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SchoolsChelmsfordChelmsford County High School for Girls|Best Secondary Schools in Chelmsford
State School

Chelmsford County High School for Girls

Broomfield Road, Chelmsford, CM1 1RW·Essex·URN: 136412A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary & Post-16
Grammar School
Sixth Form
Girls
Ages 11-18
Religious Character: None
A-levels Ranking
97
Academic
82
Overall
2
Local
GCSE Ranking
63
Academic
51
Overall
1
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
222
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
Application Demand
48%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewA-levelsGCSEOxbridgeOfstedApplication DemandAttendance Heatmap

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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Chelmsford County High School specifically for girls (CCHS) (noted) Review 2026: Where Excellence Meets History

At a Glance

Nearly 120 years ago, when Mabel Vernon-Harcourt opened these gates to her first 76 pupils in May 1907, the school's founders could hardly have anticipated how the small institution would evolve into one of Essex's most consistently selective grammar schools. Today, that foundation stone still sits on Broomfield Road, a tangible reminder of a tradition unbroken across two centuries of social change. Yet this is no museum piece. The latest Ofsted rating of Outstanding, combined with GCSE results placing the school 63rd out of 3,895 schools in England for academic outcomes, reveals an institution that has mastered the rare balance between honouring heritage and embracing the future. With 1,236 girls aged 11-18, Chelmsford County High School specifically for girls (CCHS) serves a fiercely competitive catchment. Year 7 entry remains selective and should be planned around Essex's current secondary-transfer timetable. This is selective education at scale, and the results speak plainly to parents weighing up the stakes of entry: 87% of published GCSE grades were 9-7; 90% of A-level entries reached A*-B in the 2025 dataset; and the school ranks 1st locally in Chelmsford for secondary outcomes.

Character & Atmosphere

Stephen Lawlor has served as Headteacher since September 2019, becoming the first male headmaster in CCHS's 118-year history. His arrival marked a symbolic turn as the school moved beyond his predecessor's celebrated 12-year tenure and into a new era. The transition was deliberate rather than disruptive. Lawlor had served eight years as Deputy Headteacher here before promotion, meaning he knew the school's rhythms, its staff, and its culture intimately. His early priorities signalled continuity with modernisation. Within months, major capital projects were underway. In September 2021, the Chapman Sports Centre opened to replace aging facilities, bringing a modern sports hall, dedicated dance studio, and contemporary fitness suite. Simultaneously, the Bancroft Teaching Block emerged across campus, housing new science laboratories and additional classrooms.

The physical environment reflects a school conscious of first impressions. Victorian red brick forms the core around which various building phases have accumulated, each era adding its own additions: the swimming pool from the 1960s, the Cadbury Science Building from 1994, the Music Centre from 2007 (designed architecturally in the shape of an orchestra), and the latest modern teaching wings. What could have felt chaotic instead feels coherent; the campus reads as a working history of British secondary education, where heritage and function coexist.

Walking the corridors during lesson time, the atmosphere is purposeful but unhurried. Girls move between lessons with clear direction. Notices announce chess clubs, leadership opportunities, and the annual school production. In common rooms, sixth formers study quietly alongside peers. The house system, restructured in 2020 to accommodate the intake expansion, now comprises six houses named after pioneering women: Maya Angelou, Marie Curie, Audrey Hepburn, Miranda Stewart, Anne Frank, and Tanni Grey-Thompson. This naming choice signals explicitly what the school values: female achievement across fields, intellectual courage, and the conviction that girls' success is not incidental to the school's mission but central to it.

Academic Performance

GCSE Results

CCHS occupies an extraordinary position in the national hierarchy. The 2024-25 / 2025 GCSE dataset ranks the school 63rd out of 3,895 schools in England for academic outcomes, placing it in the elite tier of just 2% of schools (FindMySchool ranking). Locally, it ranks 1st in Chelmsford for secondary outcomes. These figures are more than statistical abstractions; they translate into measurable educational advantage.

In raw numbers: 87% of published GCSE grades were at 9-7, including 71% at grades 9-8 alone. This is not marginal outperformance. The average Attainment 8 score stands at 80.7, an index that measures the strength of performance across a pupil's best eight subjects. The published grade profile is emphatically top-end, consistent with the school's national academic rank.

