The rhythm of King Henry VIII's most celebrated wife reverberates through Kendal's secondary education landscape. The Queen Katherine School, named after Katherine Parr (the last of the Tudor monarch's six wives who famously "survived"), sits at the heart of a thriving education community surrounded by the stunning landscapes of the English Lake District. For families navigating secondary school options in Lancashire, this school presents a compelling picture of academic resilience, genuine inclusion, and impressive progress against all odds. In March 2022, Ofsted awarded the school a Good rating across all areas, delivering an exceptionally positive verdict on a school that had experienced genuine difficulty not long before. The transformation is remarkable. Today, with approximately 1,420 students spread across Years 7-13, the school ranks in the middle tier of England's secondary schools for GCSE outcomes (36th percentile; FindMySchool ranking), but punches well above its weight at sixth form level, placing in the top 25% in England (23rd percentile; FindMySchool ranking). This is a school where progress matters more than starting position, and where students genuinely feel seen.
Just inside the gates on Appleby Road, the first thing you notice is the energy. Students move with purpose. Staff know names. The school occupies a site that has evolved substantially over the past two decades. The academy became home to Sandgate School students (ages 14-19 with additional learning needs) in 2017, integrating what was once a separate special school directly into the main QKS campus. This is not tokenistic inclusion. Sandgate students share facilities, attend some mainstream lessons, and participate fully in school life. Teachers interviewed during inspection noted the positive impact on everyone.
The 'Proud to Belong' motto captures something authentic here. Parents consistently report feeling heard. The school's leadership, now headed by Mr Jon Hayes (who joined in November 2016 and is listed as Executive Headteacher following recent academy trust changes), has articulated a clear vision: education that matters beyond exam results. Exam results do matter, and the school has made extraordinary progress on this front in recent years.
The physical environment includes a dedicated sixth form building with its own classrooms, computer suites, study areas, and a coffee bar. The main school building houses five dedicated science laboratory spaces, engineering facilities, a substantial performing arts theatre, and multiple PE courts. External sporting facilities include tennis courts, football pitches, and other athletic provisions.
The school became an academy in 2011 and joined Cumbria Education Trust in January 2025, becoming the fifth secondary school within the trust. This move reflects growing recognition that collaborative leadership works.
GCSE outcomes place the school in the national typical band, solid and respectable but not elite. The Attainment 8 score of 49.1 sits above the England average of 45.9. A critical measure is Progress 8, which indicates how much progress students make from their KS2 starting points. The school's Progress 8 score of +0.08 reflects above-average progress, particularly meaningful because it demonstrates that the school adds value regardless of pupils' prior attainment.
The school ranks 1,664th in England for GCSE performance (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in the middle 35% of schools. Locally in Kendal, it ranks 2nd, a particularly strong position given the competition from selective grammar schools in the region. Approximately 55% of pupils achieved grade 5 or above in English and mathematics GCSEs in recent cohorts, in line with local and national proportions.
English Baccalaureate (EBacc) take-up stands at 16%, with an average EBacc APS score of 4.28, slightly above the England average of 4.08. This reflects the school's commitment to encouraging broad subject choices in humanities, languages, and sciences, rather than allowing pupils to retreat into easier combinations.
The sixth form is genuinely the jewel. Here, the school's performance transforms dramatically. A-level results in 2024 showed 39% of grades at A* or A (equivalent), compared to the England average of approximately 28%. Performance at A*-B level sits at 60% (compared to the England average of approximately 47%). These are genuinely strong figures.
The school ranks 610th in England for A-level performance (FindMySchool ranking), placing it comfortably in the top 25% of schools (23rd percentile). Locally, it holds the top position for sixth form outcomes in Kendal. The Head of Sixth Form attributes much of this success to the personal approach: 200 sixth form students are known as individuals, not as a cohort. Progress 8 equivalents are not published for sixth form, but the school's own data tracks careful monitoring of value-added at A-level.
