A school that puts clarity, routines and relationships at the centre of daily life. The values, Responsibility, Resilience, Compassion and Aspiration, are explicitly stated and used as reference points for expectations and leadership roles.
The latest Ofsted inspection, published on 23 January 2025 after visits on 10 and 11 December 2024, concluded that the school had taken effective action to maintain standards.
This is an 11 to 16 state secondary with no sixth form, serving the Thurrock area and operating as part of the Gateway Learning Community.
The school’s identity is strongly values-led, with the strapline “All Different: All Equal” and “Together, Improving Upon Our Best” displayed prominently as part of how it presents itself to families.
Day-to-day culture is framed around high expectations and calm order. External review evidence describes classrooms as purposeful, with students described as orderly and polite throughout the day. Student leadership is also positioned as normal rather than exceptional, with examples including a regular video news bulletin and a range of pupil roles aligned to the school’s values.
Leadership continuity is a stabilising factor here. The headteacher is Mrs Grainne McLaughlin, as listed on Get Information About Schools and in the 2024 inspection report, and she describes herself as being in her eleventh year in the role on the school website.
The trust context matters. The school is part of the Gateway Learning Community, and the 2024 inspection report explains that trust leadership also holds responsibility for school oversight, which is relevant for parents assessing governance and accountability.
This review focuses on GCSE performance, since the school serves Years 7 to 11 only.
That position indicates performance below England average overall, within the lower 40% of schools in England on this measure.
In the most recent dataset provided, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 44.6 and Progress 8 is +0.07, which indicates slightly above average progress from starting points, even where overall attainment is more mixed.
The EBacc picture is an area to understand carefully. The percentage achieving grades 5 or above in the EBacc is 3%, and the average EBacc APS is 3.62. The school’s external review evidence also indicates that EBacc entry has been below average historically, while stating that entries have increased.
For families comparing local options, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tool to see how these measures sit alongside nearby schools with similar intakes.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The clearest theme in published evidence is consistency. The most recent inspection report describes a structured curriculum that sets out what students need to know, and it highlights consistent delivery approaches in classrooms, including the repeated explanation and reinforcement of vocabulary.
Where teaching is strongest, staff check learning thoroughly, identify gaps, and correct misconceptions so students build secure foundations. That matters for a mixed-ability comprehensive intake, because the biggest risk is often that gaps widen as content gets more demanding. The inspection evidence also points to students developing confidence with complex calculation in mathematics, which aligns with a “secure foundations first” approach.
Two improvement priorities are also clearly signposted. First, a small proportion of learning activities do not always help students learn the intended content as effectively as they could. Second, teachers do not always help students connect prior and future learning in a way that consistently builds depth. For parents, these are practical questions to explore on an open evening: how teachers plan tasks, how they revisit earlier knowledge, and how they extend understanding once students have grasped the basics.
Support for students with special educational needs and disabilities is described as well-established. The external review evidence states that identification is accurate and that classroom adaptations support strong outcomes, including targeted work for weaker readers to develop fluency and comprehension quickly.
As an 11 to 16 school, the main transition point is post-16. The published evidence places a strong emphasis on careers education and next-step planning, including meaningful contact with providers and employers and the use of former pupils to explain real pathways. Students are described as having strong knowledge of options, including degree apprenticeships, which is a helpful indicator for families prioritising technical and blended routes alongside sixth form.
The most useful way to assess “destinations fit” here is to ask how Year 11 guidance is structured across the year, how students are supported with applications and interviews, and how the school tracks participation after GCSEs. The inspection evidence suggests this is a defined strength.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Good
Year 7 admissions are coordinated through Thurrock’s secondary admissions process, with the local authority setting an on-time deadline of 31 October 2025 for September 2026 entry, and advising families to view offers online on 2 March 2026.
The school’s own admissions policy for September 2026 states a Published Admission Number (PAN) of 210 for Year 7, and it sets out a standard timetable with applications made through the local authority in late October, followed by offers in March.
Oversubscription priorities are detailed and are important reading for families assessing realistic chances. Alongside looked-after and previously looked-after children, priority is given to siblings, then to pupils from the Gateway Primary Free School, then to named primary schools within the Gateway Learning Community, followed by children of staff, then distance measured in a straight line.
Open evening patterns are clear in the Thurrock admissions brochure for the relevant year. For the September 2026 intake, the brochure lists an open evening on Wednesday 10 September 2025, with group tours also scheduled and additional tours offered on Fridays during September and October. For families planning ahead, that indicates a consistent September open event cycle, but it is still sensible to confirm the current year’s dates via the school’s admissions page.
