When Glyn School observes its centenary in 2027, it will mark nearly a century as one of Surrey's most accomplished secondary institutions. Originally established as Epsom County Grammar School for Boys in 1927, it has evolved through comprehensive transformation while maintaining academic ambition at its heart. Today's 1,692 students benefit from three consecutive Ofsted Outstanding ratings and results that place the school firmly among the nation's most successful comprehensive boys' schools. The newly opened 3G astro pitch at Priest Hill signals ongoing investment in an already exceptional physical infrastructure. With strong GCSE outcomes, active sixth-form progression to leading universities, and an embedded house system spanning eight named communities, Glyn delivers academic rigour without sacrificing breadth.
Stepping through the gates, you encounter a school that feels purposefully led and deeply rooted in community. Jo Garrod, who took the headship in 2020 alongside Executive Headteacher Matt Duffield, commands high expectations across every sphere. The ethos, founded on integrity and respect, translates into observable calm during transitions between lessons and genuine engagement with learning.
The house system anchors the social fabric. Eight houses named Abbey, Bourne, Carew, Derby, Merton, Oaks, St Benet, and Tudor provide each student with a cohesive pastoral base. House tutors know their boys individually, and inter-house competition through the Victor Ludorum Trophy (combining sports and academic achievement) creates a sense of belonging without creating divisions. This structure proves particularly valuable in a boys' secondary of this size, where pasteur relationships might otherwise dissolve into anonymity.
The physical campus reflects investment in educational quality. Beyond the landmark 3G pitch, Priest Hill sports pavilion remains central to the school's sporting identity and is undergoing centenary-year renovation. The school's transformation from Glyn Technology School reflects that past identity, witness the dedicated design and technology workshops still in operation, yet the contemporary curriculum speaks to ambition across all disciplines. Music ensembles rehearse actively, drama productions use multiple venues throughout the year, and the Learning Resource Centre serves as genuine hub, not mere repository.
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.
The school's 2024 GCSE outcomes position Glyn in the top 25% of schools in England (FindMySchool ranking). With an Attainment 8 score of 56.1, the school substantially exceeds the England average of 45.9. Progress 8, measuring improvement from starting points, stands at +0.45, a figure indicating above-average educational added value. These are not simply high absolute grades; they reflect genuine progress across the cohort.
33% of pupils achieved grades 5 or above across the English Baccalaureate entry suite, well above the England average of approximately 41% entering. The pattern indicates disciplined curriculum planning: sciences taught separately, languages taken seriously, and academic breadth encouraged rather than abandoned for narrow specialism.
Sixth-form results reflect the quality of teaching and student commitment. In 2024, 54% achieved grades A*–B, whilst 8% secured A* grades and 18% achieved A grades. Against the England average of 47%, results sit comfortably above the national median. The school ranks 928th in England for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it within the middle band, a fair reflection of a fully comprehensive intake and co-educational sixth form now accepting girls for post-16 study since 2005.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
53.57%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum is deliberately ambitious. The school offers 30 A-level subjects including less common choices such as Government & Politics, Law, Psychology, and Media Studies, alongside traditional strong departments in sciences, languages, and humanities. This breadth reflects conviction that students should encounter choice, not constraint.
Teaching follows structured approaches with clear subject expertise. GCSE classes operate at 28 pupils in earlier years, allowing individualised feedback. A-level sets shrink further, enabling the specialist teaching such learning demands. Staff professional development is taken seriously, the school is part of GLF Schools' wider network, which shares best practice across 43 schools and facilitates external quality assurance beyond Ofsted.
Disadvantaged pupils receive sensitive support; the school operates Pupil Premium interventions with intentional design. The Learning Resource Centre operates as a genuine study space with both quiet zones and collaborative workstations, staffed by trained librarians and available at lunch and after school. Boys identified as needing intervention receive structured support, with particular attention to literacy and numeracy through dedicated programmes.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
In 2024, 57% of leavers progressed to university, 26% entered employment directly, 6% pursued apprenticeships, and 1% continued to further education. These figures reflect the school's realistic positioning as a comprehensive institution: not all students pursue degree-level study, and the school actively supports diversified pathways.
Sixth-form destinations reveal academic reach. University progression reflects strong outcomes across leading institutions. The school does not publish specific Russell Group numbers on its website; however, Oxbridge entries remain modest, 9 applications in the measurement period, with 1 Cambridge place secured. This pattern aligns with comprehensive intake: serious academic provision without creating unrealistic expectations of Oxford and Cambridge entry.
