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SchoolsHinckleyHastings High School|Best Secondary Schools in Hinckley
State School
Hastings High School
St Catherine's Close, Burbage, Hinckley, LE10 2QE·Leicestershire·URN: 140103A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary
Mixed
Ages 11-16
Religious Character: None
GCSE Ranking
1,715
Academic
1,425
Overall
1
Local
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.

Excellent
8.3/10
Application Demand
100%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewGCSEOfstedApplication 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Hastings High School Review 2026: A structured, values-led secondary with strong progress

At a Glance

CARES is more than a neat acronym here. Community, Ambition, Responsibility, Enrichment and Self-development are presented as the organising principles for daily routines and expectations, and the strongest evidence of impact is the calm working culture described in formal external review, alongside consistently positive messaging about achievement across the school community.

This is an 11 to 16 secondary in Burbage, serving local families across Hinckley and the surrounding area, and it has expanded into a full secondary model since its earlier middle school structure. The school states it opened in 1956, which places it firmly in the post-war era of community schooling and helps explain the practical, local character of its intake and day-to-day priorities.

For parents comparing options in the area, this is best understood as a strong, oversubscribed local comprehensive that aims to combine consistent classroom routines with broad personal development, rather than an exam-only culture.

Character & Atmosphere

The dominant impression from published evidence is purposeful and orderly, with pupils described as learning well in most lessons, moving around the site calmly, and taking pride in their work. That matters for families who prioritise a settled atmosphere over novelty, particularly in the tricky transition years of Year 7 and Year 8.

The school’s values language is embedded in a way that feels operational rather than decorative. CARES is positioned as central to school life, and the same evidence points to high expectations, low-level disruption being well controlled, and bullying being uncommon with swift follow-up when issues arise. For a typical family, the implication is simple: classrooms are likely to feel like working spaces, and behaviour systems are designed to reward compliance and effort.

There is also a clear “Hastings Family” framing in official reporting, which often signals a smaller-school mindset even when numbers are substantial. In practice, this usually shows up as consistent routines, a familiar set of adult faces for pupils, and a strong emphasis on belonging. It will suit pupils who like clear boundaries and predictable processes, and it can be a stabilising fit for those who are anxious about the move from primary.

The practical day structure supports that sense of routine. The school publishes an early on-site opening, a formal morning registration time, and a 15:00 finish, which is useful for working families coordinating transport and after-school commitments.

Results / Academic Performance

On the FindMySchool GCSE academic outcomes ranking, Hastings High School is ranked 1,715th in England, while the local secondary ranking places it 1st in Hinckley. That is broadly consistent with a well-run comprehensive that performs strongly within its local context.

Looking at the current GCSE performance indicators, the Attainment 8 score is 48.5 and the Progress 8 score is +0.40. Attainment 8 summarises achievement across eight GCSE subjects, while Progress 8 estimates progress from pupils' starting points at primary school. A positive Progress 8 figure indicates pupils, on average, make more progress than similar pupils nationally.

EBacc outcomes also feature with an EBacc average point score of 4.2 and 12.5% achieving grades 5 or above across EBacc subjects. The practical implication is that pupils are making strong overall progress, while EBacc strength will vary by pupil pathway and subject choices, which is typical in mixed-intake comprehensives that balance academic routes with vocational and creative options.

Parents who want to benchmark this school against nearby alternatives should use the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool to view these measures side-by-side, particularly Progress 8 and the local ranking position, which often explains why a school is popular even when national ranking bands look “middle of the pack”.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

The most useful insight into classroom practice is the emphasis on consistent routines and retrieval. The published inspection evidence describes teachers with strong subject knowledge, frequent checking of prior learning, and regular quizzing, alongside a named “First 5 minutes” approach at the start of lessons to confirm key knowledge before moving on. In a secondary setting, that combination usually benefits pupils who need structure and who improve when teachers are explicit about what must be remembered and practised.