If you are considering a move based on admissions priority, it is sensible to use FindMySchoolMap Search to check your precise home-to-school distance and understand how distance operates as a tie-break where relevant.
Applications
456
Total received
Places Offered
205
Subscription Rate
2.2x
Apps per place
Behaviour and attendance are treated as core levers rather than add-ons. Published evidence describes high standards for conduct and a school approach that identifies and addresses underlying needs that can sit behind misbehaviour, with active work alongside families when students are absent.
Practical supports also matter here, because they reduce barriers to punctuality and learning readiness. The school publishes details of free breakfast provision in the morning, and it positions this as available to all students rather than targeted to a small group.
Ofsted also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The extracurricular offer is presented as an extension of the school day rather than an occasional add-on. The school explicitly encourages participation in extended activities, and the site describes access to breakfast provision and library opening hours that run well beyond the compulsory day.
Clubs and programmes include a mix of academic, creative and sport options. Published club timetables show examples such as F1 in Schools, Debate Club, UKMT Maths Challenge, and Chemistry Mastermind, alongside creative options including Bloco Ensemble, Creative Writing Club, and Art, Craft and Design Club.
Sports and leadership opportunities appear to be a meaningful strand. The school publishes specific basketball development activity under its Greenhouse Basketball programme, and the wider trust has promoted cadet taster activity for students considering Combined Cadet Force participation.
For parents, the key question is participation. Ask how many clubs typically run each term, how students sign up, and how the school supports attendance where transport or caring responsibilities are constraints.
The school publishes a start time of 8:15am, with a staggered finish of 2:45pm for Years 7 and 8 and 2:50pm for Years 9 to 11.
The school states that students are entitled to free breakfast provision from 7:30am (with breakfast club information also published as 7:15am to 8:15am), and it also states the library is open 7:00am to 5:00pm on weekdays.
The school sits within the Thurrock secondary network, and admissions materials emphasise distance measurement from the main gate to the home front door using a digital mapping system for oversubscription tie-breaks. For day-to-day logistics, families should check walking routes and bus options from their specific neighbourhood, as practical journey time often matters more than straight-line distance.
A results profile that is mixed rather than headline-leading. The school’s GCSE ranking sits in the lower 40% of schools in England on the provided measure, so families strongly prioritising top-end attainment should compare carefully against local alternatives and ask about subject-level variation.
EBacc entry and outcomes require attention. Published evidence notes that EBacc entry has been below average, even with recent increases. If your child is likely to pursue an academic pathway that values EBacc breadth, ask how the school is growing participation and how it supports languages and humanities progression.
No sixth form on site. Post-16 transition planning is therefore central. Families should ask early about the timeline for Year 11 guidance, provider engagement and support for applications, especially for competitive sixth forms or apprenticeships.
A strong routines-and-expectations culture. Behaviour is described as highly ordered and expectations are explicit. Many students thrive with that clarity; a minority may prefer a looser style and should test fit through a visit and student Q&A.
A values-driven comprehensive with a clear behaviour culture, structured teaching routines and practical support that lowers barriers to readiness for learning. Academic outcomes, on the provided measures, are not among the strongest in England, but progress indicators and external review evidence suggest a school that adds value through consistency and strong expectations.
Best suited to families in Thurrock who want an ordered, supportive 11 to 16 school with clear routines, strong conduct and a serious approach to attendance and careers planning, and who are prepared to evaluate subject-by-subject performance rather than relying on headline results alone.
The most recent Ofsted inspection, published in January 2025, concluded that the school had taken effective action to maintain standards, and safeguarding was confirmed as effective. The school also sets out a clear values framework and behaviour culture, which many families find reassuring.
In the provided dataset, Attainment 8 is 44.6 and Progress 8 is +0.07. The school is ranked 2,786th in England and 4th in Grays for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data). EBacc outcomes are more limited on the same dataset, so it is sensible to ask about subject-level patterns, especially for languages and humanities.
Year 7 admissions for September entry are coordinated through Thurrock’s secondary admissions process. The local authority deadline for September 2026 entry was 31 October 2025, and offers were viewable from 2 March 2026, indicating the usual national schedule.
Yes. Published admissions arrangements give priority after siblings to pupils from the Gateway Primary Free School and then to primary schools within the Gateway Learning Community, before staff children and then distance, where the school is oversubscribed.
The school publishes a start time of 8:15am. Finish times are staggered, with Years 7 and 8 finishing at 2:45pm and Years 9 to 11 at 2:50pm. The school also publishes free breakfast provision and extended access to the library during the week.
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