FindMySchool LogoFindMySchool
  • Schools by Location

    Cities and townsLondon boroughs

    Best by Phase

    Primary SchoolsSecondary SchoolsGrammar SchoolsSixth Form

    Browse All

    PrimarySecondarySixth form and A-levels
  • Combined A-levels & GCSEPrimary SchoolsOxbridge Success
  • BlogMethodology
  • School Match
  • Compare
For Schools
FindMySchool LogoFindMySchool

Helping parents and students find the best schools in England with comprehensive data and insights.

GET IN TOUCH

  • Contact us form
  • info@findmyschool.uk

Quick Links

  • Find Schools
  • All school areas
  • Primary by Area
  • Secondary by Area
  • Grammar Schools by Area
  • Sixth Form Schools by Area
  • Map Search
  • Primary School
  • Secondary School
  • Sixth Form and Grammar Schools
  • Nurseries

Rankings

  • All Rankings
  • Combined A-levels and GCSE
  • Primary Schools
  • Oxbridge Success

Resources

  • About Us
  • Our Methodology
  • Data Disclaimer
  • FAQs
  • Blog

© 2026 FindMySchool. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceCookie Policy
SchoolsChester le StreetLord Lawson of Beamish Academy|Best Secondary Schools in Chester le Street
State School
Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy
Birtley Lane, Birtley, Chester le Street, DH3 2LP·Gateshead·URN: 137942A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary & Post-16
Sixth Form
Mixed
Ages 11-18
Religious Character: None
A-levels Ranking
1,114
Academic
1,244
Overall
1
Local
GCSE Ranking
1,495
Academic
1,699
Overall
2
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
775
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.

Good
7/10
Application Demand
93%
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy Review 2026, Oversubscribed Gateshead 11 to 18 with a clear improvement story

At a Glance

Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy is a large, mixed secondary with sixth form serving Birtley and surrounding communities, with places allocated through Gateshead’s coordinated admissions process. Leadership has been stable since Dr Andrew Fowler became Principal in June 2019, a tenure that has focused strongly on routines, curriculum clarity, and raising expectations.

The most recent graded inspection (15 to 16 November 2022, published 19 January 2023) judged the academy Good in every area, including sixth form provision, and confirmed safeguarding as effective.

Demand for Year 7 places is real. For the latest reported cycle 460 applications resulted in 262 offers, which equates to 1.76 applications for every place offered, and the route is oversubscribed rather than at-capacity in the technical sense. That shapes family experience, because timing and criteria matter as much as preference order.

Character & Atmosphere

The academy’s own framing centres on leadership, service, and social responsibility through its link to Jack Lawson, the local trade union leader and Labour politician after whom the school is named. That is not presented as branding. It functions as a narrative for why education is meant to widen options, especially for students who need structure and advocacy.

Day-to-day culture is described in practical, behavioural terms rather than aspirational slogans. Routines and consistency are a repeated theme, with a strong emphasis on predictable lesson structures and expectations that apply across subjects. In a big secondary, this kind of standardisation can be a decisive factor for students who feel anxious about transitions between classrooms.

Pastoral roles appear designed around knowing students within a large roll. Student leadership roles are used deliberately, with examples such as librarians and wellbeing ambassadors, and reading ambassadors supporting younger pupils. A Pride group is also referenced as part of the academy’s personal development approach and its emphasis on inclusion.

Results / Academic Performance

On FindMySchool’s GCSE academic outcomes ranking (based on official data), Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy is ranked 1,495th of 3,895 schools in England and 2nd within the Chester le Street local area, a position that reflects solid performance in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile).

At GCSE, the academy’s Attainment 8 score is 46.6 and Progress 8 is -0.28, which indicates that progress from prior attainment is below the England benchmark in the 2025 dataset. EBacc outcomes are a weaker point with an average EBacc point score of 3.7 and 6.8% achieving grades 5 or above across the EBacc measure recorded here.

The headline “top grade” distribution is best read as an indicator of stretch for the highest attainers. 9.1% achieved grades 9 to 8, and 21.5% achieved grades 9 to 7.

For A-level outcomes, the academy sits in a similar national band. On FindMySchool’s A-level academic ranking, it is ranked 1,114th of 2,549 providers in England and 1st in the Chester le Street local area, again reflecting performance broadly in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile).

In the 2025 A-level dataset, 50% of entries achieved A* to B. That headline measure is best read alongside the academy’s 1,114th of 2,549 academic rank nationally and its 1st-place sixth-form position in the Chester le Street local area.

What this means for families is not “good” or “bad” in isolation. It points to a sixth form that supports a broad range of students, rather than one dominated by a very high prior-attainment intake. The more useful question is fit, namely whether your child thrives with consistent routines and clear expectations, because that is where the academy’s published strengths cluster.

Parents comparing performance locally should use the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to look at GCSE and A-level patterns side-by-side across nearby alternatives, rather than relying on one headline measure.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

45.34%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

Curriculum design is described explicitly as broad and balanced at Key Stage 3, including English, mathematics, science, geography, history, modern foreign languages, music, art, and a technology carousel that includes design, food, and textiles.

