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SchoolsBristolCollegiate School|Best Secondary Schools in Bristol
Independent School
Collegiate School
Stapleton, Bristol, Bristol, BS16 1BJ·Bristol, City of·URN: 109336A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
All-through
Sixth Form
Nursery Provision
Mixed
Ages 2-18
Religious Character: None
A-levels Ranking
366
Academic
318
Overall
5
Local
GCSE Ranking
420
Academic
343
Overall
6
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
1,218
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
£Fees
Yr 12
£5,571
Yr 13
£5,571
per term
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewA-levelsGCSEPrimaryOxbridgeISI Inspection

Last reviewed: January 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Collegiate School Review 2026: Three Centuries of Learning in Bristol

At a Glance

Thomas Chatterton, the eighteen-century boy poet who inspired Romantic giants like Keats and Wordsworth, walked these grounds as a precocious student in the 1750s. Today, visitors to Collegiate School find themselves on the same 35-acre campus, a former bishop's palace relocated here in 1861, where academic rigour and creative freedom remain equally prized. The school was founded in 1710 by Bristol merchant Edward Colston as an all-boys boarding school and has evolved dramatically over three centuries; the transformation accelerated in 1949 with day-boys, in 1984 with girls entering the sixth form, and in 1991 following a merger that created genuine co-education. In September 2022, the school adopted the name Collegiate School, Bristol, reflecting this inclusive evolution. With approximately 800 students aged 2 to 18 across its Prep and Senior Schools, Collegiate operates as a grounded, values-driven community where academic excellence and broader human development are treated as equally important. The FindMySchool data reveals strong academic results: at GCSE, the school ranks 420th of 3,895; at A-level, 366th of 2,549 in England. In 2024, ISI inspectors conducted their first evaluation under the new framework, removing single-word judgements in favour of deeper pupil voice and balanced findings; the headmaster confirmed the report would have merited the highest possible grade under the old system. For families in Bristol and beyond seeking a school that balances intellectual ambition with genuine pastoral care and community responsibility, Collegiate presents a serious option.

Character & Atmosphere

The physical setting immediately conveys Collegiate's distinctive character. The brick Bishop's Palace, with its Victorian extensions, sits at the top of Bell Hill amid woodland and open playing fields, an unusual luxury for a Bristol school. Between lessons, students stream across manicured pitches; at lunchtime, the Chatterton Hall multipurpose venue (named after the school's most famous alumni) hums with activity. There is palpable order here without rigidity. Teachers are addressed by first names in some contexts, and the house system creates genuine belonging without the insular cliques that plagued older boarding house cultures.

Jeremy McCullough has led the school since September 2014, arriving from Lancing College. His tenure has coincided with the name change and a strategic push toward inclusion. The school's founding Christian heritage remains visible, services and Christian messages persist, yet Collegiate explicitly welcomes families of all faiths and none. This balance reflects modern Bristol: diverse, values-driven, but without proselytising edges. Students describe an atmosphere where academic ambition is matched by expectations around kindness and service. The Sixth Form Outreach Programme involves pupils in hundreds of volunteer hours annually at care homes, primary schools, and local projects. This is not tokenism; it is woven into the school's identity.

The four day houses (Aldington, Beaufort, Roundway, and King's) serve as the hub of pastoral life. House competitions span sport, debating, chess, art, poetry, and charity work, an antidote to schools where achievement means grades alone. The House Song competition is particularly memorable: each house trains senior pupils to lead younger members in ensemble performances, judged by external adjudicators. This ritual, which occurs annually, encapsulates Collegiate's philosophy: stretch students academically while celebrating communal effort and creative expression.

Academic Performance: GCSE Results

In the current GCSE dataset, 52.1% of grades achieved level 7 or above (equivalent to A or A* at the old GCSE system). The school ranks 420th of 3,895 in England for GCSE academic outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in a strong national position. This reflects solid, consistent performance rather than the elite extremes of traditional academic selective schools; the cohort includes able students, but also those who have made good progress from their starting points.

