At drop-off, the tone is purposeful and calm, helped by a clear culture of respect and a mobile phone-free day. St Bede’s Inter-Church School is a mixed, state secondary for students aged 11 to 16, with a distinctive joint Church of England and Roman Catholic foundation. The headteacher is Mr Alistair Day, who has led the school since 2012.
Academic outcomes are strong. Ranked 410th in England and 8th in Cambridge for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), performance sits well above the England average (top 10%).
The school’s identity is explicit and consistently reinforced. Its motto, Cum Deo (With God), appears across key parts of school life, and the stated mission is practical rather than abstract, focusing on a learning, caring, and serving community where people are valued for who they are and who they may become.
St Bede’s is unusual in Cambridgeshire because it is a maintained secondary with a distinctive Christian foundation shared by the Anglican Diocese of Ely and the Roman Catholic Diocese of East Anglia, which shapes admissions, worship, and pastoral work. It is also a school that draws students from a wider area than many local secondaries, with the school itself noting that families travel from across the county.
Buildings matter here, but in a functional, pupil-centred way. The original campus dates to the early 1960s, designed as a purpose-built Catholic secondary, and later developed as the school expanded. A local architectural history project cites the main school building as built in 1961 to 1962, with later additions, and credits architect David Roberts.
Recent investment has kept the site evolving. In September 2025, the school marked the opening of a new chapel and music block, blessed and dedicated in a joint service led by bishops from the two foundation traditions. The content is more than ceremonial, it signals that worship, music-making, and community life remain central even as the school grows.
Community structures are deliberately “smaller than the whole”. The House system is positioned as a way to stop a large secondary feeling anonymous, with students across year groups working together and taking responsibility for events such as House liturgies, sports day events, chess tournaments, and inter-house competitions.
A final feature that shapes daily atmosphere is the phone policy. Since 2021, the school has operated a mobile phone-free day, with clear rules on confiscation and collection. The practical implication is fewer low-level distractions and, for many students, less social media pressure during the school day.
St Bede’s academic profile is a major reason families consider it. The school ranks 410th in England and 8th in Cambridge for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), placing it well above the England average (top 10%).
Headline attainment measures support that positioning. The Attainment 8 score is 64.8, and the Progress 8 score is +1.02, which indicates students make substantially more progress than pupils with similar starting points across England.
The English Baccalaureate indicators are also strong. The average EBacc APS score is 6.21, and 50% of pupils achieved grade 5 or above across the EBacc. For families, this matters because EBacc entry patterns often reflect curriculum breadth and the extent to which a school sustains academic ambition across a wide cohort.
Performance metrics never tell the whole story, particularly for a faith-designated school that balances academic expectations with explicit character formation. What is useful here is the alignment between results and the school’s operational choices: structured teaching, a strong reading culture, and a deliberate emphasis on behaviour and relationships. That coherence is one reason outcomes appear stable rather than “spiky” year to year.
Parents comparing Cambridge secondaries should use the FindMySchool Local Hub page and the Comparison Tool to view local GCSE performance side-by-side, particularly if you are weighing several strong options within realistic travel distance.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Teaching is described by the school as mission-led, and the more helpful question for parents is what that looks like in practice for a student in Year 7 or Year 10. The clearest operational signal is curriculum intent and sequencing. Subjects are planned so that knowledge builds in a deliberate order, with time allocated for students to revisit prior learning so it sticks. Teachers present complex ideas in manageable steps, check understanding frequently, and adjust when students need extra support.
Entry into secondary is treated as a baseline-setting point rather than a reset. The school states that it gathers consistent baseline information when students arrive to identify need early and inform support. That matters because the fastest way for a high-performing secondary to lose momentum is to assume uniform starting points.
Reading is a particular strategic focus. Beyond the general expectation that students read widely, the library is staffed by a full-time librarian, opens before school and through extended hours on several days, and students can borrow up to five books at a time. A further practical detail is built into English: each student has a weekly 30-minute library lesson within their English timetable, plus a Year 7 library induction early in the year. The implication is that reading is treated as a habit to be trained, not simply a preference to be encouraged.
