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 key theme here is momentum. The school is smaller than most secondaries, and that can be an advantage when a community is trying to turn a corner, because routines, expectations, and relationships can be reinforced consistently. The daily structure foregrounds reading and purposeful starts to lessons, with a tutor period and guided reading built into the morning.
The most recent inspection judgement is not yet where leaders want it to be, but the detail matters. Behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management were all judged Good, with quality of education judged Requires Improvement. Safeguarding arrangements were also confirmed as effective.
For families, the practical question is fit. This is a school for parents who want a local 11 to 16 option with a clear improvement trajectory, a strong emphasis on consistent routines, and a culture that celebrates pupils’ differences and achievements, while still recognising that published outcomes have not yet caught up with the changes taking place.
The school frames its ethos through the Forest Values, an acrostic that emphasises Friendships, Organised, Respectful, Engaged, Sustainable, and Teamwork. It is not just branding. The intention is a shared language that staff can reinforce across tutor time, corridors, and classrooms, especially helpful in a community where consistency is part of the improvement plan.
A notable feature is the school’s emphasis on belonging. The house structure is a visible part of this, with houses including Beechenhurst, Clearwell, and Symonds Yat, each with a named head of house. For many pupils, that creates a smaller “home base” inside a whole school, a useful mechanism for attendance support, pastoral check ins, and incentives such as house points.
The external picture from the most recent inspection aligns with a community that is rebuilding trust. It describes relationships based on mutual respect, pupils feeling safe and settled, and staff support for personal challenges. That matters because a calm baseline is a prerequisite for academic recovery, especially for pupils who have experienced disruption.
Leadership is presented in a way that reflects trust governance. The Ofsted report names an executive headteacher (Alan Dane) and a head of school (Nicola Mooney). The school’s own staffing information presents Mrs Mooney as Head of School, with an explicit focus on inclusion and ethical practice, alongside senior leaders responsible for quality of education and other key areas. Government directory information also lists Mrs Nicola Mooney as headteacher or principal. (Where titles vary between sources, it is best read as a trust leadership structure with day to day school leadership centred on the Head of School role.)
This is an 11 to 16 school, so the headline outcomes are GCSE measures. On the FindMySchool GCSE ranking, it sits 3,786th in England and 4th in the Forest of Dean for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). In percentile terms, that places it below England average, within the bottom 40% of schools in England on this measure.
The detailed measures reinforce that published outcomes remain a challenge. The school’s Progress 8 score is -0.78, indicating that, on average, students have made less progress than pupils with similar starting points nationally. The average EBacc average point score is 2.25, and 2.1% of pupils achieved grade 5 or above in the EBacc measure recorded here. These figures suggest the school’s improvement work needs to translate into stronger examined performance over time, particularly in the combination of academic subjects that make up the English Baccalaureate route.
The key contextual point, which parents should hold alongside those numbers, is that the most recent inspection explicitly states that published outcomes do not fully reflect the impact of improvements already made to the quality of education. In practice, that typically means the school has changed curriculum sequencing, routines, and teaching expectations, but current cohorts have not yet experienced the full “through line” of that redesigned curriculum from Year 7 onwards. If you are considering entry now, ask leaders what has changed since 2022, which year groups have had the new model from the start, and how the school is measuring impact beyond headline grades.
A useful way to interpret the school’s current position is through the relationship between behaviour, attendance, and attainment. When a school improves its climate first, strong learning tends to follow, but with a lag. Here, the inspection evidence points to more purposeful routines and a calmer learning environment, while also identifying that high rates of absence still prevent many pupils from fulfilling their potential.
Families comparing local options should use the FindMySchool local hub pages to view results side by side, and to track whether the gap between curriculum changes and published outcomes is narrowing over the next results cycle.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The school’s improvement strategy shows up most clearly in its attention to routines and reading. The daily timetable includes guided reading for Years 7 to 10, with a guided preparation slot for Year 11, and the inspection narrative describes pupils practising reading each morning alongside older pupils attending revision classes.