The Collegiate Mathematics Department was recently recognised by a national assessment as the joint seventh-best maths department in the country, a claim borne out by results showing 84% of A-level grades at A* or A in mathematics and 80% in Further Maths. This strength in STEM translates to university destinations: sciences, engineering, and medicine remain popular progression routes. English, Languages, and Humanities are equally robustly taught, reflecting the school's commitment to breadth rather than STEM tunnel vision.

The 2025 A-level dataset shows 40% of all grades at A or A*, and 80% at A* to B. Beyond raw grades, the school tracks value-added measures internally, monitoring whether students progress further from their starting points. This student-centred approach, measuring individual growth rather than merely publishing top percentiles, reflects the leadership's stated philosophy.

A-Level Performance

At A-level specifically, Collegiate ranks 366th of 2,549 in England (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in a strong national position. A-level results have improved incrementally over the past five years. The 2025 dataset shows 80% of grades awarded A* to B, with 40% at A or A*. These figures indicate that Collegiate students are performing strongly in the current A-level ranking.

The strength in mathematics has already been noted. Beyond that, performing arts and design subjects attract strong entries. The school offers 30 A-level subjects, allowing genuine choice; students are not confined to science/humanities dichotomies. The Extended Project Qualification (EPQ) is encouraged, with students undertaking independent research projects that feed into university applications.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

77.61%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

52.1%

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

The curriculum follows the English National Curriculum at Key Stages 1-4, enriched beyond statutory requirements. From Year 7, languages are compulsory (French is the core requirement); classical languages (Latin) are available as options. Sciences are taught separately from Year 7 onwards, allowing students to develop specialised disciplinary knowledge rather than generalised "science" thinking.

Teaching methodology reflects modern best practice: collaborative learning features alongside traditional direct instruction. The school's 2024 ISI report noted that teaching is structured, with clear learning intentions and regular feedback loops. Teachers are viewed as subject experts, in mathematics, for instance, the departmental recognition was earned through consistent, expert-led instruction. Class sizes average 20-25 in main school (smaller at sixth form); this permits individualised attention without the extremes of 1-to-1 tutoring or large lecture halls.

Beyond the classroom, learning is extended through regular academic visits. The school website references language tours to Europe, history trips to America, and the traditional geography trip to Iceland. These are not bolt-on luxuries; they are structured enrichment, with lessons explicitly building on site visits. Academic enrichment programmes (e.g., Maths Masterclasses at UWE Bristol, Bristol Academy Rugby Coaching) complement in-house provision.

Where Students Go Next: Destinations

University Destinations

Published sixth-form destination information points to a substantial university pathway, with Russell Group and Oxbridge routes present but not the only measure of success. While Oxbridge progression remains modest by selective school standards, it reflects a school drawing from across Bristol's socioeconomic spectrum, not a narrowly privileged intake.

Popular destination universities include Durham, Bristol (local advantage), Edinburgh, and Exeter. Medicine remains oversubscribed as a choice; approximately 15 students annually pursue medicine, dentistry, or veterinary medicine at university. The school supports this aspiration without creating artificial selection pressure; those capable and genuinely interested are supported; others are encouraged toward their authentic interests.

Destinations data also captures apprenticeships and employment. This reflects a working assumption that university is not the sole measure of success. Sixth-formers are signposted toward a range of pathways, and the school maintains relationships with local employers and apprenticeship providers.

Internal Progression to Sixth Form

Entry to the sixth form from Year 11 is not automatic; students must meet GCSE thresholds (typically grades 5 and above in intended A-level subjects, alongside core English and Mathematics at grade 4). This maintains the academic integrity of sixth form cohorts without creating unwanted anxiety at GCSE. The school also admits sixth form applicants from external schools, bringing in approximately 50-100 new students annually alongside internal progression, a dynamic that enriches peer diversity.

Oxbridge Success

#1357 in England

Total Offers

1

Offer Success Rate: 14.3%

Cambridge

1

Offers

Oxford

0

Offers

Beyond the Classroom: Extracurricular Life

The extracurricular programme is substantial and intentionally structured. Rather than an exhaustive list of generic clubs, Collegiate emphasises depth within key pillars: Drama, Music, STEM, Sport, and Service. The following named activities exemplify this philosophy.