Homework systems are also designed to be visible to families. The school uses an online platform for setting and tracking homework and also records House points and sanctions within that system, creating a single, consistent record that students and parents can check.
With no sixth form, St Bede’s is explicitly a “launch point” at 16. The most important practical implication for families is that students need to make a clear post-16 plan in Year 11, whether that is sixth form, college, or apprenticeship routes. The school’s careers work emphasises exposure rather than guesswork: students attend taster days at key post-16 providers in Year 10, and many students have opportunities to visit universities as part of subject studies. The school also notes a link with Homerton College, Cambridge, used to support higher education information.
Careers education begins earlier than many parents expect. The published careers guidance policy states that the school provides independent careers guidance from Year 7 onwards, aligned to the Gatsby Benchmarks. The implication is that students are encouraged to connect curriculum choices to real pathways, rather than treating careers as a last-minute Year 11 activity.
Support at results time is also addressed directly. The school’s results guidance advises students who are uncertain about a post-16 placement to contact their preferred provider quickly, reflecting a realistic understanding of how places shift in late August.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
Year 7 admissions are coordinated through Cambridgeshire Local Authority on behalf of the governing body. The school’s published admissions information states that applications should be submitted on the Common Application Form by 31 October, with offers issued in March, and late applications handled from November through to September.
The Published Admission Number for Year 7 is 180 places. If applications exceed this number, oversubscription criteria apply.
As a joint Church of England and Roman Catholic foundation, faith-based criteria sit close to the top of the admissions hierarchy. After looked-after and previously looked-after children, priority includes children of eligible staff, then baptised or formally recognised members of the Church of England or Roman Catholic Church (confirmed by clergy), followed by other recognised Christian denominations, then other faiths, then other applicants. Within categories, sibling priority applies, then straight-line distance to the school, with distance calculated using the local authority’s mapping method.
Families applying under religious criteria are also required to complete a Supplementary Information Form and return it directly to the school by the local authority deadline. The practical implication is that a strong application depends on meeting both the local authority application requirements and the school’s faith evidence requirements, on time.
Parents considering this school should also use the FindMySchoolMap Search to check travel practicality, including journey time and realistic transport routes, alongside admissions criteria.
Applications
540
Total received
Places Offered
174
Subscription Rate
3.1x
Apps per place
Pastoral culture here is not positioned as separate from learning. Behaviour expectations are high, and relationships between adults and students are framed as a strength, with students supported to improve in the rare cases where they struggle to meet expectations. Safeguarding is confirmed as effective, and the overall tone described in the most recent inspection is safe, harmonious, and supportive.
Faith life is part of the pastoral framework rather than an optional add-on. Collective worship is described as a daily practice in assemblies and tutor groups, using weekly themes based on the Church calendar and drawing on a range of formats including readings, prayer, reflection, and creative material.
Chaplaincy staffing is explicit. The school names a chaplain (Revd Dr Clarke) and chaplaincy support (Mr Allen), and describes chaplaincy work as including worship leadership, lunchtime activities, and pastoral support. Tutor groups nominate chaplaincy representatives, and the chaplaincy programme includes activities such as contemplation practices and reflection days for each year group. For families, the implication is that faith life is organised and staffed, not merely symbolic.
The mobile phone-free day is also best understood as a wellbeing intervention as much as a behaviour policy. Whatever a family’s view on phones, the operational effect is clear boundaries and a more consistent expectation of attention and respectful interaction during school hours.
Support for students with special educational needs and disabilities is described in practical terms: baseline information is gathered on arrival, individual programmes respond to need, and outcomes are reviewed in line with the Code of Practice.
Extracurricular life is organised to be accessible, with a mix of academic extension, creative outlets, and student-led activity. The school notes that students sign up to clubs through its internal platform, which helps coordinate a busy programme without relying on informal sign-ups.