Reading is treated as a gateway, not a bolt on. The inspection evidence describes a phonics curriculum for pupils in the earliest stages of reading, including specialist teaching for pupils who speak English as an additional language. The implication for parents is straightforward: if your child is behind in reading fluency, the school is explicitly structured to identify that early and to provide a planned route back to confident access to the wider curriculum.
Subject level curriculum thinking is also visible in the way departments describe intent. The history curriculum, for example, is described as chronological at key stage 3, with an explicit emphasis on helping students engage with historical discourse, including careful vocabulary and attention to how accounts are constructed. In a school context, that matters because it signals an expectation that students will do more than recall facts, they will be taught how to argue and explain using subject language.
Where the school is still working is in translating strong intent into consistently strong classroom practice. The inspection identifies assessment as not yet used precisely enough in some subjects, and not enough opportunities for pupils to use vocabulary in extended discussion or writing. The practical implication is that some students may still experience variability between subjects or classes, and families should ask how leaders are supporting staff training, coaching, and shared practice to reduce that inconsistency.
With an upper age of 16, the main transition is post 16. The most helpful way to think about this is preparation rather than a single destination pipeline. The inspection evidence describes careers education as comprehensive and expanding, including opportunities for pupils to meet employers and training providers.
For families, the key questions are practical. What guidance do Year 9 and Year 10 students receive before option choices and post 16 planning. How are students supported to choose between sixth form, further education colleges, and apprenticeship routes. What is the school’s approach to work related learning, workplace encounters, and personal guidance interviews. The school’s careers information positions the programme as part of a wider commitment to pupil growth and future planning, which aligns with the inspection picture of developing aspirations.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is a state school, so there are no tuition fees. Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated through the local authority process for secondary transfer, using the standard application timetable.
For the Gloucestershire secondary intake timetable for September 2026 entry, the closing date for applications is midnight on Friday 31 October 2025. Allocation day is Monday 2 March 2026, and the deadline to accept the offered place or request waiting list consideration is midnight on Monday 16 March 2026.
The school’s published admission number is 90 for Year 7. The same local authority guidance document also reports total preferences for September 2025 of 82, with 48 first preferences recorded. That combination suggests that demand can vary by year, and parents should treat any single year snapshot as indicative rather than predictive.
If you are applying from outside the normal Year 7 entry point, the admissions policy indicates that in year applications should be made directly to the school in the first instance, in line with local fair access protocols.
Open events are the best way to assess fit, particularly when a school is in a period of improvement. If published open evening dates are not current, ask for the typical autumn pattern and how to book, and use FindMySchool tools to shortlist and compare options before the October deadline.
Applications
71
Total received
Places Offered
47
Subscription Rate
1.5x
Apps per place
The strongest pastoral signal is that the school is building a climate where students feel safe, settled, and able to report concerns with confidence that staff will respond fairly. That is not a cosmetic point, it underpins attendance, behaviour, and learning.
Support for pupils with additional needs is also presented as a whole school expectation rather than a small team working in isolation. The SEND section references a whole school provision map and an annual cycle of review. For parents of children with identified needs, it is worth asking how support is implemented day to day in classrooms, how staff training is structured, and how the school measures progress beyond test scores, particularly for students who miss school because of health, anxiety, or complex circumstances.
Attendance is the area where wellbeing and academic outcomes intersect most sharply. The inspection identifies that persistent absence continues to limit outcomes for many pupils, even alongside targeted support for families. Families considering the school should pay close attention to expectations around punctuality and attendance, and to the support offer when attendance difficulties arise.
Extracurricular life is most persuasive when it is specific. The inspection evidence references sporting tournaments and competitions, and also notes a recent performance of Matilda that provided pupils with a valuable opportunity to perform drama and music to a live audience. That matters because performance work requires sustained rehearsal, teamwork, and confidence, and those are transferable skills for students whose self belief may have been dented by academic struggle.
