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.
A large 11–16 academy serving Willington, Crook and surrounding villages, Parkside Academy sits in a part of County Durham where school transport matters. The school itself estimates that about 60% of students arrive by school bus, which shapes the rhythm of the day and makes after-school options more realistic for families further out.
Leadership is stable. Mrs K. Armstrong is the headteacher and took up the post from 01 September 2020. The school is part of Advance Learning Partnership, so governance and improvement work sits within a wider trust structure.
The most recent Ofsted inspection was on 19 September 2023 and graded the school Good across all reported areas. Academically, GCSE outcomes are broadly in line with England norms rather than sharply above or below, with a Progress 8 score of 0.01 and an Attainment 8 score of 42.6. Parkside’s FindMySchool GCSE ranking places it in the middle 35% of secondary schools in England (25th to 60th percentile). It also ranks 1st locally in Crook on that same measure.
Parkside presents itself as a practical, community-facing academy where routine and participation are the levers for improvement, not selective entry or narrow academic sorting. The admissions messaging is explicit that Year 7 entry is coordinated through Durham County Council and that the school offers up to 180 places per cohort. That scale usually brings a broader peer mix, and it also allows the school to run plenty of parallel opportunities, for example multiple sports teams and a wide enrichment timetable.
Several “how school feels” signals come through consistently in the school’s own communications. A free breakfast offer runs from 08:15 until registration, built around bagels and cereals, which is often as much about punctuality and readiness to learn as it is about nutrition. The school also puts notable emphasis on structured enrichment, with a clear expectation that clubs and additional opportunities are part of the weekly routine, not a special add-on.
The local context matters. The school states that the area has significant deprivation and that 41% of students are eligible as disadvantaged students. In practice, that tends to push schools towards a very applied definition of “ambition”, one that blends qualifications, attendance, personal development and credible post-16 routes.
Parkside’s headline performance data points to a school that is broadly typical by England standards rather than academically selective.
This places Parkside in line with the middle 35% of secondary schools in England (25th to 60th percentile), so outcomes are neither elite nor weak in the national picture.
At GCSE level:
Attainment 8: 42.6
Progress 8: 0.01, effectively in line with the England benchmark of 0
EBacc: the picture is more limited, with 8.9% achieving grade 5 or above across EBacc, and an EBacc average point score of 3.55. (For context, the England average EBacc entry rate is 40.5%, so families who strongly prioritise an EBacc pathway should ask how options and guidance are structured.)
For parents comparing local secondaries, Parkside’s value is in being transparent about where outcomes sit and then focusing on the ingredients that shift results over time. If you are weighing multiple schools, the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison view is a useful way to line up Progress 8, Attainment 8, and EBacc patterns side-by-side using the same definitions.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Curriculum materials indicate a relatively broad Key Stage 4 menu, mixing academic choices with applied options. In addition to the usual core subjects, published curriculum information highlights subjects such as health and social care, travel and tourism, and hospitality alongside more traditional options like history, geography, arts, and modern foreign languages.
The most persuasive indicator of the school’s teaching approach is how it builds structured programmes around literacy, enrichment, and readiness for next steps. The school’s “Reading Restaurant” is a good example: students are rewarded for engagement with reading for pleasure and are invited to a breakfast reading event with curated reading lists for Year 7. The implication is straightforward, reading is treated as a culture to be built, not a skill to be assumed.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is an 11–16 school, so the main transition is at 16. Parkside states that a higher than average number of its pupils remain in education beyond 16, progressing to providers across the Durham and Bishop Auckland area.
The school’s careers resources signpost a range of local routes including New College Durham, Durham Sixth Form Centre, and Bishop Auckland College, among others. There is also evidence of repeated engagement with local colleges through taster days and careers events, including visits to Bishop Auckland College for Year 10 and Year 11 students.
The implication for families is that post-16 planning cannot be an afterthought. If your child is likely to thrive in a sixth form setting, or alternatively wants a more vocational or apprenticeship-led route, you should treat Year 9 and Year 10 as the decision runway and ask how guidance interviews, college visits, and subject option support are scheduled.
Parkside Academy’s Year 7 admissions are coordinated through Durham County Council, using the Common Application Form process rather than direct application to the school. The school indicates an annual intake capacity of up to 180 Year 7 students.
