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.
Carisbrooke College serves students aged 11 to 16 in Newport, with places allocated through Isle of Wight Council’s coordinated process and a published admission number of 120 for Year 7 entry in September 2026.
Leadership has been a clear recent story. Natalie Sheppard has led the school since July 2024, first in an interim capacity, and later as the permanent headteacher, with the school explicitly framing this as a “building strong foundations” period.
The college day runs to a conventional five-period structure with tutor time and assembly, and lessons finishing at 15:15. That timetable matters for families planning transport, after-school commitments, or homework routines.
The most recent graded Ofsted inspection (23 May 2023) judged the predecessor school Requires Improvement overall, with Behaviour and attitudes, Personal development, and Leadership and management all graded Good.
The school’s public messaging leans into a values-led culture, using the CASTLE acronym to describe the standards it wants students to internalise. The language is consistently about aspiration, respect, and creating an orderly learning environment, and it is presented as a shared expectation for staff, students, and families.
A practical indicator of culture is how the school defines the learning day and routines. Tutor time and assembly are built into the timetable, and the day is structured in a predictable way. For many students, that regularity can be a quiet strength, particularly for those who benefit from a clear rhythm and consistent expectations.
External context also matters. The school’s governance and policy approach changed after the transfer into HISP Multi Academy Trust on 01 July 2024, with the school adopting trust model policies where appropriate. For parents, this can influence behaviour systems, staff development days, and operational consistency across the trust.
In the most recent published here, Attainment 8 is 38.8 and Progress 8 is -0.54. EBacc average point score is 3.18, and the percentage achieving grades 5 or above in EBacc is 4.2.
What those figures typically signal for families is that outcomes have been below where leaders want them to be, and progress through Key Stage 4 has been an area requiring attention. The school’s own materials place emphasis on explicit teaching, modelling, scaffolding, and practice, which aligns with what many schools adopt when they are tightening classroom consistency and trying to improve examination readiness.
It is also worth watching how the post-2024 governance changes interact with results over time. Joining a multi-academy trust often brings more standardised curriculum planning, shared professional development, and closer performance tracking. That does not guarantee rapid change, but it can create the conditions for steadier improvement.
A helpful way to understand the academic offer is to look at how departments describe sequencing. In science, for example, the school references an AQA Mastery Model approach at Key Stage 3, designed to secure the foundations needed for GCSE demand later. That points to a curriculum that is trying to build knowledge systematically, rather than relying on ad hoc topic coverage.
The broader teaching narrative is about making challenging material accessible to all students, with deliberate emphasis on talk, modelling, feedback, and independent practice. In practical terms, parents should expect lessons that lean towards clarity and routine, and a focus on closing gaps quickly so students can keep up with GCSE content density in Years 10 and 11.
Key Stage 4 decision-making begins earlier than some families expect. The school’s Year 9 options process is framed as a significant moment, with explicit emphasis on guidance so that subject choices support later pathways. For families, the implication is simple, take the options process seriously, and ask how subjects align with future technical, vocational, or academic routes.
This is an 11 to 16 school, so destinations are shaped by what comes after GCSE. That means this review avoids quoting progression percentages.
What can be said from the school’s own materials is that careers education is treated as a structured programme, including encounters with employers and guidance activities that help students make informed post-16 choices. For families thinking ahead, the key question to ask is how the school supports students to secure places on post-16 courses that fit their prior attainment and interests, whether that is A-level, vocational routes, or apprenticeships.
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.
Year 7 entry for September 2026 is coordinated via Isle of Wight Council, with a published admission number of 120. Applications must be submitted by midnight on 31 October 2025. Offers are issued on 02 March 2026.
If the school is oversubscribed, allocation follows a defined priority order. After children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, the policy prioritises looked-after and previously looked-after children, specific medical need supported by evidence, sibling links (with nearest-school considerations), children of staff in defined circumstances, then other children, with distance used as a tiebreaker within categories. Distance is measured as a straight line using the local authority’s GIS system, and random allocation is used if a tie remains.
Open events are a useful reality-check, particularly for students who are anxious about the move from primary. The school ran a Year 6 open evening on 29 September 2025, with presentations repeated through the evening, tours, and opportunities to meet staff including SEND support. If you are applying for a later cycle, it is reasonable to expect open events to sit in early autumn, but families should confirm exact dates each year.