The school’s news and events also points to ongoing theatre activity, including a staged production of Little Shop of Horrors in December 2025. For creative students, this is a tangible sign that the school is investing time in stagecraft and ensemble work, not just end of term entertainment.
Longer standing enrichment programmes also feature in school communications. A newsletter describes the Duke of Edinburgh Award being delivered at the school, with students working towards the Bronze award. The Duke of Edinburgh structure, with its volunteering, physical, skills, and expedition elements, is particularly useful in an 11 to 16 school because it gives students a credible achievement story beyond GCSE grades, and it can support attendance and motivation for students who respond best to practical goals.
A further example of identity based provision appears in a school publication describing an LGBTQ+ club called the Link, alongside wider inclusion work. For some families, that is an important indicator of whether a child is likely to feel accepted and supported.
The important caveat is currency. The school’s own clubs page indicates it is under development, so families should ask for the current term’s timetable of clubs and intervention sessions, and for clarity on which opportunities run weekly versus seasonally.
The published school day starts with line up at 08:30, followed by tutor time and guided reading or guided preparation, and then six periods through to 15:00. Year 11 students have an additional period on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, extending to 15:50 on those days.
Because timings can change year to year, particularly during school improvement programmes, parents should confirm any variation for their child’s year group, and clarify the expectations around after school intervention, revision sessions, and late buses if relevant.
Published outcomes remain a weakness. The FindMySchool GCSE ranking places the school below England average on this measure, with a Progress 8 score of -0.78. Families should be realistic about current headline performance, and focus on whether the improvement work is consistent and sustained.
Attendance is a major lever. The inspection identifies that high rates of absence continue to limit outcomes for many pupils. If your child has struggled with attendance, ask what the early intervention offer looks like and how school, family, and external services coordinate.
No sixth form. Students move on at 16, so post 16 planning needs to begin early. Ask how the school supports choices across sixth form, further education, and apprenticeships, and what personal guidance is available.
Extracurricular information is not always centralised. The clubs page indicates it is under development, so you may need to ask directly for the current programme and for how opportunities are allocated if places are limited.
This is a local 11 to 16 school with clear signs of improvement in climate, routines, and pupil confidence, alongside the reality that published academic outcomes have not yet caught up. The most recent inspection profile, with three Good judgements alongside Requires Improvement for quality of education, supports the view of a school that has stabilised and is working to strengthen teaching consistency and impact.
Who it suits: families who want a community secondary option in Cinderford, who value structured routines, a serious approach to reading, and visible pastoral rebuilding, and who are prepared to engage actively with attendance expectations and academic support. The main question to resolve at an open event is whether the improvements are experienced consistently across subjects and year groups.
The most recent inspection judged the school Requires Improvement overall, with Good judgements for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. Safeguarding arrangements were confirmed as effective. The school is showing improvement momentum, but published GCSE outcomes remain below England average on the FindMySchool ranking measure, so families should focus on consistency of teaching and attendance support when assessing fit.
The overall outcome from the inspection on 20 February 2024 was Requires Improvement. The same inspection reported Requires Improvement for quality of education, and Good for behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management.
Applications for September 2026 entry follow the Gloucestershire secondary admissions timetable. The closing date is midnight on Friday 31 October 2025, with allocation day on Monday 2 March 2026. Families then respond by midnight on Monday 16 March 2026 to accept the place or request waiting list consideration.
No. The school’s age range is 11 to 16, so students transition to post 16 education elsewhere, such as sixth forms or further education routes. The school’s careers and personal development programme is an important part of preparing students for that transition.
The published day begins at 08:30 with line up, followed by tutor time and a guided reading or guided preparation slot, then six teaching periods through to 15:00. Year 11 students have an additional period on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, extending their day to 15:50 on those days.
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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.
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