Subject-specific strengths are evident from detailed results pages: mathematics performs particularly strongly, with 70% of Further Maths students achieving A*-B; Geography, with 68% at A*-B; and Sociology, with 81% at A*-B. Art, English Language & Literature, and Chemistry all show respectable performance. Physics and Psychology sit lower but with reasonable outcomes across the ability range.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
60.11%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Teachers have strong subject knowledge. The school's 2022 Ofsted inspection noted that staff "present subject matter clearly and deliver content well." The curriculum is ambitious and broad. From Year 9 onwards, pupils select from a wide range of GCSE options including languages (French, Spanish), humanities (Geography, History), sciences taught separately, technology, and creative subjects. The school actively encourages English Baccalaureate combinations, positioning students strongly for competitive university courses.
In the sixth form, pupils choose from 16 A-level subjects and a range of BTEC Level 3 vocational qualifications. The school explicitly caters for three curriculum pathways: A-level only, A-level combined with BTEC, and BTEC exclusively. This flexibility is genuinely important for pupils with different strengths and aspirations. Some students arriving with strong GCSE results in practical subjects find the BTEC pathway better suited to their learning style and career goals. Others arrive from other schools seeking a sixth form that will challenge them academically. The school accommodates both.
Homework is managed carefully. In Year 7, only English, Mathematics, and Science homework is set to support transition. From October onwards, all subjects set homework "if meaningful and manageable." This signals a mature approach: homework is a tool, not an end in itself.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
From the 2023-24 cohort (77 leavers reported), the destinations were: 44% to university, 8% to further education, 9% to apprenticeships, and 27% to employment. The remainder (approximately 12%) fall into other categories. These figures reflect a school serving a mixed-attainment cohort and a community with diverse post-16 pathways. Many pupils progress to the school's own sixth form, but a significant minority choose vocational pathways, apprenticeships, or move to local further education colleges.
The school's role as a "strategic facility for students with physical and medical needs" means that some pupils have genuine additional barriers to overcome. The fact that pupils with complex needs still progress to meaningful destinations (not always university, but to purposeful next steps) speaks to the school's commitment to holistic development.
This is where the school truly shines. Sixth form leavers secure places at Russell Group universities with regularity. In the 2023-24 cohort, students progressed to universities including Durham, Edinburgh, Manchester, York, Bath, Newcastle, and Liverpool. Specific examples include:
Beyond universities, higher apprenticeships represent a significant and celebrated pathway. Recent sixth form leavers have secured apprenticeships in Nuclear Engineering (BAE Systems), Accountancy, and Pharmaceutical Training (Boots). The school reports these with equal pride to Oxbridge acceptances, recognising that not all high-achieving students pursue university, and that apprenticeships with leading employers offer equally prestigious futures.
The school received 5 Oxbridge applications in the measurement period, resulting in 1 Cambridge offer and 1 acceptance (1 candidate). While numerically modest, this reflects the school's honest non-selective intake: Oxbridge is not the primary focus, but nor is the pathway closed. Students of genuine ability and ambition have accessed it.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 20%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
—
Offers
The school employs approximately 51 full-time teachers and 8 teaching assistants. The student-to-teacher ratio is 18:1, within typical ranges but not exceptionally low. What distinguishes the school is not class size but teacher knowledge and care. Parents specifically mention that staff demonstrate genuine investment in individual pupils' progress.
Mr Jon Hayes leads the school as Headteacher (since 2016) and more recently as Executive Headteacher within Cumbria Education Trust. His leadership has been transformational. The school's journey from an Inadequate rating in December 2016, through Requires Improvement in May 2018, to Good in March 2022 represents a remarkable turnaround. Staff have stabilised. The student population has grown. Most importantly, outcomes have improved across every measure.
Mrs Ruth Nelson heads the Sixth Form and is credited by staff and students with personalising the experience in a way that attracts external students to apply.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
The school offers over 30 clubs and regular activities running lunchtime, after school, and at weekends. Rather than list all offerings generically, specific named examples illustrate the breadth:
A dedicated Performing Arts facility supports multiple choirs, a school orchestra that performs locally, and regular school plays including an annual musical production. Students participate in the Westmorland Youth Orchestra and Cumbria Youth Orchestra independently. The Amabile choir (an external vocal group) draws QKS members. In 2023, the school recorded high attainment in Music BTEC (Distinction) and continuing popularity of A-level Art and Design Technology, suggesting strong creative confidence.
The DofE is central to the school's "whole child curriculum." Since 2017, every Year 9 student has the opportunity to participate. Gold expeditions have taken place along the Caledonian Canal. This is not peripheral; the school reports record-breaking numbers of students completing DofE Awards annually. The emphasis on resilience, teamwork, and personal challenge aligns perfectly with the school's values.