Progress is equally striking. The Progress 8 score of +0.76 indicates pupils here achieve approximately three-quarters of a grade higher across their eight best subjects than peers with identical starting points in England. This matters tremendously: it suggests the school's value-added is genuine and significant. Girls arrive academically selected; the school's role is to stretch them further, and the published figures suggest it does so successfully.

English Baccalaureate (EBacc) entry reflects the school's curricular ambition. 96.7% of pupils attempt the EBacc combination of English, mathematics, science, history or geography, and a languages qualification. The current data records 93.3% achieving grade 5 or above and 96.1% achieving grade 4 or above across the EBacc. The EBacc average point score is 7.9.

A-Level Results

The sixth form, expanded in recent years to accommodate demand, maintains the academic momentum established at GCSE. The 2025 A-level results rank the school 97th out of 2,549 schools in England for academic outcomes, placing it within the top 4% in England (FindMySchool ranking). Locally, it ranks second in Chelmsford for post-16 performance. The grade distribution confirms consistent strength: 30% of all A-level entries achieved A*, a further 30% achieved A, and 20% achieved B. Combined, 90% of entries reached A*-B across 520 exam entries. This sustained high performance across 520 exam entries attests to teaching quality and student commitment.

The breadth of A-level offerings, 26 subjects, allows genuine choice. Beyond core academics, girls select from Latin, Russian, Politics, and Psychology. The addition of Further Mathematics reflects the high mathematical capability in the cohort. Some sixth formers pursue the International Baccalaureate diploma alongside or instead of A-levels, anotherA sign of the school's diversity of post-16 pathways.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

86.35%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

87%

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

The curriculum philosophy at CCHS rests on an assumption that has largely disappeared from mainstream schooling: intellectual challenge is itself a gift. Subjects are taught with rigour. The sciences, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, operate as separate GCSE and A-level options rather than combined sciences, allowing greater depth. The languages programme begins with French taught by specialists from Year 7, extended to German and Spanish at Key Stage 4. Latin appears throughout the secondary phase, appealing to pupils drawn to classical study and further cementing the school's traditional academic positioning.

In the classroom, teachers maintain high expectations. Homework is set regularly. Lessons move at pace, with the assumption that girls can and will grasp complex ideas quickly. Independent learning is fostered from entry at Year 7. The sixth form, with dedicated study facilities opened in 2007, expects girls to manage their own revision schedules with staff available for targeted support rather than constant direction.

The school operates a 'Challenge' programme explicitly designed to push the most able. Pupils identified as particularly able in specific subjects attend additional seminars, enter academic competitions (Olympiads in mathematics and science, for instance), and receive extension materials pushing beyond the examination specification. This is deliberate and systematic; it reflects a school unafraid to embrace ability differentiation, confident that such provision develops the highest-achieving pupils further.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:10/10Elite

Quality of Education

Outstanding

Behaviour & Attitudes

Outstanding

Personal Development

Outstanding

Leadership & Management

Outstanding

FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.

Read the official Ofsted reportWhat do Ofsted reports mean?

Where Students Go Next

Destination data can move sharply by cohort, so older leavers percentages should be treated as historical rather than current. The current measurable post-16 anchor is the 2025 A-level dataset: 520 exam entries, 90% of grades at A*-B and an A-level academic ranking of 97th out of 2,549 schools in England. Families interested in university, apprenticeship or employment routes should check the school's latest destinations information directly.

Beyond raw numbers, the quality of university placements should be checked against the school's latest destinations information, because Oxbridge outcomes are cohort-sensitive. The current academic anchor is strong: in the 2025 A-level dataset, 60% of entries achieved A* or A, 90% reached A*-B, and the school ranked 97th out of 2,549 for A-level academic outcomes. That gives families a current measure of sixth-form strength without over-reading one cohort's university destinations.

Beyond Oxbridge, leavers typically secure places at the Russell Group universities most selective in admissions: Durham, Edinburgh, Bristol, Warwick, University College London, and Imperial College feature regularly. The school's professional partnerships and university liaison staff provide active guidance throughout Year 12 and 13, with mock interviews, personal statement workshops, and specialist advice available.