Drama: A Defining Strength

Collegiate is a rare school in Bristol offering all 14 GCSE theatre options, a deliberate institutional choice reflecting commitment to dramatic arts. The school operates its own theatre, the Harry Crook Theatre, where students perform in roles ranging from ensemble to lead, backstage crew to directors. Annual productions include large-scale musicals (over 100 participants) and intimate drama club performances. Recent years have seen adaptations of classical and contemporary texts.

The Drama Club and Tech Club are active societies where students learn stagecraft, lighting design, sound engineering, and performance technique. Many sixth-formers specialise in drama-related further study or careers. Beyond in-house productions, the school regularly takes students to professional theatre venues: Bristol Old Vic, the Hippodrome, the Tobacco Factory. Professional visiting actors and directors deliver workshops. This embedded theatre culture is distinctive; drama is not peripheral but central to school identity.

Music: Ensembles and Breadth

Music at Collegiate is described as "rich and varied." The school maintains a chapel choir, orchestras, brass and wind ensembles, and multiple singing groups. Musicians may perform at formal events (e.g., in Bristol Cathedral as part of a mass choir), at Live Lounge evenings within school, and at the House Music competition. The House Song competition, already mentioned, has all pupils singing; those with musical experience take leadership roles.

Instrumental tuition is subsidised for Year 7 pupils through the BLAST project, which encourages uptake of instruments beyond piano and guitar. Over half the student body learns an instrument. The school welcomes professional musicians for masterclasses across all genres (classical, jazz, contemporary, film music). The breadth reflects an inclusive philosophy: music is for all, not reserved for the elite few.

Sports: Facilities and Participation

Collegiate's sporting legacy is genuinely impressive. The 35-acre campus includes:

  • Athletics field with pavilion
  • Six rugby pitches
  • Two cricket squares
  • Floodlit all-weather hockey pitch
  • Six floodlit tennis courts and four floodlit netball courts
  • Fully equipped fitness suite
  • Two squash courts
  • Table tennis facilities
  • Sports hall (4 badminton courts, basketball court, 4-court configuration)
  • Indoor cricket nets
  • Axe throwing range

This on-site provision is unique among Bristol schools. Sport is compulsory until Year 9, after which it remains optional but widely chosen. Rugby is traditionally strong; Callum Braley and Jake Polledri, both school alumni, progressed to professional rugby union (international players for Italy). Women's sports have expanded significantly; netball, hockey, and tennis recruit strong participants. The House Cup competitions in sport drive participation across ability levels. The school maintains links with local academies; coaching is delivered both in-house and by visiting professionals.

STEM and Service

Beyond mathematics (covered above), the school supports STEM through clubs and partnerships. The school's website does not explicitly list a dedicated robotics club in the main search results, though STEM enrichment through external partnerships (Maths Masterclasses at UWE) is confirmed. The Sixth Form Outreach Programme includes tutoring younger students in core subjects, a peer-teaching model that benefits both parties.

Charity work and community service are structured. The Pupil Charity Committee selects causes annually; students raise thousands of pounds. Volunteering at care homes, primary schools, and community projects engages sixth-formers particularly. Duke of Edinburgh's Award scheme runs to Gold level, with expeditions and skill development integrated across school life.

Combined Cadet Force (CCF)

The CCF is compulsory for Year 9, optional beyond. The school's CCF comprises 256 cadets (the largest cohort since its 1915 foundation), split into Army, Royal Air Force, and Royal Navy sections. Weekly parades and termly activities include rifle shooting (on-site 15m range), command tasks, climbing, camouflage and concealment, flying visits, sailing, and regular camps. For students interested in military pathways or leadership development, this provides serious structured opportunity.

Clubs and Societies: Selective Naming

The Clubs and Societies Programme offers lunchtime and after-school options. Specifically named societies include:

  • Debating Society (linked to House Cup competitions)
  • Chess Club (inter-house leagues)
  • Poetry Society (House Song contest references this)
  • Drama Club and Tech Club (covered above)
  • Art Club (inter-house competitions)
  • House Cup participation spans music, sport, academia, and service

While the school does not publish an exhaustive alphabetical club list online, the emphasis is on meaningful engagement rather than a buffet approach. Students are encouraged toward depth in chosen activities rather than shallow participation in many.