Leaders also place visible weight on oracy and vocabulary. This is a practical strategy rather than a slogan, because it supports learning across subjects, particularly for pupils who may be capable but lack the language to explain, justify, and write convincingly. Linked to this, the school’s reading support is described as targeted, with staff training to provide specific help for pupils who need it, which matters in an 11 to 16 school where literacy gaps can otherwise widen rapidly by Year 9.

In key stage 4, the curriculum intent is described as broad, with encouragement to maintain humanities and languages alongside other choices. That framing typically signals a school trying to avoid premature narrowing at GCSE, while still recognising that not every pupil thrives on the same balance of subjects. Families should read the Year 9 options guidance carefully and consider how the school’s priorities align with their child’s strengths and future plans.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:8.3/10Excellent

Quality of Education

Good

Behaviour & Attitudes

Outstanding

Personal Development

Outstanding

Leadership & Management

Good

FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.

Where Pupils Go Next

Because the school is 11 to 16, the central “next step” is post-16 transition into sixth form, college, apprenticeships, or training routes. The published evidence is clear that careers guidance is treated as a structured programme rather than a one-off event, including detailed information to support subject choices in Year 9 and a careers curriculum designed to prepare pupils for the next phase.

For families, the key implication is that planning starts early. Year 9 options are presented as an informed decision rather than an administrative tick-box, and the school signposts post-16 routes, including A-levels, apprenticeships, and technical pathways. A pragmatic approach here is to treat Year 9 as the point to begin conversations about whether a pupil is likely to prefer a school sixth form, a sixth form college, or a vocational route, and to use work experience opportunities and employer engagement to pressure-test those preferences while there is still time to adjust.

Beyond qualifications, personal development opportunities are used as proof of employability skills. The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award offer is set out explicitly, including expedition training and local assessed activity, and the school positions this as a way for pupils to evidence skills such as teamwork, problem solving, and resilience. For pupils who are less defined by grades and more by practical competence, that kind of structured enrichment can be a meaningful differentiator in post-16 applications and early job interviews.

Admissions

Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated through the local authority route. The school directs families to apply via the local authority system. For September 2027 entry, Leicestershire's secondary transfer closing date is 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 1 March 2027 or the next working day.

The school also signposts that its admissions policy sets out the catchment area and oversubscription criteria. While the policy documents linked from the school site were not accessible without sign-in at the time of review, the practical advice remains consistent: families should check catchment eligibility early, confirm how distance and priorities are handled, and avoid relying on a single preference if the school is routinely oversubscribed.

Demand can vary from year to year, so families should treat the oversubscription criteria, catchment position, and realistic contingency planning as more important than older application counts.

Parents who want to ground this in reality should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check their distance to the school gates and then compare that against the current oversubscription rules, remembering that application patterns vary from year to year.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
Not published by Leicestershire

Applications

394

Total received

Places Offered

189

Subscription Rate

2.1x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Pastoral systems are presented as proactive and tightly linked to behaviour routines. The published inspection evidence points to calm conduct and an orderly environment, which usually reflects clear expectations, consistent follow-up, and staff alignment on what “good behaviour” looks like in corridors and classrooms. That consistency tends to reduce anxiety for many pupils, especially those who struggle when boundaries shift from teacher to teacher.

Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities is described as integrated into classroom practice, with teachers adapting resources and leaders developing routines to strengthen how pupils with SEND are supported, including consideration of how teaching assistants can add more learning value in lessons. The implication for parents is that SEND support is present and evolving, and the best outcomes will come when families share timely information and work with the SENCO team to shape a clear support plan.

Safeguarding arrangements are described as effective, with strong systems for recording and tracking concerns and regular staff training aligned to the local safeguarding context. For families, that is the baseline expectation, but it is also a practical reassurance that the school’s processes are documented and actively maintained.

Beyond the Classroom

The extracurricular programme is unusually transparent because it is published as a structured weekly timetable, with clubs and support sessions running across lunchtimes and after school. This gives parents a clearer sense of what enrichment looks like in practice: not a generic “lots of clubs”, but a calendar of named activities.