Students regularly secure places at research-intensive universities including Durham, Exeter, Bristol, and Edinburgh. Medical school entry remains a notable strength, with the school claiming consistent placements annually. The explicit Careers, Information, Advice, and Guidance programme, including an annual Careers and Higher Education Fair, ensures meaningful post-16 planning begins early.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 11.1%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
This section represents a defining strength. The school operates an extensive extracurricular ecosystem that balances universal access with elite pathways, a crucial distinction often blurred in school marketing.
Music clubs span soul band, ukulele groups, and a junior band, with students progressing to perform in spring concerts, creative arts evenings, and Christmas carol concerts. The school employs high-calibre instrumental tutors teaching guitars, strings, brass, woodwind, vocals, and percussion through a formal application process, suggesting serious instruction rather than hobby provision. The breadth indicates that students uninterested in orchestral tradition can still engage meaningfully, soul and ukulele clubs signal inclusive programming.
The Drama Department conducts regular club sessions throughout the year with a whole-school production performed in June, drawing on a curriculum that teaches character work, voice control, movement, and script memory across Key Stage 3. The department uses three performance venues, suggesting serious technical capability. Creative Arts offerings, described as showcasing students' talents through art, music, drama, food, and design, earn specific mention on the school's homepage, indicating cultural priority.
Science engagement extends through science clubs and specialist teaching in biology, chemistry, and physics as distinct subjects from Year 7. Mathematics clubs serve both remedial and extension purposes. Computing is offered as a discrete subject option, alongside design and technology spanning construction, timbers-based materials, product design, and paper/boards work at different key stages.
Sports provision is exceptional in scope and infrastructure. Friday afternoon fixtures see boys representing the school in football, rugby, basketball, badminton, cricket, athletics, and table tennis, with multiple teams per year group reflecting genuine breadth. The newly completed 3G pitch enables year-round football and rugby training regardless of weather. Additional facilities support volleyball and other activities. Recent investment signals long-term commitment; the sport pavilion renovation is part of centenary fundraising, underlining the emotional importance of athletics to school identity.
The Combined Cadet Force, run in partnership with City of London Freemen's School in Ashtead, accepts applications from Year 9 onwards. Originally begun in 2013 with 50 cadets, nicknamed "The Originals", numbers have grown steadily. The CCF offers both RAF and Army sections with structured progressions toward commissioned rank, skills training in weapons, navigation, and first aid, plus adventure camps featuring climbing, canoeing, and mountain biking. This is not ceremonial youth engagement; it is serious leadership development.
The Duke of Edinburgh Award operates at Bronze (Year 9), Silver (Year 10), and Gold (Year 12) levels. Currently, 111 pupils pursue Bronze, 23 pursue Silver, with planned expansion to include Gold again. The school partners with Learn Outdoors to deliver expedition sections with professional support, removing barriers that might otherwise exclude less experienced outdoor learners.
Board Games Club in the Learning Resource Centre; Creative Arts Evening showcasing student work; the Boundless Festival coordinated through GLF Schools Foundation celebrating achievement across 10 priority areas including sports, arts, and innovation. This density of offering, from formal cadet rank structures to lunch-time board games, distinguishes truly comprehensive enrichment from selective token programmes.
With 2.77 applications per place available (2024 data for Year 7 entry), the school is oversubscribed, meaning competition for places is genuine. The school is non-selective and serves its local community; admissions follow national coordinated arrangements through Surrey Local Authority.
The sixth form is mixed, welcoming girls as external applicants since 2005 (after a brief earlier experiment starting in 1993). The sixth form has grown to include approximately 25% female students, creating a genuinely co-educational experience at post-16 despite the boys' school designation for Years 7–11.
Parents interested in entry should consult Surrey's coordinated admissions process. Open mornings typically occur in October; families should verify specific dates through the school website. Glyn's oversubscription means distance and school preference become significant factors. Parents wishing to understand catchment positioning may consult the FindMySchoolMap tool to check proximity compared to the last distance historically offered.
Applications
653
Total received
Places Offered
236
Subscription Rate
2.8x
Apps per place
The school takes student wellbeing seriously through multiple channels. Each student has a form tutor within their house; heads of year provide additional oversight. The Glyn SHARP system (an online pastoral tracking tool) enables staff to identify and respond to concerns quickly. The Mental Health Support Team provides specialist counselling beyond school-based pastoral care. Designated safeguarding leadership is clear: Miss H Thompkins, Deputy Headteacher, holds the DSL role with explicit communication pathways for concerns.
