England and 3rd in the Boston area (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This sits below England average overall, in the lower performance tier nationally.
On core performance measures, the picture is mixed but not directionless. The school’s Progress 8 score is +0.20 (2024), indicating that students, on average, achieve above expectations given their starting points. Attainment 8 is 40, which provides a snapshot of average grades across a student’s best eight GCSE entries. The EBacc average point score is 3.33, and 7.5% of pupils achieved grades 5 or above across the EBacc subjects.
The most useful way to interpret this combination is that the school is making ground through teaching quality and leadership focus, but still has work to do to shift the overall attainment profile. For parents, that typically translates into a school that can be particularly effective for students who respond well to structure and consistent teaching, and where targeted support can make a meaningful difference.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Curriculum intent is described in practical terms: clear sequencing, a focus on what students should know and be able to do, and a push for consistency in classroom delivery. The inspection evidence points to teachers generally presenting information clearly, choosing tasks that help pupils learn, and using frequent checks of understanding to spot gaps.
Where the school is still tightening practice is formative assessment consistency. In some subjects, assessment does not reliably identify misconceptions and knowledge gaps early enough, which can slow progress for students who need timely correction. This is a technical issue rather than a headline one, but it matters because it affects how quickly students catch up when they fall behind.
At Key Stage 3, the curriculum is broad, with English, mathematics, science, humanities, arts, languages, computing, and personal development all positioned as core elements rather than add-ons. At Key Stage 4, core GCSEs sit alongside a menu that includes subjects such as Business Studies, Digital Information Technology, Food Preparation and Nutrition, Health and Social Care, Sport Science, and Statistics, which gives students multiple routes to build a balanced profile for post-16.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The school’s careers education is described as high-quality, with students supported to understand a range of next steps across education, training, and employment. The Baker Clause expectation is explicitly referenced in the inspection documentation, which usually means students in Years 8 to 11 should have structured access to information about technical routes and apprenticeships, not only sixth form pathways.
Post-16 is slightly more complex than a single-site sixth form model. The school is part of a trust that promotes a separate sixth form offer based at Bourne Academy, with open evenings and an application timeline that sits alongside Year 11 planning. For families, the practical implication is to treat post-16 planning as a two-step process: first, establish GCSE option choices and likely grades; second, confirm the travel and daily routine that a trust-based sixth form might involve.
Secondary admissions are coordinated by Lincolnshire County Council. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 8 September 2025 and the national closing date is 31 October 2025, with a local final date for late applications and changes of 12 December 2025. Offers for secondary places are released on 2 March 2026.
Demand is an important part of the picture. The latest published application and offer figures supplied indicate 394 applications for 174 offers, which is about 2.26 applications per place. That is a level of competition where careful preference planning matters, especially if your family is considering more than one school in the area.
The school positions the open evening as the main entry point for understanding expectations and daily life. For 2026, the published open evening date is Tuesday 29 September 2026 (5.30pm to 8.00pm), with no advance booking required. The school also flags that these evenings are busy and that parking can be pressured, which is a practical detail but also a proxy indicator of demand.
Parents weighing probabilities should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check the likely travel pattern and compare realistic options, then use the Local Hub comparison tools to benchmark outcomes and priorities side by side.
Applications
394
Total received
Places Offered
174
Subscription Rate
2.3x
Apps per place
Pastoral care is described as a core strength, with staff working to ensure students feel safe, supported, and able to learn. Students report being happy at school and experiencing strong pastoral support, alongside clear expectations for learning and conduct.
There is also a strong emphasis on early identification and escalation where students need help, including when external services are required. This matters in a coastal and rural catchment where access to wider services can vary by location, and where the school can play a central coordinating role for families.
Attendance is the key wellbeing-related pressure point. The most recent inspection notes that persistent absence remains too high for some groups, particularly vulnerable pupils, and that this can lead to missed learning and widening gaps. For parents, that is a prompt to ask how attendance is monitored, what support is offered, and how the school works with families where absence has complex causes.