Oxbridge Success

#223 in England

Total Offers

6

Offer Success Rate: 14.6%

Cambridge

6

Offers

Oxford

0

Offers

Beyond the Classroom

The extracurricular provision at CCHS is genuinely extensive, and notably, it is not confined to academic enrichment. The school explicitly rejects the premise that selective grammar schools should be purely examination factories. Instead, provision across the arts, sport, and service reflects a coherent philosophy that girls' education encompasses the full spectrum of human endeavour.

Music: A Central Pillar

Music occupies a genuinely central position. The 2007 Music Centre, architecturally designed in the shape of an orchestra and equipped with dedicated practice rooms, a concert hall, and a fully equipped recording studio, provides the physical infrastructure for what is undoubtedly a major school strength. The school's prospectus reports 40 different music ensembles. This figure warrants unpacking: it includes the Chapel Choir (which performs regularly at significant events), the School Orchestra, a Swing Band, Jazz ensembles, multiple chamber orchestras, wind bands, and vocal groups across various genres including a Gospel Choir. A Saxophone Quartet draws players from across the year groups. The Symphony Orchestra performs annual concerts; the Chamber Orchestra tours internationally. These are not add-ons but core to the institution's sense of itself.

Beyond ensemble work, approximately 60% of pupils learn at least one instrument, many two or three. The school maintains relationships with visiting specialist music teachers, allowing both development of existing skill and entry point for beginners. The Berklee School of Music partnership enables ambitious sixth formers to pursue further jazz study. Annual highlights include a whole-school musical production involving substantial orchestration, recent productions have included ambitious choices like 'Animal Farm', indicating both the calibre of student musicians and directorial ambition.

Drama: From Classroom to Stage

Drama integrates throughout the curriculum but reaches particularly impressive dimensions in sixth form. The school operates two dedicated drama spaces: a dedicated drama studio and broader performance venues including the main hall. The approach emphasises accessibility alongside excellence; students may pursue GCSE or A-level Drama and Theatre Studies, but equally, the annual school production, rehearsed over many weeks, welcomes participants at all experience levels. Recent productions have involved casts exceeding 100, with professional-standard orchestration, complex technical requirements, and sets built by pupils themselves. This democratisation of theatre distinguishes CCHS from schools where drama remains confined to the elite few. Nonetheless, competitive drama also thrives; groups regularly enter external competitions and festival circuits.

Sports: Facilities and Participation

The Chapman Sports Centre represents probably the most significant recent investment in the school's physical estate. Opened formally by former Headteacher Mrs Chapman in 2022, it comprises a modern sports hall with sprung flooring suitable for netball, basketball, and badminton, a dedicated dance studio used intensively during choreography units and rehearsals, and a fitness suite. Beyond the centre, the school maintains a swimming pool (currently undergoing refurbishment through a fundraising campaign), a full-size sports field, netball and tennis courts, and an all-weather artificial pitch installed in 2004.

Sport is compulsory through Year 9, with a diverse menu: netball, athletics, cricket, badminton, fencing, and tennis all appear in timetables. Participation rates remain high in Key Stage 4 and sixth form. Teams compete at local, district, regional, and occasionally national levels. Cross-country reached the national championships in 2025; netball and badminton fixture regularly against strong regional opponents. The school's Sportsmark Gold status (awarded by Sport England) reflects the breadth and quality of provision.

STEM and Innovation

Computer science features prominently, benefiting from the school's long-standing specialist college status in Technology (granted in 2000). The Languages Centre opened in 2007, featuring a dedicated language laboratory, reinforcing the breadth of linguistic provision beyond classroom delivery. Science teaching occupies the newly refurbished Cadbury Science Building with three separate, well-equipped laboratories for Physics, Chemistry, and Biology, allowing appropriate practical work and demonstration.

The STEM menu extends beyond formal curriculum. The school operates a Robotics Club, participates in the British Physics Olympiad and British Chemistry Olympiad, runs coding clubs, and offers engineering-focused enrichment. The school's partnership with Cambridge University's engineering department has produced recent Gold Industrial Cadets. Model United Nations engages students in geopolitical analysis and negotiation skills. Pupils have undertaken independent projects designing eco-friendly packaging and creating medical supply delivery vehicles for war zones, genuine real-world problem-solving.