The school has designated PE facilities including multiple courts, a sports hall, and grounds for field sports. Football, hockey (floodlit astroturf pitch available), rugby, tennis, and cross-country are offered. Students progress to county and regional competitions. A-level PE and BTEC Sport are available at sixth form, with strong uptake.
The school achieved Technology College specialist status in 2001 and maintains that focus. Computing, Engineering, and Design & Technology all feature prominently. The school website references "state-of-the-art" facilities for these areas; detailed inspection reports confirm hands-on learning in dedicated spaces. Students can take A-level Computing and Further Mathematics, with particularly strong results in Further Maths (70% A*-B grades in 2023).
Named specific clubs mentioned by students and staff include:
The school explicitly states it caters "for students of all ability," suggesting clubs include both competitive/elite groups and recreational/social options.
Sixth form students engage in voluntary work with local primary schools and charities. Work experience placements are embedded in the sixth form curriculum. This emphasis on service and practical preparation for adult life is genuinely distinctive.
This is a non-selective state secondary school. Admission is through the standard local authority coordinated admission process for Year 7. The school did not provide specific catchment boundary data in publicly available sources; families should contact the Local Authority (Westmorland and Furness) or the school directly for current distance criteria.
Admission data shows that for primary (Year 6) transition, the school received 290 applications for 168 places in the measurement year, representing a subscription ratio of 1.73:1. The school is oversubscribed, which is unsurprising given its recent improvement trajectory and position as a broad community secondary in a town with limited alternatives.
The school serves a community with moderate deprivation: approximately 17% of pupils are eligible for free school meals, slightly above the England average. Approximately 9% have English as an additional language. These figures reflect Kendal's economic profile and the school's role in serving all local families.
Applications
290
Total received
Places Offered
168
Subscription Rate
1.7x
Apps per place
Form tutors and Heads of Year provide structured pastoral oversight. Year Heads (one per year group) ensure consistency. Student Support Mentors and Heads of School add additional capacity. The Designated Safeguarding Lead (Mrs Geraldine Wade, also SENCO) ensures robust protection.
The school has invested in mental health support. A trained counsellor visits weekly. The school holds the Inclusion Quality Mark, certifying commitment to genuinely inclusive practice. SEND pupils are assessed early; the school identifies approximately 45 pupils on the SEN register, with varying levels of support. The integration with Sandgate School means pupils with high and complex needs can access mainstream education alongside specialist support.
Behaviour is described consistently as calm and respectful. The 2022 Ofsted report noted that "pupils behave well; they are polite and respectful." This is not achieved through rigid control but through genuine relationship-building.
The school is a "strategic facility for students with physical and medical needs." Students from across the wider area may access places if they have physical disabilities or medical conditions. Specialist medical provision is on site; staff are trained to support pupils with complex health needs. This integration of special and mainstream education, while resource-intensive, enriches the whole school community.
School day: 8:50am to 3:20pm (main school); Sixth Form may have different timings.
Wraparound care: The school does not explicitly advertise breakfast club or after-school childcare on the main website. Families should contact the school directly to confirm current provision.
Holidays and term dates: Published on the school website and aligned to Cumbria Education Trust schedule.
Transport: Stagecoach operates local bus services; the school is served by public transport. Parking availability on site is limited but parents can drop off on surrounding streets. The school is central to Kendal and accessible by walking from much of the town.
Specialist provision: The school shares a site with Sandgate School (72 places for pupils with additional learning needs), with integrated facilities including a purpose-built block (completed 2017 as part of a £3m expansion).
Oversubscribed entry: With 290 applications for 168 places, securing entry in Year 7 is competitive, particularly if living outside the immediate catchment. Families should clarify distance priorities with the Local Authority well in advance.
Sixth form entry: External candidates can apply, but demand is high. The school's quality at post-16 has raised its profile significantly. Minimum GCSE requirements would typically be grade 5 or above in subjects chosen, but confirmation should come from the school directly.
Transition from primary school: The school places heavy emphasis on transition support, including visits from SENCO staff to primary feeder schools and early identification of additional needs. This is excellent practice, but families should ensure concerns are flagged early to benefit from this process.