Key Stage 4 is structured around a standard core (English language and literature, mathematics, science, plus non-examined physical education and religious education) with pathways that include separate science routes for students best suited to that pace. The implications here are practical. Students considering A-level biology, chemistry or physics later are not automatically blocked by combined science, but the separate science route creates more timetable time for depth earlier.

Reading is treated as a whole-school priority with identifiable mechanisms, including trained staff delivering additional reading sessions for pupils who struggle with fluency, and a reading ambassador model that pairs older and younger students.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:7/10Good

Quality of Education

Good

Behaviour & Attitudes

Good

Personal Development

Good

Leadership & Management

Good

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

Where Pupils Go Next

The sixth form is intended as a progression route for many Year 11 students, while also taking external applicants where places allow. The academy’s stated focus is on preparing students for university, apprenticeships, and employment, which matches the destinations profile rather than contradicting it.

For the 2023 to 2024 leavers cohort (cohort size 87), 54% progressed to university, 17% entered apprenticeships, 21% moved into employment, and 1% progressed to further education. These figures will not total 100% and do not need to. The practical implication is that post-18 pathways are varied, and the sixth form is not framed as university-only.

On Oxbridge, the figures record two applications and one acceptance in the reporting period (Cambridge only in this slice of data). That is a small number, but it still signals that the academy supports high-tariff applications for a subset of students, rather than treating them as unrealistic.

Alongside the statistics, the academy publishes qualitative destination examples in its prospectus, including universities such as Durham, Edinburgh, Newcastle, Northumbria, Sunderland, York, Cambridge, Oxford, and University College London. These are presented as indicative destinations rather than a quantified league table.

Oxbridge Success

#471 in England

Total Offers

1

Offer Success Rate: 50%

Cambridge

1

Offers

Oxford

—

Offers

Admissions

Year 7 admissions are coordinated through Gateshead’s Local Authority process, and the academy applies Gateshead’s secondary admissions timeline and the coordinated scheme rather than operating a separate direct route for Year 7. The admissions policy sets out a clear priority order when applications exceed places, starting with children in public care, then those living in the catchment area, then sibling link, then exceptional medical or social grounds, then all other children.

Families should check Gateshead’s current secondary admissions timetable for the live application window, closing date and offer day. The academy’s admissions policy still makes timing important, because late or incomplete applications are handled through the local authority process.

Demand is strong enough for the academy to be oversubscribed, with 460 applications and 262 offers for the relevant entry route, and a 1.76 applications-to-offers ratio. Practically, that means families should treat admissions as a project, confirm whether their address is in the defined catchment area, and make sure the application is submitted on time even if the school is not the first preference. If distance becomes a deciding factor in some years, parents should use FindMySchool Map Search to verify their precise distance compared with recent allocation patterns, while remembering that outcomes vary year by year.

Year 12 admission is handled through a sixth form admissions policy, with similar oversubscription priorities if the sixth form becomes full. The academy’s sixth form materials indicate that recruitment activity typically begins early in November, with applications often due in January and subject-specific entry grades applying for some courses. For 2026 entry, families should treat those timings as indicative and check the current sixth form application page for the live schedule.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
Not published by Gateshead

Applications

460

Total received

Places Offered

262

Subscription Rate

1.8x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Pastoral support is described through systems rather than slogans. A weekly personal, social and health education programme is highlighted, alongside a focus on trusted adults, low reported incidence of bullying, and structured support for students who experience anxiety or social and emotional challenges.

There is also evidence of targeted wellbeing provision through enrichment, including a Mindfulness and Wellbeing Group based in the learning resource centre and advertised as open to any year group. That matters because it offers a low-barrier entry point for students who might not seek formal pastoral support, but still benefit from structured coping strategies and calm spaces.

Support for students with special educational needs and disabilities is described as classroom-integrated, with teachers and teaching assistants working together and staff receiving clear information about strategies that help individual pupils.

Beyond the Classroom

Extracurricular activity is framed as part of the wider curriculum rather than an optional add-on. The academy regularly publishes bulletins so families can see what is available, which is useful in a large school where opportunities can otherwise feel opaque.

There are several identifiable strands that give a clearer picture than a generic “lots of clubs” claim:

  • Student leadership and inclusion: wellbeing ambassadors, librarians, reading ambassadors, and a Pride group all feature as concrete roles rather than aspirational labels. The implication is a school that uses responsibility as a development tool, particularly for older students.

  • Library-led enrichment: the learning resource centre runs structured lunchtime activity including spelling bees, book swaps, graphic novel creation, and book clubs, which suits students who want something quieter but still social at break and lunchtime.

  • Sport and fitness access points: the bulletin model includes a breakfast fitness club using the fitness suite, and lunchtime and after-school sport options such as netball and multi-sports sessions. This offers a route for students who are not already on teams but benefit from routine activity.

  • Sixth form enrichment with recognised outcomes: Duke of Edinburgh is positioned as a post-16 opportunity with Bronze and Silver routes, and the prospectus highlights the Extended Project Qualification as part of building independent study capability.