Fees and Financial Aid

Collegiate is an independent school. Senior School day fees are £5,571 per term (approximately £16,713 per academic year), based on the most recent ISC data. This positions Collegiate in the mid-tier of Bristol's independent schools, more expensive than state provision, but substantially less than traditional boarding schools or the most exclusive day schools.

Bursaries and scholarships are available. The school website indicates scholarships in Academic, Music, Sport, Art, and Drama categories, with scholarships typically offering 10-25% fee reduction. Means-tested bursaries are also available; the specific percentage of students receiving support is not published online, but the school states bursaries are available and encourages applications from families who might otherwise consider the school financially out of reach.

£Fees
Year 1£5,571 / term
Year 2£5,571 / term
Year 3£5,571 / term
Year 4£5,571 / term
Year 5£5,571 / term
Year 6£5,571 / term
Year 7£5,571 / term
Year 8£5,571 / term
Year 9£5,571 / term
Year 10£5,571 / term
Year 11£5,571 / term
Year 12£5,571 / term
Year 13£5,571 / term
£

Admissions: Entry Routes and Selectivity

Collegiate receives applications at multiple entry points:

  • Reception (age 4)
  • Year 3 (age 7) via 7+ entrance examination
  • Year 4 (age 8) via 8+ entrance examination
  • Year 7 (age 11) via 11+ entrance examination
  • Year 9 (age 13)
  • Year 12 (age 16) sixth form

The entrance examinations assess English, Mathematics, Verbal Reasoning, and Non-Verbal Reasoning. The school does not publish pass marks or explicit admission quotas; selectivity is moderate compared to grammar schools or top independent selectives. However, admissions remain competitive; the school receives several hundred applications annually for approximately 50-60 places per entry point.

Sixth form entry requires GCSE grades of 5 and above in intended subjects (grade 4 acceptable for some subjects), plus core English and Mathematics at grade 4 minimum. This ensures sixth form cohorts remain academically engaged without creating anxious gatekeeping at GCSE.

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Pastoral support is structured around the house system. Each house has a dedicated staff team; the house leader knows every student's name, family circumstances, and academic trajectory. Academic tutors (one per student) meet regularly to discuss progress and any concerns. This multi-layered approach, house staff, academic tutors, form tutors, creates redundancy; if a student is struggling, multiple adults are aware.

The school employs a trained counsellor who visits weekly; additional support is available for students with identified mental health needs. The school's 2024 ISI inspection noted that safeguarding arrangements are robust and that pupils feel safe and supported. Anti-bullying strategies are in place; the school's policy emphasises restorative approaches alongside sanctions where needed.

For students with learning support needs, the SENCO coordinates provision. The school holds the Inclusion Quality Mark, reflecting its commitment to supporting students across the spectrum of additional needs. On-site support includes specialist teaching; external agency involvement (educational psychology, speech and language therapy) is facilitated where necessary.

Practical Information

School hours are 8:50am to 3:20pm for the senior school. Wraparound care is available: breakfast club from 7:45am and after-school club until 6:00pm. Holiday clubs operate during main school breaks, supporting working families.

Transport is facilitated through the school's transport service; the school is located at Bell Hill, Stapleton, approximately 2.5 miles from Bristol city centre and close to the M32 motorway junction. Most pupils travel by private car; public transport links (bus services) serve the location, though not with high frequency. The school's location in a green, semi-rural setting within the city is both an asset (space, facilities) and a mild drawback (car dependency for many families).

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 823
  • Number of pupils: 767

Things to Consider

Independent School Fees: Whilst fees are moderate for Bristol's independent sector, the annual cost of approximately £16,700 remains substantial for many families. Bursary support exists but is limited; families should enquire directly about financial aid eligibility before committing.

Admissions Selectivity: Collegiate is moderately selective. Students with significant additional needs or very low prior attainment may not thrive in the academic environment. Entrance examinations are real hurdles; parents should not assume acceptance.