Parents comparing options can use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand travel times and practical distance, then weigh that against the oversubscription rules and the reality of daily transport on the island.
Applications
387
Total received
Places Offered
113
Subscription Rate
3.4x
Apps per place
The school presents itself as a place that wants calm routines and respectful conduct to be the norm, and it links behaviour expectations to adult consistency. From a parent perspective, the most useful questions are operational, how the school responds to low-level disruption, what escalation looks like, and how it communicates with families when issues repeat.
Support for additional needs is visible in admissions communications and open evening messaging, where SEND support is explicitly positioned as something families can discuss early. For students who need predictable structure, the clearly defined school day and routines can also help reduce anxiety around transitions and expectations.
Carisbrooke’s strongest “named” enrichment signals are in creative and performance activity, particularly music. The school has promoted a set of lunchtime and after-school music clubs including Song Café, School of Rock, Song Jam, and a Key Stage 4 band, with timings that make it accessible to students who cannot stay late every day.
Drama activity is also visible through school communications. A summer showcase described Drama Club performances drawn from well-known productions, alongside music performances and named clubs. For students who gain confidence through performance, these are the kinds of structured, recurring opportunities that help them build skills without needing to be “the natural lead” from day one.
For families who want character-building activities that develop organisation and teamwork, the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is positioned as an established option from age 14. That offers a clear pathway for students who thrive on practical challenge, volunteering, and completing a longer programme rather than a single event.
The teaching day finishes at 15:15, after tutor time and five lessons. Term dates are published clearly, including trust-wide development days when students are not in school.
Transport planning matters on the Isle of Wight. Families should check bus routes and realistic journey times at the hours students actually travel, particularly if a child will join clubs on certain days. Wraparound care is typically a primary-school feature; this secondary school does not present a breakfast or after-school childcare model in its published day-structure, so parents who need supervised early drop-off should ask directly what is available for Year 7.
Inspection position. The most recent graded inspection outcome available is Requires Improvement. Families should read the detail, then ask the school what has changed since, particularly around teaching consistency and outcomes.
Oversubscription rules are specific. The admissions policy uses a defined priority order, and distance measurement is a tiebreaker within categories. This can affect siblings and families who move late in the cycle.
GCSE outcomes have needed work. The published attainment and progress figures indicate that results have been below desired levels. Parents should ask about current intervention, subject support in Year 11, and how progress is tracked across Years 7 to 9 so gaps do not compound.
Change period. Trust transfer and a new headship phase can bring clearer systems, but it can also mean policies and routines are still bedding in. Families who value stability may want to ask what is already standardised and what is still being reviewed.
Carisbrooke College is a straightforward, mainstream 11 to 16 secondary with clear routines, a published admissions framework, and a visible emphasis on rebuilding outcomes through consistent teaching practice. It will suit families who want a structured school day, who value accessible enrichment like music and performance clubs, and who are willing to engage closely with progress and revision as GCSEs approach. The key question is trajectory, whether the school’s leadership and trust support translate into stronger results over the next few cohorts.
Carisbrooke College is in a period of improvement, with the most recent graded inspection outcome available being Requires Improvement (23 May 2023), alongside Good judgements in behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. For many families, the best indicator will be the school’s current trajectory, the quality of teaching in core subjects, and how effectively it supports progress through Key Stage 4.
Applications are made through Isle of Wight Council’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, the published closing date is midnight on 31 October 2025, and offers are issued on 02 March 2026.
After children with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the school, priority includes looked-after and previously looked-after children, specific medical need supported by evidence, sibling links (with nearest-school considerations), children of staff in defined circumstances, then other applicants. Where a tiebreak is needed, straight-line distance measured via the local authority GIS is used, and random allocation can be applied if a tie remains.
The published timetable shows Period 5 ending at 15:15, following tutor time and assembly at the start of the day.
The school has promoted named music clubs including Song Café, School of Rock, Song Jam, a Key Stage 4 band, and a Year 11 coursework club. Drama Club has also featured in school showcase events, and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is presented as a structured opportunity from age 14.
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