Facilities and environment: The school operates across a substantial site shared with Sandgate School and serves 1,400+ students. The facilities are adequate but not luxurious. The outdoor environment score in one external review noted "below average" performance on environmental factors (air pollution and traffic accidents), reflecting the school's location near a main road. This is not the school's failing; it's the reality of a central Kendal location.
GCSE performance variation: While sixth form outcomes are genuinely strong, GCSE performance is solidly average in England. Pupils with lower prior attainment may find progress challenging without additional support. The school has SEN provision but is not a specialist school for learning difficulties.
This is a genuinely successful comprehensive secondary school serving a real community. It is not selective, does not cream the brightest pupils, and does not serve a particularly affluent intake. What it does accomplish is to take pupils from their Year 7 starting points and progress them meaningfully over five years, leading a significant minority to genuine academic achievement at GCSE and a majority of sixth formers to strong university or apprenticeship outcomes.
The school's transformation from Inadequate to Good status in six years is itself evidence. Staff have stabilised, leadership is confident and visionary, and pupils genuinely believe in their potential. The emphasis on "Proud to Belong" is not marketing; it shapes real decisions about how students are treated and how they treat each other.
Best suited to families within the Kendal catchment who want a genuinely inclusive, ambitious comprehensive school with proven progress and warm human relationships at its core. The sixth form, in particular, is a destination worth considering even if students are not already on roll. Entry to Year 7 is the primary challenge; once admitted, students benefit from strong pastoral care, good teaching, and a school that knows them as individuals.
Yes. Ofsted rated the school Good in March 2022 across all areas, including Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, Leadership and Management, and Sixth Form Provision. The school has improved dramatically from a previous Inadequate rating. GCSE results are solid and in line with national averages. A-level results place the school in the top 25% of schools in England (610th out of 2,649 schools; FindMySchool ranking), with 39% of grades at A* or A in recent cohorts.
The sixth form is exceptionally strong, with regular progression to Russell Group universities and competitive apprenticeships. The school's progress measures are genuinely above average, meaning pupils make more progress than expected from their starting points. Leadership has transformed the school's culture. Inclusion is real: the integration with Sandgate School enriches the whole community. Teachers have strong subject knowledge and genuine relationships with pupils. The emphasis on the whole child, Duke of Edinburgh, work experience, voluntary work, creative opportunities, goes beyond exam results.
The sixth form sits in a dedicated building with approximately 200 students. Results are strong: 39% of grades at A* or A (2024), and the school ranks 610th for A-level performance (top 25% in England). The school offers 16 A-level subjects and BTEC qualifications, with flexibility for students pursuing different pathways. External applicants are welcome but places are competitive. The Head of Sixth Form, Ruth Nelson, is credited with a highly personalised approach that attracts students from other schools.
The school is oversubscribed for Year 7 entry (1.73 applications per place). Entry is through the standard Local Authority coordinated process; the school is non-selective. Distance from the school is the primary criterion after looked-after children and siblings. Families should clarify current distance priorities with Westmorland and Furness Council. Sixth form entry is also competitive but open to external candidates; minimum GCSE requirements would typically be grade 5 or above in chosen subjects.
The school has five dedicated science laboratory spaces, dedicated engineering facilities, a performing arts theatre, multiple PE courts and sports hall, floodlit astroturf pitch for hockey, and tennis courts. The sixth form building includes dedicated classrooms, computer suites, private study areas, and a coffee bar. The site is shared with Sandgate School (specialist provision) and includes integrated facilities built as part of a 2017 expansion. Facilities are adequate but not luxurious.
Behaviour is calm and respectful, noted consistently by inspectors and parents. The school holds the Inclusion Quality Mark and genuinely integrates pupils with special educational needs alongside mainstream peers. The SENCO works closely with families. The school is a strategic facility for students with physical and medical needs. Approximately 45 pupils are on the SEN register. Bullying is dealt with effectively according to Ofsted; the school has trained Anti-Bullying Ambassadors.
Yes. Since 2017, every Year 9 student has the opportunity to participate. The school reports record-breaking numbers completing DofE Awards at Bronze, Silver, and Gold levels. Gold expeditions have taken place (e.g., Caledonian Canal). The award is fully integrated into the "whole child curriculum."
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