For families, the key implication is breadth. Students can choose structured, quieter options (library programmes, wellbeing group), leadership roles (ambassadors, librarians), or active clubs. That range matters as much as any single flagship activity.

Practical Information

The academy publishes a detailed day structure. Tutor time begins at 08:50 and the published timetable ends at 15:20. A separate joining guide indicates that pupils are expected on site for 08:40, which effectively builds in transition time before the formal start.

Wraparound care is not usually a feature of secondary schools in the way it is for primaries, but there are early options such as the breakfast fitness club listed in the extracurricular programme. Families who need supervised early drop-off beyond that should check directly what is available in the current year’s offer.

For travel, the academy references significant use of public bus routes, including Go North East service 21 for some students, and there are dedicated school bus services listed by local transport providers. For journey planning, Nexus provides tools for bus and Metro options by school, and operators such as Go North East publish school bus services serving the academy. For rail, Chester-le-Street station is the most obvious nearby rail hub for many families, though onward bus travel is typically required.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,496
  • Number of pupils: 1,293

Things to Consider

  • Oversubscription reality. With 460 applications and 262 offers cycle, admissions are competitive. Families should treat deadlines and criteria as decisive, and avoid assuming that a late or incomplete application will be accommodated.

  • Progress measures are below the England benchmark in the 2025 dataset. A Progress 8 score of -0.28 suggests that not all groups are making the progress they should from their starting points. This is most relevant for families whose child needs strong academic acceleration and may benefit from asking how intervention and stretch are targeted for different prior-attainment groups.

  • Disadvantaged pupil strategy needs to be clearly evidenced. External review materials highlight inconsistency in support for some disadvantaged pupils, so families may want to probe how current pupil premium strategy is evaluated and how impact is tracked in each subject.

The Verdict

Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy will suit families who want a large, structured 11 to 18 setting with clear routines, a broad curriculum, and visible student leadership opportunities. It is also a realistic choice for students who want varied post-16 routes, including apprenticeships and employment, not only university.

Admission is the obstacle; what follows is coherent and well organised. Best suited to students who respond well to consistent expectations and a steady pace of improvement, and to families prepared to engage early with admissions criteria and timelines.

FAQs

The academy is judged Good in its most recent graded inspection, including sixth form provision, and safeguarding is confirmed as effective. In performance terms, GCSE and A-level outcomes sit broadly in the middle performance band for England in the FindMySchool rankings, with the current data placing the school 2nd locally for secondary outcomes and 1st locally for sixth-form outcomes.

Yes, demand exceeds available places cycle, with 460 applications and 262 offers reported for the relevant Year 7 entry route. Oversubscription means criteria and deadlines matter, and families should take care to submit a complete application on time.

Year 7 applications are coordinated by Gateshead. Families should use Gateshead’s current secondary admissions timetable for the live closing date, offer day and late-application rules, because the exact dates can change by entry year.

The published timetable starts with tutor time at 08:50 and ends at 15:20. The joining guidance also indicates pupils should be on site by 08:40 to support punctuality and readiness for the start of the day.

The sixth form materials indicate a general requirement of five GCSEs at grade 4 or above, including English language and mathematics, alongside subject-specific grade requirements for some courses. Recruitment activity is described as beginning early in November in a typical cycle, so families should check the current sixth form application page for the live timeline.

School Match

Is this the right school? Get 5 personalised picks in 3 min.

Try School Match

Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Birtley Lane, Birtley, Chester le Street, DH3 2LP
01914334026
lordlawson.academy
Andrew Fowler
Get directions

Often Compared With

Is Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy the right fit for your child?

Answer 11 quick questions and get 5 personalised school picks

Try School Match

Is this your school?

Claim this profile to update contact info, add photos, and more.

Claim profile

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.

Display Your Ranking

School Ranking Badge
Share this badge on your school's website
#1 Sixth Form
School
in Chester Le Street
#1,244 in England
Lord Lawson of Beamish Academy
#885
State · Secondary & Post-16

Cardinal Hume Catholic School, Gateshead

Gateshead council
FMS Inspection Score
Elite
A-Level
#1,094 / 2,549
GCSE
#1,088 / 3,895
Oxbridge
#2,363 / 2,712
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
11-18 years
Religious Character
Catholic
Sixth Form
Details
#1,193
State · Secondary & Post-16

St Robert of Newminster Catholic School and Sixth Form College, Washington

Sunderland council
FMS Inspection Score
Good
A-Level
#1,242 / 2,549
GCSE
#1,873 / 3,895
Oxbridge
#451 / 2,712
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
11-18 years
Religious Character
Catholic
Sixth Form
Details
#1,325
State · Secondary & Post-16

North East Futures UTC

Newcastle upon Tyne council
FMS Inspection Score
Developing
A-Level
#1,325 / 2,549
Oxbridge
#916 / 2,712
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
14-18+ years
Religious Character
None
Sixth Form
Details
Independent · Other

The Poplars

Sunderland council
No rankings available
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
8-18 years
Religious Character
None
Special Classes
Details