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.
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
Highcliffe School sits in that busy middle ground many families want, big enough to offer breadth, small enough to run on clear routines. The tone is purposeful and welcoming, with a strong emphasis on respect, encouragement, and recognition of effort through commendations and awards.
Academically, the current FindMySchool data gives a more mixed picture: GCSE academic outcomes rank 3,579th in England, with the wider secondary local measure placing the school 3rd in Christchurch, while A-level academic outcomes rank 1,031st nationally and 2nd locally for sixth form.
A well-regarded sixth form offer, a visible careers programme, and a defined admissions catchment shape the experience; families considering entry should focus early on deadlines and on how the school’s reading culture and anti-bullying work are developing.
The school’s stated ethos, Caring, Supporting and Encouraging, is reinforced by a rewards and recognition structure that runs from Year 7 through Year 13. Commendations, celebration assemblies, and prize giving are presented as core tools for building positive habits rather than occasional extras.
Daily life is designed around clear expectations and a consistent pastoral structure. Pastoral leads, described as non-teaching specialists, sit alongside teaching roles such as form tutors and year leadership, giving families more than one route to support when issues arise. Peer mentoring also features in the model, including Year 10 students supporting Year 7, and sixth form students providing academic support in reading and mathematics.
The 2023 inspection described the school as welcoming, with pupils who behave well in lessons and social time, and who feel they have an adult to talk to when concerned. It also noted that pupils and parents are not always confident that bullying will not reoccur after staff action, so families should ask direct questions about follow-up and monitoring.
At GCSE, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 47, with an EBacc average point score of 4.3 and 17.7% achieving grades 5 and above across the EBacc. Progress 8 is -0.05, which indicates outcomes close to expected progress nationally from the same starting points.
Ranked 3,579th in England for GCSE academic outcomes and 3rd in Christchurch on the local secondary measure (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), results sit well below the middle of the national GCSE academic ranking.
At A-level in the 2025 dataset, 10% of grades are A*, 10% are A, and 50% are A* to B. The combined A* to A share is 20%, with 297 total exam entries in the current A-level dataset.
Ranked 1,031st in England for A-level academic outcomes and 2nd in Christchurch on the local sixth-form measure (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), the sixth form sits inside the stronger half of the national A-level academic ranking.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
50.84%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Curriculum intent is framed as broad and ambitious, supported by subject “learning journeys” that set out what students study across key stages. The 2023 inspection highlights strong subject knowledge among staff and a curriculum sequence designed so students build knowledge over time, with examples referenced in English, geography, and art and design.
Where this becomes most relevant for families is consistency across years. The inspection indicates improvements to sequencing where it was weaker, so parents of older students may want to ask how those changes have affected homework routines, assessment, and course choices at key transition points (Year 9 options and sixth form entry).
Reading is the clearest area for development. The inspection points to two linked issues, weaker readers are not diagnosed precisely enough to match support, and reading beyond the taught curriculum does not continue strongly into Year 9 and above. For some students, this could affect confidence across subjects that depend on sustained reading and vocabulary.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The school does not publish a full destinations breakdown with Russell Group or Oxbridge totals on its main pages, so the best available picture comes from the official leaver destinations results and the school’s own guidance emphasis on careers.
Leavers move into a mix of university, employment, apprenticeships and further education. Because destinations data can lag the main performance dataset, families should check the latest published destinations information when comparing sixth-form pathways.
Oxbridge outcomes should be read as selective and cohort-dependent. Families interested in the most competitive university routes should ask how current sixth-form students are supported with Oxford and Cambridge applications, rather than treating any single measurement period as a defining feature of the sixth form.
Careers education is described as highly structured, with impartial guidance covering higher education, apprenticeships, and employment. That matters in a mixed-intake sixth form, where the right next step can be university, a degree apprenticeship, or direct employment depending on the student.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 14.3%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
Highcliffe School is an academy and is the admissions authority for its main intake, operating within the coordinated admissions schemes used by local authorities. For September 2027 entry into Year 7, BCP’s coordinated secondary timetable states that applications open on 1 September 2026 and close on 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 1 March 2027 and acceptances due by 15 March 2027.
The school’s admissions policy sets out the admission number for the main Year 7 intake. Oversubscription is handled using published criteria, including catchment priority, sibling priority, and a staff-child criterion in specified circumstances. The policy also describes the traditional feeder areas, including local schools in Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole and in parts of Hampshire where places are available.
Open events follow a predictable pattern. For Year 7 entry, families should check the school calendar for confirmed open-evening dates and use them alongside the current BCP coordinated admissions timetable.
In-year applications are handled by the school rather than by the local authority, with outcomes issued within 15 school days in line with the admissions code.