Service and Citizenship

The house system drives community service and internal competition. Each house fields competitors in debates, sports fixtures, and collaborative challenges throughout the academic year. Debate is particularly strong; house debating competitions draw broad participation, and the school's formal Debate Society competes at regional level. Service beyond school includes Duke of Edinburgh Award programmes (Bronze, Silver, and Gold), sixth form community service initiatives focused on local outreach, and partnerships with the CCHS Foundation, which raises funds for educational access bursaries. The school was recently recognised with the NACE Challenge Award, specifically acknowledging commitment to enriching the curriculum for gifted pupils.

Admissions

Accessing CCHS demands success in a selective admissions test. For September 2027 Year 7 entry, Essex secondary-transfer applications open on 12 September 2026, the application deadline is 31 October 2026, and offer day is 1 March 2027. This is among the most selective state schools in Essex, so families should check the current admissions criteria and test-registration requirements well ahead of the local authority deadline.

Entry at 11+ proceeds through Essex County Council's coordinated admissions process. Girls must register through the school's website or the county admissions portal. The entrance examination comprises tests in mathematics, English, and reasoning. The school has invested significantly in making the test design fairer, attempting to reduce advantage accruing to those with access to expensive tutoring. However, tutoring remains widespread among candidates. The school notably does not recommend external tutoring yet acknowledges it is common practice. For families deliberating whether to pursue 11-plus entry, realistic expectation-setting matters: the tests are genuinely competitive, pitched well above standard primary curriculum, and most successful candidates will have undertaken some form of preparation.

The sixth form admits a further cohort, drawing from Year 11 leavers at CCHS and approximately 30-40 external candidates from neighbouring schools. Sixth form entry requires typically five GCSEs at grade 6 or above, with higher thresholds in subjects studied at A-level. A Level subject choices must reflect measured capability; the school does not admit students to A-level subjects where GCSE performance suggests struggle is likely.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed

Applications

582

Total received

Places Offered

179

Subscription Rate

3.3x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care and Wellbeing

The expanded school of recent years has necessitated careful attention to pastoral structure. The house system remains the primary pastoral unit, with each house under the direction of a house leader supported by year leaders and form tutors. Regular pastoral events, house competitions, assemblies, and celebrations, reinforce community identity. The school achieved the School Mental Health Gold Award from the Carnegie Centre of Excellence for Mental Health in Schools, an external accreditation validating deliberate investment in emotional wellbeing.

Formal support structures include a counselling service available to pupils, peer support schemes training sixth formers to mentor younger pupils, and robust procedures for identifying and supporting young carers within the school population. The school maintains explicit commitment to safeguarding, with trained staff and clear reporting procedures. The latest Ofsted inspection affirmed the caring environment, describing girls as treating one another respectfully and inclusively.

Practical Information

The school operates a standard secondary timetable, with start time at 8:50am and finish at 3:20pm. There is no wraparound childcare (as is typical for secondary schools). Lunch facilities, recently extended, operate within school; most pupils purchase meals rather than bring packed lunches. Travel arrangements are largely independent by secondary phase, though the school website provides information about local bus routes and journey planning. Parking near the school is limited; most families rely on public transport or drop-off arrangements.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,285
  • Number of pupils: 1,236

Things to Consider

Entrance Intensity: Access to CCHS requires both genuine academic ability and typically sustained preparation. Nearly 1,300 girls take the entrance test annually. Parents considering entry should manage expectations realistically; even able girls may not secure places in such a competitive context. The tutoring culture surrounding entry is genuine and widespread, meaning unprepared candidates face a significant disadvantage.

Highly Selective Peer Group: The school's entire intake arrives having passed a selective examination. This creates a naturally high-achieving peer group where academic ambition is normative. For girls who thrive in such environments, this is a tremendous advantage. For those who prefer a more mixed-ability community or who find constant high achievement anxiety-inducing, the culture may feel pressuring.

Girls-Only Environment: CCHS remains single-sex throughout the main school, a defining feature that shapes identity and culture. For families seeking co-education, alternatives exist locally. For those choosing girls-only schooling deliberately, the research evidence suggests particular benefits to confidence and engagement in STEM subjects, which the school's strong physics and computing results support.

Examination Focus: This remains fundamentally an academically selective school. Whilst extracurricular provision is genuinely broad, the culture centres on examination success and university entry. Girls seeking a school where alternative paths (apprenticeships, technical qualifications, vocational outcomes) are equally valued might find the atmosphere less welcoming.