A distinctive feature is the range of named clubs that go beyond the standard list. Examples include Code club, Green side up gardening club, a STEM club, a Philosophy and theology debating club, Carnegie reading group, Young RE Ambassadors, and a Further maths club. There are also practical and enterprise-oriented options such as Cooking club, Design and technology enterprise club, and an Enterprise Challenge for Year 9.
Music is supported both through curriculum and optional tuition. Instrumental and vocal lessons are available via Cambridgeshire Music, and the current list includes brass, woodwind, upper and lower strings (including harp), piano, drum kit, guitar, and singing. This breadth matters because it allows late starters and committed musicians to participate without needing private tuition as a prerequisite.
Drama is structured as a whole-school participation opportunity. The school stages two drama productions annually, one for lower school and one for upper school, with roles not only in acting but also in rehearsal support, prop-making, costume-making, and make-up design. The implication is that students who do not see themselves as performers can still take part in a high-commitment creative project.
Sport is presented as competitive but inclusive. The school lists teams for football, rugby, hockey, basketball, cricket, tennis, badminton, and athletics, with fixtures usually held on weekday afternoons.
Trips and visits are positioned as part of widening experience, and the school notes that students are offered a selection of residential trips, with information provided in the autumn term for Years 7 and 9 so families can decide with adequate notice.
The school day is clearly set out. Students should be on site by 08:55 and in form rooms for registration at 09:00, with the school day ending at 15:20.
Transport information is unusually detailed for a state secondary. The school lists several public bus routes serving the site, identifies the nearest stop as “St Bede’s School”, and notes that Cambridge main station is around a 10 to 15 minute walk away.
The library operates as a working space beyond timetabled lessons, opening from 08:30 and extending to 16:30 on certain weekdays, which is useful for students who need a consistent homework environment.
Faith-based admissions criteria. As a joint Church of England and Roman Catholic foundation school, religious evidence can materially affect priority, and a Supplementary Information Form is required for faith applications. Families should read the criteria carefully and plan documentation early.
No sixth form. Students move on at 16, which suits many teenagers, but it does mean planning for post-16 pathways starts earlier, and families should consider travel and fit for the next provider as part of choosing a Year 7 school.
Phone-free expectations. A mobile phone-free day has operated since 2021. Some families will welcome this; others may need to adjust routines around travel and after-school communication.
Competition for places. The Published Admission Number is 180 for Year 7 and oversubscription criteria apply when applications exceed places, so a strong preference does not guarantee entry.
St Bede’s Inter-Church School combines high academic performance with a clear moral and pastoral framework grounded in its inter-church foundation. The current headteacher has led since 2012, and the most recent inspection confirms an Outstanding standard across all graded areas, alongside effective safeguarding.
Best suited to families who want a state secondary with explicit Christian worship and service at its centre, who are comfortable engaging with faith-based admissions criteria, and whose child will thrive in a structured, high-expectation culture. Admission is the obstacle; for those who secure a place, the educational experience is exceptionally strong.
Yes. The most recent Ofsted inspection (June 2024, published July 2024) judged the school Outstanding overall, with Outstanding grades across key areas and effective safeguarding. Its GCSE performance is also strong, placing it in the top 10% of schools in England by FindMySchool’s GCSE ranking.
Applications are coordinated by Cambridgeshire Local Authority, not made directly to the school. The school states that the Common Application Form deadline is 31 October, with offers issued in March, and late applications handled between November and September. Families applying under faith criteria must also submit a Supplementary Information Form to the school by the deadline.
No. The school serves students from Year 7 to Year 11, so all students move on to a new provider at 16. Careers education includes post-16 taster days and structured guidance on pathways so students can plan effectively.
Students should be on site by 08:55 and registered at 09:00, with the school day ending at 15:20.
St Bede’s operates a mobile phone-free day. The school introduced the policy in 2021, and phones are not permitted during the day unless used with reception permission for essential contact.
Get in touch with the school directly
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