Parents comparing options can use FindMySchool’s Map Search and Local Hub comparison tools to shortlist realistic alternatives alongside their distance and admissions priorities.
Previous Year (2024/25 Entry)
Applications
463
Total received
Places Offered
252
Subscription Rate
1.8x
Applications per place
Pastoral design is explicit. The prospectus describes year-based pastoral leads as non-teaching specialists, supported by teaching staff in tutor teams and year leadership, with additional targeted support available through roles such as an Emotional Literacy Support Assistant and careers guidance.
The 2023 inspection notes that students feel safe and have trusted adults to raise concerns with, supported by a messaging route through the MyHighcliffe account. It also confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Attendance and re-engagement work is also visible. The Jubilee Centre is referenced as a support for students with lower attendance, designed to help them re-engage with school life. This is relevant for families whose child may need a managed pathway back into routine after illness, anxiety, or persistent attendance issues.
Extracurricular life is framed around the Highcliffe Challenge, a structured programme that tracks and rewards achievements across intellectual and personal development, with phases designed to be completed by the end of Year 8, Year 10, and Year 12. For students who respond well to tangible milestones, this can help maintain engagement beyond exam targets, especially in key stage 3 where habits are still being formed.
Clubs and enrichment are also concrete rather than generic. Current examples include Debate Club, Jazz Band (by audition), Chess Club for sixth form, and a range of sport options such as futsal, football, rugby, basketball, and table tennis. The inspection also references opportunities in music, debating, outdoor education, and leadership routes such as school council and peer mentoring, which align well with the school’s emphasis on responsibility and student voice.
Sixth form facilities are positioned as a practical advantage for independent study and enrichment, including a cafe, a study centre, an art studio, a fitness suite, ICT suites, and a dedicated technology centre. For many students, that infrastructure matters as much as subject offer, it creates a default place to work between lessons rather than drifting off-site.
The school day is structured around a five-period timetable. Registration begins at 08.35 for Years 10 to 13, with teaching beginning at 09.05 and the school day ending at 15.05; bus users are dismissed at 15.15 to allow movement time.
Lunchtime and after-school activities run on-site, and families should expect the club list to change termly. Transport planning matters in this area, particularly for students travelling from the wider catchment, so parents should check the latest local authority routes and timings alongside the school’s finishing time.
Reading culture for older students. The 2023 inspection highlights that reading beyond the English curriculum is stronger in Years 7 and 8 than in Year 9 and above, and that support for weakest readers is not always precisely matched to need. This is a key question for families where reading confidence is already fragile.
Bullying follow-up. The inspection notes that bullying is reported, the school acts, but some pupils and parents are not always confident it will not reoccur. Families should ask how incidents are tracked over time and how repeat patterns are handled.
Competition for places. The school is oversubscribed in available admissions data, and the published admissions policy sets out clear criteria and deadlines. Families should treat the process as time-sensitive and evidence-led, not informal.
A large-school feel. The scale supports breadth of subjects and clubs, but students who prefer quieter environments may need time to settle into a bigger year group and a more complex timetable.
Highcliffe School offers a clear mainstream proposition, structured routines, a broad curriculum, and a sixth form with strong local standing. It suits students who respond to consistent expectations, value a wide choice of activities, and can take advantage of leadership and enrichment pathways like the Highcliffe Challenge.
Best suited to families aligned to the catchment and ready to engage early with admissions deadlines. The main question to explore in visits and conversations is how the school is strengthening reading culture and building confidence in the long-term management of bullying concerns.
Highcliffe School was judged to continue as a Good school at its most recent inspection in June 2023. GCSE outcomes now rank 3,579th in England for academic outcomes and 3rd in Christchurch on the local secondary measure, while A-level outcomes rank 1,031st academically and 2nd locally for sixth form.
Applications for the main Year 7 intake are made through the coordinated admissions process for your home local authority. For September 2027 entry, the BCP coordinated secondary timetable gives an application deadline of 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 1 March 2027.
Yes. The admissions policy sets out a defined catchment, with priority given within criteria such as catchment and sibling links when the school is oversubscribed. If you live outside the catchment, it is important to read the oversubscription criteria carefully and consider realistic alternatives.
Open events typically run in September each year. A Year 6 open evening took place on 18 September 2025, and a sixth form open evening was scheduled for 30 September 2025, so families can expect a similar pattern annually, with dates confirmed on the school calendar.
A-level outcomes rank 1,031st in England for academic outcomes and 2nd in Christchurch on the local sixth-form measure, and careers guidance is emphasised as a structured programme covering higher education, apprenticeships, and employment. Families should check the latest destinations information when comparing post-16 pathways.
Get in touch with the school directly
Is this your school?
Claim this profile to update contact info, add photos, and more.
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.
