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.
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
Lincoln Castle Academy sits at a moment of transition, with a renewed leadership team, a new establishment identity, and a stated ambition to reset expectations quickly. The context matters: the most recent published graded inspection for the predecessor school (July 2022) judged provision to be Inadequate, with particular concerns around curriculum coherence, staffing stability, behaviour consistency, and sixth form experience.
Since then, the academy has moved on structurally and is now part of Delta Academies Trust, with Mr Johnathon Hodgson listed as principal on government records, and his appointment recorded from 1 July 2024. Parents considering the school in 2026 are therefore weighing two things at once: current direction and systems, plus the legacy issues highlighted in the last published inspection evidence.
For Year 7 entry, the practical implication is still that proximity and admissions rules will matter. Families should read the current oversubscription criteria carefully and avoid relying on older application and offer figures when judging how realistic a place may be.
The clearest externally verified picture of day to day culture comes from the July 2022 inspection narrative, which described pupils holding mixed views, alongside a calmer corridor atmosphere and signs of behaviour improving, but with too many removals from lessons and inconsistency in applying the behaviour policy.
Set against that baseline, the academy’s current messaging is about tightened expectations, rebuilding trust, and making enrichment a normal part of the week rather than an occasional extra. The enrichment model is unusually explicit for a state secondary, with an expectation that students in Years 7 to 9 participate weekly through the Involve offer, and clubs running four nights per week without charge.
If you are considering the sixth form, be aware that the last published inspection evidence was particularly critical of the sixth form experience at that time, including course viability changes and weak careers support. The academy’s current sixth form positioning focuses on community and progression, but parents should probe the lived reality: stability of subject offer, supervised study expectations, and how careers guidance is delivered now.
This is a school where you should read the numbers carefully, and in context.
From the current GCSE results, the average Attainment 8 score is 40.8, with 41.7% achieving grades 5 or above in English and maths and 62.1% achieving grades 4 or above. The EBacc average point score is 3.5, and 4.9% achieved grades 5 or above in the EBacc. FindMySchool ranks the school 2,773rd out of 3,895 schools for GCSE academic performance and 3,648th overall.
The academy itself also publishes an additional headline about English and maths passes in its prospectus material. This can be useful context, but it sits alongside the results measures above rather than replacing them.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The key question for Lincoln Castle Academy is whether curriculum sequencing and subject expertise have moved from “early stage rebuilding” to “embedded and consistent”. The July 2022 inspection evidence identified gaps in coherent curriculum planning across subjects, and it also raised concerns about subject knowledge and training.
In current published curriculum information, the academy describes a three year Key Stage 3 (Years 7 to 9) followed by Key Stage 4 (Years 10 and 11), with options at the end of Year 9. For parents, the practical check is simple: ask to see how knowledge builds in core subjects from Year 7 to Year 11, and how the school checks retention. You are looking for clear schemas, consistent lesson routines, and a shared approach to retrieval and assessment across departments, because inconsistency was a known historical weakness.
There is no current Oxbridge or destinations figure to quote here. For highly academic pupils, the better question is how the academy identifies ambitious students early, supports subject choice, and connects them with credible sixth-form, college and university pathways.
For most families, the more relevant destinations conversation will be about GCSE to post-16 routes, including colleges, sixth forms and vocational options locally. Use open evenings and careers events to check how option guidance works, and whether technical routes and apprenticeships are presented with equal credibility.
Quality of Education
Inadequate
Behaviour & Attitudes
Requires Improvement
Personal Development
Requires Improvement
Leadership & Management
Requires Improvement
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Year 7 entry is managed through Lincolnshire's coordinated admissions process, rather than a direct application to the academy. Families should verify the current secondary transfer deadline, offer date and any late-application rules with the council before relying on dates from an older cycle.
The academy’s published admissions policy sets out the usual priority order: Education, Health and Care Plans naming the school first, then looked after and previously looked after children, then siblings, then distance based rules. It also specifies tie break arrangements using random allocation where applications cannot be separated.
If you are applying from outside Lincolnshire, applications go through your home local authority, but the oversubscription criteria still apply.