For September 2026 entry (Year 7), Durham’s published timeline states:
Applications open in September 2025
Closing date is Friday 31 October 2025
National offer day is Monday 02 March 2026
If you are applying from outside County Durham, confirm which local authority coordinates your application, as cross-border processes can change how and when information is shared.
Applications
271
Total received
Places Offered
174
Subscription Rate
1.6x
Apps per place
The school explicitly builds wellbeing into its wider curriculum and enrichment framing, rather than treating it as a standalone add-on. One practical example is the use of workshops for Year 10 and Year 11 focused on resilience and motivation in the run-up to GCSEs, designed to give students usable strategies for stress and workload.
Safeguarding and wider culture should be explored directly with the school if you are shortlisting. The most recent inspection provides the official baseline for standards across behaviour, personal development, and leadership.
Parkside’s co-curricular offer is one of its clearest strengths, particularly around sport, creative options, and structured clubs that run consistently.
On sport and physical activity, the facilities list is unusually specific for a state secondary: a full-sized 3G artificial pitch, sports hall, gym, dance studio, rock climbing wall, fitness suite, plus multiple grass pitches. That matters because it enables both mass participation and team depth, and it also supports leadership pathways such as officiating and coaching awards.
Clubs and enrichment are not presented as occasional extras. In Term 1 of 2024/25, the school reported 18 different clubs running, with over 300 students attending consistently. Examples named include Art Club (with over 30 students), Young Translators Club, Games Club, and Maths Homework Club. For a mid-sized town catchment, that level of participation is meaningful, it suggests the timetable and transport arrangements allow students to stay.
Academic and aspiration programmes add a different dimension. The school references participation in The Brilliant Club, where Year 8 students work with a PhD tutor on a university-style tutorial programme. The implication is that “stretch” is not reserved for a small top set, it is delivered through structured external partnerships as well as in-class teaching.
This is a state school with no tuition fees.
The published school day timings changed from September 2023. Registration runs 08:30–08:55 and the day ends at 15:00 (following a short afternoon meeting slot). Free breakfast provision runs from 08:15 until registration.
Enrichment commonly runs after school, and the school has referenced an after-school bus to support students who stay for clubs. For families relying on local authority transport, it is sensible to confirm eligibility and route details early, particularly if your child intends to attend regular after-school activities.
No sixth form. Students move on after Year 11, so the quality of careers guidance and college engagement matters more than it would in an 11–18 school.
EBacc pathway looks limited. With 8.9% achieving grade 5 or above across EBacc, families prioritising a strongly academic language and humanities route should ask how options are structured and how students are guided towards EBacc entry where appropriate.
Transport shapes the experience. With about 60% arriving by school bus, after-school participation can depend on bus arrangements and club scheduling, especially for students travelling from surrounding villages.
Context brings added responsibility. The school highlights local deprivation and a high disadvantaged proportion, which can be a positive if you value inclusive practice and strong support systems, but it also makes consistency and behaviour policy implementation particularly important to explore during visits.
Parkside Academy suits families looking for a non-selective 11–16 school with strong practical infrastructure, especially in sport, and a clear emphasis on participation, routines, and structured enrichment. Academically, outcomes sit around the England middle range, so the deciding factors are likely to be culture, support, and how well the school helps students translate Year 7–11 progress into the right post-16 destination. Best suited to students who benefit from predictable routines, plentiful clubs, and a school that actively supports broad participation, including those who rely on school transport. The main trade-off is that families seeking an 11–18 pathway or a highly EBacc-heavy route will need to plan carefully around options and post-16 transition.
Parkside Academy was graded Good at its most recent inspection (19 September 2023), with all headline areas also graded Good. Academically, GCSE performance sits in the middle range nationally, with Progress 8 close to the England benchmark.
Year 7 applications are coordinated through Durham County Council rather than directly through the school. For September 2026 entry, the published deadline is Friday 31 October 2025, with offers released on Monday 02 March 2026.
The school’s Attainment 8 score is 42.6 and Progress 8 is 0.01, indicating progress broadly in line with the England benchmark. EBacc outcomes are more limited, so it is worth discussing EBacc entry and option routes if that matters to your family.
The school reports a wide enrichment programme, including clubs such as Art Club, Young Translators Club, Games Club and Maths Homework Club, alongside extensive sport options. Some clubs run after school, supported by an after-school bus for students who need transport.
From September 2023, registration starts at 08:30 and the school day ends at 15:00. Free breakfast provision runs from 08:15 until registration time.
Get in touch with the school directly
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