Behaviour is calm and courteous. The 2023 Ofsted inspection noted that poor behaviour is "extremely rare" and students "demonstrate strong values, mutual respect and an authentic understanding of equality and inclusion." This observation aligns with lived experience: transitions between lessons occur in orderly fashion, students address staff respectfully, and relationships feel genuine rather than transactional.
The school operates a structured anti-bullying policy with both student and parent support pathways. Student ambassadors, selected from the sixth form, support younger pupils' wellbeing and create peer mentoring relationships.
The school day runs from 8:50am to 3:20pm. Lunch facilities operate in-house; the school canteen offers varied options daily with dietary requirements accommodated. Transportation is served by local buses; the school is proximate to West Ewell and Epsom train stations for families traveling from further afield. Parking at the school site is limited; the website provides explicit guidance on sustainable travel and encourages cycling (with secure bicycle storage provided).
Oversubscription and Competition for Places: With 2.77 applications per place, entry is not guaranteed. Families living closer to the school have priority after looked-after children and siblings. Verify current distance data before relying on a place here.
Boys' Atmosphere: Despite co-educational sixth form intake, Years 7–11 are boys-only. For families seeking mixed-gender secondary provision throughout, other local options exist (nearby Rosebery School is co-educational).
No Grammar Screening: Glyn is fully comprehensive and non-selective, meaning academic composition reflects local demographic mix rather than entrance examination filtering. This is a strength educationally but means peer aspiration may be more varied than in selective settings.
Sixth Form Gender Transition: Girls join at Year 12, having completed their GCSEs elsewhere. The adjustment to co-education requires cultural fluency; families should discuss expectations with prospective sixth-form girls prior to entry.
Glyn School delivers consistently solid comprehensive education for boys, with genuine academic rigour, exceptional extracurricular breadth, and pastoral care that feels personal despite the school's size. Results place it in the top 25% in England; leadership is visibly committed; infrastructure investment signals confidence in the future. The school is best suited to families within the oversubscribed local catchment who value breadth alongside academic challenge and who appreciate a boys' secondary where masculine culture is shaped constructively by staff rather than left to default.
The outstanding Ofsted rating, three consecutive times, reflects sustained quality. For parents in the area, Glyn represents genuine value as a state-funded comprehensive. Glyn School in Ewell, Epsom pairs strong results with a broader experience beyond examinations.
Yes. Glyn was rated Outstanding by Ofsted in September 2023, building on previous Outstanding ratings in 2012 and beyond. The school ranks in the top 25% of schools in England for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), with Attainment 8 scores significantly above England average. The school has been operating at or near capacity for years, indicating strong parental demand rooted in demonstrated quality.
Entry is highly competitive. In 2024, the school received 653 applications for approximately 236 places (ratio of 2.77 applications per place). The school is non-selective, so priority is determined by distance from the school and other admissions criteria (looked-after children, siblings). Living within the tight catchment area significantly improves chances. Parents are advised to verify current distance information before assuming a place.
At GCSE, the school achieved an Attainment 8 score of 56.1 in 2024, well above the England average of 45.9. 33% of students achieved grades 5 or above in the English Baccalaureate suite. At A-level, 54% achieved grades A*–B, with 8% achieving A* grades. These results reflect strong teaching and above-average progress for the comprehensive intake.
The school offers extensive extracurricular provision including Combined Cadet Force (RAF and Army sections), Duke of Edinburgh Award at Bronze, Silver, and Gold levels, music ensembles (orchestra, bands, choirs), drama productions, instrumental tuition in all major instruments, sports including football, rugby, basketball, badminton, cricket, and athletics, plus specialist clubs in science, maths, and design/technology. The newly completed 3G astro pitch enables year-round football and rugby training.
Yes. The sixth form is mixed and accepts both internal pupils and external girls from Year 12 (aged 16). The school offers 30 A-level subjects. The sixth-form population has grown to approximately 25% female since external applications began again in 2005. Entry for internal pupils is based on GCSE results and specific subject entry requirements; external pupils apply directly through the school's sixth-form admissions process.
The school occupies a substantial campus at Priest Hill with dedicated sports facilities including cricket pitches, a newly completed state-of-the-art 3G astro pitch, an indoor sports hall, tennis courts, and a pavilion (currently undergoing centenary-year renovation). Academically, facilities include science labs (with separate biology, chemistry, and physics teaching), design and technology workshops, music studios, drama venues, and the Learning Resource Centre (library and study space).
Yes. Glyn is consistently oversubscribed with approximately 2.77 applications per available place. The school has been at or near capacity for years. Distance from the school and admissions criteria determine final allocation. Parents living within the catchment have significantly better chances of securing a place than those living further away.
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