Parents comparing options should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check realistic distance and travel time, then sanity check that against Lincolnshire’s distance measurement rules stated in the school admissions policy.
Applications
200
Total received
Places Offered
163
Subscription Rate
1.2x
Applications per place
The most important safety marker from the last published inspection evidence is that safeguarding arrangements were found to be effective at that time. Beyond safeguarding, the same evidence base highlighted relationship building and consistency as areas that needed attention, including confidence in reporting bullying to all staff.
The academy now places visible emphasis on student voice through a student leadership programme, which is a useful indicator if it is implemented meaningfully rather than ceremonially. If pastoral support is a priority for your child, ask how concerns are escalated, how attendance support works for persistently absent students, and how lesson removal is handled so learning continues, because “lost learning time” was a specific historic concern.
Lincoln Castle Academy is unusually specific about enrichment expectations, especially for Key Stage 3. The school describes clubs and activities running four nights per week, with an expectation that Years 7 to 9 attend at least one club weekly to meet an enrichment pledge.
The published examples are concrete rather than generic. The prospectus-style material lists activities such as Politics Club, Coding Club, Science Club, Latin, Choir, School of Rock, Secret Cipher Challenge, Engineering STEM Challenge, and Duke of Edinburgh activities. The art department also references daily enrichment for both Key Stage 3 and Key Stage 4, plus trips and visiting artists linked to GCSE coursework.
There are also signs of a focused push on mathematics practice, including recognition connected to the Sparx platform, which may appeal to families who want structured homework routines rather than ad hoc revision.
The academy publishes a detailed day structure including an early gate opening, five teaching periods, and a daily enrichment slot (Involve or Achieve) running through to 3:30pm.
Because this is an 11 to 18 secondary, wraparound care is not typically provided in the same way as a primary breakfast club or after school club. The academy’s site emphasises after academy enrichment, but if you need supervised provision beyond the formal day, you should check directly what is available and for which year groups.
Inspection legacy and rebuilding phase. The most recent published graded inspection evidence for the predecessor school raised serious concerns across curriculum, staffing stability, and sixth form experience. Families should ask what has changed since then, and look for consistency in routines and staffing.
Attainment still needs careful scrutiny. The current figures show an Attainment 8 score of 40.8, an EBacc APS of 3.5 and a GCSE academic ranking of 2,773rd out of 3,895 schools in England. Parents should ask how the school is accelerating catch-up for pupils who arrive behind.
Post-16 pathways need checking separately. The school context here is 11 to 16, so families should look closely at how Year 11 pupils are guided towards local sixth forms, colleges, technical routes and apprenticeships.
Lincoln Castle Academy is a school with clear momentum language, a structured enrichment offer, and leadership change that is recent enough to plausibly signal a new phase. The challenge is that the last published graded inspection evidence was stark, and the attainment measures remain below England averages, even with a slightly positive progress signal.
Who it suits: families who want a local comprehensive with an explicit focus on routines, enrichment participation, and rebuilding academic culture, and who are willing to do due diligence on current staffing stability and sixth form offer before committing.
The most recent published graded inspection evidence for the predecessor school judged it Inadequate (July 2022), while safeguarding was found to be effective. The school has since moved forward structurally and is now under different governance, so parents should weigh current leadership, consistency in teaching, and the day to day experience at open events.
Year 7 applications are made through Lincolnshire's coordinated admissions system rather than directly to the academy. Families should verify the current secondary transfer deadline, offer date and any late-application rules with the council before relying on dates from an older cycle.
In practice, admissions outcomes depend on how the oversubscription criteria apply to your child, particularly siblings and distance rules. Families should use current council guidance rather than older application and offer figures when judging the likelihood of a place.
The academy describes clubs running four nights per week and expects Years 7 to 9 to take part weekly. Published examples include Politics Club, Coding Club, Science Club, Latin, Choir, and STEM themed challenges.
The academy publishes a structured day with gates opening at 7:50am, the first lesson period starting at 8:25am, and a daily enrichment slot running to 3:30pm.
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