Geographic Catchment: Unlike state schools with defined catchments, Collegiate draws from across Bristol and beyond. Families from more distant areas should consider transport logistics and time commitment before enrolling.

Name Change Legacy: The 2022 transition from Colston's School to Collegiate School was thorough, reflecting genuine institutional commitment to inclusivity. However, families researching online may encounter older references to the former name; this is normal and does not indicate outdated information.

The Verdict

Collegiate School is a genuinely accomplished school that combines strong academic outcomes with breadth of experience and social responsibility. The campus, pastoral structure, and enrichment opportunities set it apart from many urban day schools. It suits families seeking academic rigour without ruthless selectivity; bright and hardworking students thrive, alongside capable peers who develop strong character and resilience.

The school is not suited to:

  • Families seeking a pure academic hothouse (consider Bristol Grammar School or Queen Elizabeth's Hospital instead)
  • Students requiring specialist SEND support beyond mainstream provision (not a special school; whilst inclusive, it works within the mainstream model)
  • Families seeking very tight local catchments or state school provision (Collegiate requires a conscious choice to move away from state alternatives)

For families committed to independent education in Bristol, seeking a school with genuine community ethos, strong results, and distinctive character, Collegiate merits serious consideration. The location, facilities, and leadership create an environment where young people flourish academically and develop into thoughtful, engaged citizens. In a city with excellent state alternatives, Collegiate's value proposition rests on its distinctive offer: the marriage of rigorous academics with genuine pastoral depth and community commitment.

FAQs

Collegiate School achieved strong results under the March 2024 ISI inspection, with inspectors noting that the report would have merited the highest possible grade under the old framework. GCSE results show 52.1% of grades at level 7 or above; A-level results show 40% of grades at A or A*, with 80% at A* to B. The school ranks 420th of 3,895 for GCSE academic outcomes (FindMySchool ranking) and 366th of 2,549 in England for A-level academic performance (FindMySchool ranking). Yes, it is a good school with consistent, credible academic outcomes and strong pastoral provision.

Day school fees are £5,571 per term, or approximately £16,713 per academic year (based on the three-term structure). This is mid-range for Bristol's independent schools. Scholarships are available in Academic, Music, Sport, Art, and Drama categories (typically 10-25% reduction). Means-tested bursaries are also available; families are encouraged to contact the school directly about financial support eligibility before assuming unaffordability.

Entry is moderately selective. The school uses entrance examinations (English, Mathematics, Verbal Reasoning, Non-Verbal Reasoning) at multiple entry points. Admissions are not as narrow as grammar schools or top selectives, but the school does receive significantly more applications than places available. Strong preparation and demonstrated capability in entrance assessments are required. Families should not assume acceptance based on proximity or local reputation alone.

Sporting facilities are extensive and on-site: six rugby pitches, floodlit hockey pitch, cricket squares, tennis courts, netball courts, squash courts, fitness suite, sports hall, and athletics field. Sports are compulsory until Year 9; rugby, netball, hockey, cricket, and tennis are particularly strong. Elite pathways exist (e.g., rugby coaching partnerships), but the school also emphasises participation across ability levels. The 35-acre campus is unique among Bristol schools and supports a genuine sporting culture.

Music is central to school life. The school maintains chapel choir, orchestras, wind and brass ensembles, and multiple singing groups. Over half the student body learns an instrument; subsidised tuition is available through the BLAST scheme for Year 7. The House Song competition is a major annual event. Professional musicians visit to deliver masterclasses. Drama and music together represent a creative pillar of Collegiate's offering, distinct from schools where these are peripheral.

Published leavers information points to a substantial university pathway, including Russell Group destinations, alongside Oxbridge progression in some years. Beyond Oxbridge, popular destinations include Durham, Bristol, Edinburgh, and Exeter. The school also supports non-university pathways, including apprenticeships and employment. University progression is strong but not absolute; the school values breadth of post-16 outcomes.

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Contact Information

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Stapleton, Bristol, Bristol, BS16 1BJ
01179655207
collegiate.org.uk/
Jeremy McCullough
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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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