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SchoolsEppingEpping St John's Church of England School|Best Secondary Schools in Epping
State School

Epping St John's Church of England School

Bury Lane, Epping, CM16 5JB·Essex·URN: 145050A 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
Church of England
A-levels Ranking
1,074
Academic
1,203
Overall
1
Local
GCSE Ranking
3,566
Academic
3,180
Overall
1
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
907
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Epping St Johns Church of England School Review 2026: The Epping comprehensive with sixth form, structured support, and strong enrichment

At a Glance

For local families, this is the headline fact: it is a state-funded secondary with sixth form, serving students aged 11 to 18 and operating at close to full capacity (around 1,030 students against a capacity of 1,036).

The school’s current legal form dates to 01 November 2017, when it opened as its present establishment, and it sits within the BMAT Education trust.

The leadership figure to know is Mr Michael Yerosimou (Head of School). A publicly available appointment date is not clearly stated in the official sources accessible for this review, so families who care about leadership tenure should confirm directly with the school.

In day-to-day terms, the school positions itself as high-expectations and highly organised, with a visible emphasis on routine (tutor groups, year leadership, and a structured behaviour system) alongside a deliberately broad enrichment offer (clubs, sports, trips, and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award from Bronze to Gold).

Character & Atmosphere

This is a Church of England school, and the faith dimension is not presented as a bolt-on. The documentation describes Christian values as the underpinning for how students are expected to live and learn together, including themes such as dignity, respect, courage, and aspiration.

Pastoral structures are designed to make a large school feel navigable. The prospectus describes a tutor-led model where form tutors are the first point of contact, supported by year leaders and senior leadership oversight. Houses link tutor groups across year groups and create a framework for assemblies and identity beyond the classroom.

The most helpful way to interpret the culture is through the school’s stated routines and the behaviour systems described in official material. A consistent behaviour system is referenced as the mechanism staff use to manage incidents, and there is an explicit ambition to keep expectations common across subjects and year groups. That matters for families because consistency is usually what determines whether students experience school as calm and predictable, or as variable depending on who is teaching.

A practical note for parents: as the only mainstream secondary in Epping, the school carries a strong community function. When a town has a single non-selective secondary, it often means the intake is genuinely mixed, and the school has to do two things at once, stretch the most academic students while also building confidence, literacy, and readiness for examinations for those who arrive with weaker starting points. The support mechanisms described, such as targeted reading and mathematics help and a daily homework club, are coherent responses to that reality.

Results / Academic Performance

At GCSE, Epping St Johns is ranked 3,566th academically in England out of 3,895 ranked GCSE schools, while the local secondary hub still lists it 1st in Epping. That national position is weaker than the earlier middle-band wording, so families should read it alongside the Progress 8 score and local context rather than treating one ranking line as the whole story.

Key GCSE indicators include an Attainment 8 score of 42.8 and a Progress 8 score of 0.0, suggesting progress overall is in line with the national benchmark once prior attainment is taken into account. EBacc outcomes show 16.4% achieving grades 5 or above across the EBacc measure.

At A-level, the sixth form is ranked 1,074th academically in England out of 2,549 ranked providers, and 1st in Epping for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This is a stronger national position than the previous profile suggested and is useful context for families considering staying on after GCSEs.

The rounded grade profile reported shows: 0% of grades at A*, around 20% at A, around 40% at B, and around 70% at A* to B combined. The A* to A share is around 20%, so the current sixth-form picture is stronger on the broad A* to B measure than the earlier profile suggested.

A useful way to interpret these figures is to align expectations. GCSE progress appears broadly typical for England, but the national GCSE ranking is now weaker than the previous middle-band wording implied. Sixth form outcomes look more positive in the current A-level data, with the local rank still reflecting the school's role as the leading sixth-form option within Epping itself. For many families, the implication is to compare the sixth form on subject availability, continuity, pastoral familiarity, and the wider Essex and London fringe alternatives.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

65.13%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

The clearest academic design feature in the published material is the emphasis on structure: five 60-minute lessons per day is set out as the timetable pattern for Key Stage 3, and Key Stage 4 is described as a three-year phase (Years 9 to 11) with a staged approach to GCSE choices.

That staged options model is a meaningful choice. Example: students begin GCSE option choices during Year 9, with further selection later. Evidence: the stated rationale is that choice becomes “an exciting phase” that increases motivation and improves results. Implication: for some students, earlier agency can increase buy-in; for others, particularly those who mature later or need more time to identify strengths, families should ask how guidance and careers support are delivered before final option commitments.

Support beyond lessons is a recurring theme. The prospectus describes “aspiration sessions” after school, Saturday and holiday school, a daily homework club from 3pm to 4pm, and targeted one-to-one support in reading and mathematics.

For parents, the practical question is not whether these exist, but how they are targeted. High-impact support is usually sharply focused, for example Year 11 students preparing for GCSEs, students retaking key content, or students with specific literacy gaps. The school’s published approach suggests it is attempting to build a high-support, high-expectation model, which can be effective when attendance and routines are strong.

Where Students Go Next

For many families, the sixth form is the key differentiator. The destination results for the 2023/24 leaver cohort (79 students) indicates 47% progressed to university, 15% to apprenticeships, 19% to employment, and 1% to further education.

The school also has a small Oxbridge pipeline in the recorded cycle: two students applied to Cambridge, one received an offer, and one acceptance is recorded across Oxford and Cambridge combined. This is not an Oxbridge “machine”, but it does indicate that students with the right profile are supported to apply and succeed.

The implication for families is straightforward. If your child’s plan is university, including competitive courses, you should ask about subject availability, guidance for personal statements, predicted grade support, and the structure of enrichment that builds credible applications. If apprenticeships are in view, the same logic applies, but the questions shift to employer engagement, application coaching, and how work experience is sourced and quality assured.