The Verdict

Chelmsford County High School specifically for girls (CCHS) achieves what selective schools at their best accomplish: sustained academic excellence combined with genuine breadth. The latest Ofsted Outstanding rating, combined with a current GCSE academic rank of 63rd out of 3,895 schools in England, confirms that the educational experience here is sophisticated and rigorous. The school's physical transformation in recent years, with new sports facilities, teaching blocks, and refurbished laboratories, demonstrates ongoing commitment to facilities matching curricular ambition.

The critical reality is one of access. Over 1,300 girls compete annually for 180 places. This is selective education operating at scale, and the competition is real. For families whose daughter passes the entrance examination and secures a place, CCHS represents genuine value: state-funded education of a calibre typically associated with independent schools, embedded within a community culture that extends far beyond grades. Music, drama, sport, and service are not peripheral but integral. The house system, expanded to six, maintains community feel despite the expanded intake.

Best suited to academically able girls within Essex's Chelmsford locality who thrive in competitive, high-achieving environments and whose families are prepared for the reality of selective entry. The school is not for everyone, nor does it claim to be. But for those for whom it is right, the combination of tradition, excellence, and genuine opportunity makes it an exceptional choice.

FAQs

Yes, firmly. The school holds an Ofsted Outstanding rating and ranks 63rd for GCSE academic outcomes, placing it in the top 2% in England (FindMySchool ranking). In the 2024-25 / 2025 GCSE dataset, 87% of published GCSE grades were 9-7, and 2025 A-level results show 90% of entries at A*-B across 520 exam entries. The school is also ranked 1st locally in Chelmsford for secondary outcomes.

Extremely competitive. Nearly 1,300 girls sit the entrance test annually for 180 Year 7 places, a ratio of roughly 7 candidates per place. Success requires genuine academic ability, typically combined with some form of preparation or tutoring. Girls must pass the mathematics, English, and reasoning papers to be competitive.

The school campus includes the Victorian main building, the Cadbury Science Building (1994) with dedicated laboratories for physics, chemistry, and biology, the Music Centre (2007) designed architecturally in the shape of an orchestra with a fully equipped recording studio, the Chapman Sports Centre (2021) featuring a sports hall, dance studio, and fitness suite, a swimming pool, an all-weather artificial pitch, tennis courts, netball courts, a drama studio, a languages centre with language laboratory, and the John Moore Library.

The school maintains 40 different music ensembles, including a Chapel Choir, School Orchestra, Swing Band, Jazz groups, Saxophone Quartet, Gospel Choir, and various chamber ensembles. Approximately 60% of pupils learn at least one instrument. The annual school production involves casts exceeding 100 students. Drama teaching occurs across the secondary curriculum, with GCSE and A-level options available.

Sports are compulsory through Year 9, with a diverse menu including netball, athletics, cricket, badminton, fencing, and tennis. The school holds Sportsmark Gold status. Teams compete at local, district, and regional levels. The new Chapman Sports Centre provides modern facilities including a sports hall, dance studio, and fitness suite. Additional facilities include a swimming pool, full sports field, and all-weather pitch.

Yes. The sixth form ranks 97th for A-level academic outcomes, placing it within the top 4% in England (FindMySchool ranking). In 2025, 90% of A-level entries achieved A*-B grades across 520 exam entries, with 60% at A* or A. Locally, the sixth form ranks 2nd in Chelmsford.

The school offers numerous societies, including the Law Society, Medical Society, Debate Society, and Robotics Club. Service includes Duke of Edinburgh Awards (Bronze through Gold), house-based competitions, and sixth form community service. The school was awarded the NACE Challenge Award for commitment to gifted pupil enrichment. Participation in academic competitions (Physics Olympiad, Chemistry Olympiad, British Jurisprudence Moot Court) is actively encouraged.

No. As a state‑funded academy, CCHS for Girls does not charge tuition fees. However, as with all schools, families may incur costs for uniform, school meals, educational trips, and music lesson fees for instrumental tuition.

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Contact Information

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Broomfield Road, Chelmsford, CM1 1RW
01245352592
www.cchs.co.uk
Stephen Lawlor
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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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