A standout example is the Journalism Club, which links directly to the production of the Hastings Herald. The evidence here matters because publishing work to a deadline is a real-world skill: pupils practise writing for an audience, editing, and working collaboratively, which supports literacy across subjects and builds confidence in public communication.

The programme also signals inclusive breadth. Pride Club appears as a regular lunchtime offer, alongside Book Club, Lego Club, dance provision, and sport options such as mixed hockey and table tennis. There are also targeted academic and coursework sessions, including Year 7 Cooking Club, subject-specific catch-up and GCSE revision sessions, and Year 11 “Golden Ticket” support slots, which suggests the school tries to use enrichment time both for interest-based activities and for structured academic help.

Homework support is formalised through the Homework Hangout Club, running daily at lunchtime and after school until 16:00, with staffed ICT rooms and equipment access. The practical implication is significant: pupils who lack a quiet workspace at home, or who need support organising tasks, have a predictable place to complete work, which can reduce family friction and improve homework completion habits.

Finally, the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award offer gives a clear route for pupils to build a track record beyond school, including volunteering, physical activity, skills development, and expedition training within Leicestershire. For pupils who grow through challenge and structured responsibility, this is a meaningful extension of the CARES values into action.

Practical Information

The school publishes a day structure with a site opening time of 08:10, morning registration at 08:30, and a 15:00 finish, alongside a stated 32.5 hours provided in a typical week.

For travel, most families will treat this as a local-journey school for Burbage and Hinckley. Practical planning should include realistic drop-off and pick-up timing, and checking bus options and walking routes based on your exact address, as these factors affect daily quality of life as much as headline school performance.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 800
  • Number of pupils: 859

Things to Consider

  • Competition for places. Families outside the priority criteria should check the current admissions arrangements carefully. Securing a place may be challenging without a clear catchment advantage, and older application counts should not be treated as a guarantee.

  • Curriculum consistency. Inspectors highlighted that, in a small number of subjects, curriculum implementation was not yet consistently embedded, which could affect pupils’ precision of recall in those areas.

  • No sixth form on site. Pupils move on at 16, so families should be ready to engage early with post-16 planning, including open events at local colleges and sixth forms, and a clear sense of which pathway suits the pupil best.

  • Extended-day childcare is not clearly published. The school day ends at 15:00, and while structured homework support exists, families needing formal childcare beyond that should confirm arrangements early.

The Verdict

Hastings High School comes across as a disciplined, community-minded comprehensive with a clear emphasis on routines, literacy, and personal development, supported by a well-articulated enrichment timetable and a strong progress story. The best fit is for families who want a calm working atmosphere, structured homework support, and a wide set of opportunities that combine clubs with academic help. The main challenge is entry in an oversubscribed context, followed by thoughtful planning for post-16 options once a place is secured.

FAQs

The most recent published inspection outcome confirms the school continues to be Good, with pupils described as learning well in most lessons and behaviour described as calm and orderly. Progress measures in the available data also indicate pupils, on average, make above-average progress from their starting points.

Applications are made through the local authority coordinated admissions system. For September 2027 entry in Leicestershire, applications close on 31 October 2026, with offers released on 1 March 2027 or the next working day.

Yes, available demand indicators show oversubscription, with more applications than offers. Families should read the admissions arrangements carefully and include realistic alternative preferences when applying.

The school publishes an opening time of 08:10, registration at 08:30, and a 15:00 finish. Families needing provision beyond 15:00 should ask the school directly what supervised study or after-school options are currently available.

The school publishes a structured extracurricular timetable including activities such as Journalism Club, Pride Club, Book Club, Lego Club, sport sessions, and targeted academic support including homework and revision sessions.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

St Catherine's Close, Burbage, Hinckley, LE10 2QE
01455239414
www.hastings.leics.sch.uk
Stephen Shipman and Claire Bradley
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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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