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.

Read the official Ofsted reportWhat do Ofsted reports mean?

Admissions: How to Get In

This is a state school with no tuition fees. Admission for Year 7 is coordinated by Essex County Council (rather than direct application to the school).

For September 2027 entry, Essex sets the standard timeline: applications open 12 September 2026 and close 31 October 2026. National Offer Day is 01 March 2027.

Appeals follow a published county timetable. For secondary entry in September 2026, the Essex deadline for submitting appeals is 13 April 2026, with hearings running up to mid-June for on-time appeals and later into July where possible.

For sixth form entry (Year 12), most schools operate a direct application process with published entry criteria, and the school has a dedicated sixth form provision referenced in official sources. However, the exact dates and deadlines for sixth-form admissions are not set out in the accessible sources used for this review, so families should confirm the current sixth-form application window with the school.

Application Demand

Last distance offered:
Not published by Essex

Previous Year (2024/25 Entry)

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
Not published by Essex

Applications

406

Total received

Places Offered

185

Subscription Rate

2.2x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Ofsted’s most recent full inspection (21 and 22 April 2022) judged the school Good across every headline area, including sixth form.

The same report confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.

Beyond those headlines, the pastoral model described across the school’s published material is built around tutor contact, year leadership, and a support hub called The Hive, described as a place where students can receive specialist support from teaching assistants for learning or pastoral reasons.

For parents, a useful question is how pastoral support scales in practice for a school of this size. Look for clear “routes” for raising concerns, clarity about early help (attendance, anxiety, friendship issues), and the practical availability of staff at pinch points (start of day, break, lunchtime). The inspection report also points to the importance of students having multiple avenues to report worries, which is a sensible prompt for parents to ask what reporting options exist now and how they are communicated to younger students.

Beyond the Classroom: Extracurricular

The enrichment offer is unusually well articulated in school-published material, including a named programme, Be Courageous, and a clear expectation that students should participate.

Examples are specific rather than generic. Evidence includes clubs such as Science and Astronomy Club, British Sign Language club, School Newspaper, School Band, Choir club, chess, dance, and a range of sports sessions including football, trampolining, table tennis, netball, basketball, and rugby.

The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is offered from Bronze through Gold, spanning Year 9 to Year 13. That is meaningful because it provides a structured route to sustained volunteering, skills development, and expedition experience, which is valuable both for personal development and post-16 applications.

Trips and visits are also described with a mix of curriculum and broader development aims, including university trips, Cambridge science trips, exchanges, theatre visits, and local visits such as Epping Forest. The key implication is breadth: a well-planned trips programme often becomes the mechanism by which students see beyond the immediate area and begin to link subjects to real futures.

Facilities named in the prospectus include a multi-use games area (MUGA), an all-weather pitch (ASTRO), break-out computer zones, a dedicated sixth-form area, a chaplaincy space for quiet reflection, and The Hive support space. These specifics matter because they suggest the school has thought about zoning, student support, and how to create places for both active and quiet time within a secondary day.

Practical Information

Transport is a practical strength of the location. Epping is served by the Central line, which can broaden the feasible travel-to-school radius for some families and can also make post-16 travel for part-time work, college links, or wider activities more manageable.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,036
  • Number of pupils: 1,031

Things to Consider

  • Sixth form outcomes are stronger in the current dataset. The sixth form is ranked 1,074th academically in England out of 2,549 ranked A-level providers, and the rounded grade profile records around 70% of grades at A* to B. Families should still compare subject availability and support, but the current headline A-level data is more positive than the previous profile suggested.

  • Structured support is a strength, but it can require buy-in. The published model includes Saturday and holiday school, aspiration sessions, and a daily homework club. Students who engage tend to benefit; students who resist routine support may find expectations feel demanding.

  • Faith character is part of the identity. The chaplaincy space and Church of England ethos are positioned as foundational. Families who prefer a fully secular experience should weigh whether this feels aligned.

The Verdict

Epping St Johns Church of England School is a near-capacity, town-centre comprehensive that aims to combine clear routines, high expectations, and a broad enrichment offer with the practical reality of serving a wide intake. GCSE Progress 8 sits at 0.0, while the national GCSE ranking is weaker than the earlier profile suggested. Sixth form outcomes are more positive in the current A-level data, with around 70% of grades at A* to B.

Who it suits: families seeking a local, structured secondary with a clear enrichment programme, visible student support mechanisms, and a faith-informed ethos, especially where continuity into sixth form is valued. The main decision point for many will be post-16: for some students the sixth form will be the right fit; others should compare alternative sixth-form options before committing. Using FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature can help families keep a disciplined shortlist while they compare travel times, subject options, and sixth-form pathways.

FAQs

It is judged Good in its most recent full inspection, and its GCSE progress measure is in line with the national benchmark, although the current GCSE ranking sits in the lower part of the national table. The school also sets out a clear support and enrichment model, including structured homework provision, targeted literacy and numeracy support, and a wide club programme.

Applications are made through Essex County Council. For September 2027, applications open on 12 September 2026 and close on 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 01 March 2027.

Yes, it has sixth form provision. In the current rounded A-level dataset, around 70% of grades are A* to B and the sixth form ranks 1,074th academically in England out of 2,549 ranked providers.

The school publishes a named enrichment programme, Be Courageous, including clubs such as Science and Astronomy Club, British Sign Language club, School Newspaper, School Band, and a wide range of sport sessions. Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is offered from Bronze to Gold.

No. This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual associated costs such as uniform, trips, and optional activities.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Bury Lane, Epping, CM16 5JB
01992573028
www.eppingstjohnsschool.org
Michael Yerosimou
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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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