Inspectors also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular provision is organised around the end of the formal day, with “Period 6” used for clubs, intervention, and enrichment. The benefit of this model is that enrichment is built into the rhythm of the week rather than being treated as optional extras for a small minority.
The published programme for Term 3 (January to February 2026) gives a helpful window into the school’s priorities. Alongside sports and performing arts, there are clearly academic clubs and structured support sessions. Examples include the STEM Club (Years 7 to 9), Maths Challenge Club (Years 7 and 8), Creative Writing Club (Year 7), Debate Club (all years), History Explorers Club (Years 7 to 9), and a Live Lounge music session for all years.
There is also a range of inclusion-oriented activity. For the same term, the schedule includes an LGBTQ+ Club and a Crochet Club, alongside Chess Club and library-based opportunities such as Junior Librarians. The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award runs for Year 10, which can be a strong fit for students who benefit from goal-based development and supervised independence.
Sport is present at both participation and development levels, with activities such as basketball, football, badminton, and netball explicitly timetabled, and a fitness suite used for different year groups.
The school day starts with students expected on site at 8.35am, with registration from 8.40am. Lessons run through to a final registration, assembly, or personal development slot ending at 3.15pm, followed by after-school provision through Period 6.
Travel is a major practical factor in this area. The school describes itself as accessible via an established bus network, and the prospectus places emphasis on the number of local bus stops serving surrounding villages and Boston. The published transport support includes a bus pass subsidy model, including 50% support for students not qualifying for local authority transport and 100% for families in receipt of free school meals, as described in the school’s published materials.
On day-to-day costs, catering operates via a cashless system, and free school meal entitlement is described as £4.00 per day loaded to the student account. As with all state schools, there are no tuition fees; costs tend to sit in uniform, trips, and optional extras such as music tuition.
Competition for places. Published application and offer figures indicate demand that can outstrip supply, so admissions planning should be realistic and deadline-driven.
Attendance as a pressure point. Persistent absence for some vulnerable pupils remains an area the school is working to improve, and families should ask how support is structured when attendance patterns become difficult.
Post-16 logistics. Post-16 options are promoted at trust level, which can be a strong opportunity but may involve a different site and travel pattern than families expect when they first choose a Year 7 school.
Consistency of assessment practice. The school’s direction is clear, but assessment consistency across subjects was identified as still being embedded, which can matter for students who need early correction and rapid catch-up.
The Giles Academy is a school with visible momentum, strengthened routines, and leadership capacity that has been formally recognised. It will suit families who want a structured, expectations-led environment in a non-selective setting, and who value a clear pastoral framework alongside academic improvement. The main constraint is admissions competition, and the key practical decision is understanding travel and post-16 pathways early, not in Year 11.
The most recent inspection judged the school Good overall, with Outstanding for leadership and management. Students describe feeling safe and supported, and the school’s Progress 8 score of +0.20 (2024) indicates above-average progress from prior attainment.
Applications are made through Lincolnshire County Council. For September 2026 entry, applications open on 8 September 2025 and close on 31 October 2025, with offers released on 2 March 2026.
In the FindMySchool GCSE rankings, the school is placed 3,070th in England and 3rd in the Boston area. The Progress 8 score of +0.20 (2024) suggests students generally do better than expected given their starting points, while attainment measures indicate there is still headroom to lift overall grades.
A structured Period 6 model supports enrichment after 3.15pm. Recent published examples include STEM Club, Debate Club, Maths Challenge Club, Creative Writing Club, Chess Club, and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award, alongside sport and performing arts activities.
Post-16 options are promoted across the wider trust, with a dedicated trust sixth form offer based at Bourne Academy and a published open evening programme. Families should clarify subject availability, entry requirements, and travel expectations during Year 10 and early Year 11 planning.
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