A large 11 to 18 comprehensive serving Liskeard and surrounding villages, this school combines a calm, routines-led approach with a clear commitment to inclusion. The 2025 inspection evidence points to a strong sense of belonging, positive staff relationships, and high expectations that are increasingly reflected in outcomes.
Leadership has been stable in recent years, with Mr Dan Wendon as Headteacher, taking up the post in September 2022. The school is part of the South East Cornwall Multi Academy Regional Trust (SMART), which shapes governance and school improvement capacity across the local area.
For families weighing options locally, the headline is balance. Students can follow both A-level and vocational routes post 16, while the school’s Area Resource Centre (ARC) supports students with additional needs to access wider school life.
The school’s public-facing language is consistent and specific, focusing on courage, resilience, and kindness as core principles. Those values are not presented as branding alone; they are tied to day-to-day routines and expectations, including rewards that explicitly reference them.
A structured day underpins the atmosphere. Tutor time and assembly begin at 8.45am, followed by four long teaching periods and a mid-day lunch, finishing at 3.15pm. The timetable operates on a two-week cycle, which can take a little getting used to for new Year 7 students, but it supports curriculum breadth while keeping the day predictable.
A strong inclusion narrative runs through the school’s messaging and its formal external evidence. Students in the ARC are described as participating in trips, work experience, and wider school opportunities, with a combination of bespoke and mainstream access depending on need. In practice, this matters because it reduces the risk of support operating as separation. It signals an intention to keep students connected to peers and the wider rhythm of school life, while still meeting Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) requirements through specialist sessions.
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.
Sixth form culture is described in personal terms rather than purely academic terms. Students have a common room with a kitchen area, designated study periods, and a named Study Skills Coordinator (Mrs Fry). There is even a sixth form dog, Minnie, which is an unusually specific and human detail in a post 16 setting. The implication for families is that support and belonging are taken seriously beyond Year 11, not treated as an add-on.
At GCSE, outcomes sit below England average overall based on the available performance indicators, though the school is the top-ranked option locally within its defined area. Ranked 2,993rd in England and 1st in Liskeard for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), the school sits below England average in the national distribution, placing it in the lower band.
The GCSE picture is best read through a combination of achievement and progress measures. The school’s Attainment 8 score is 40.1, and its Progress 8 score is -0.09. A negative Progress 8 score indicates that, on average, students made slightly less progress than similar students nationally from the end of primary school to the end of Key Stage 4.
EBacc entry is an area of development. The March 2025 inspection evidence indicates that the proportion following the English Baccalaureate suite at Key Stage 4 remains below the government’s ambition, though leaders have increased the number of students on this pathway in Years 10 and 11 compared with previous cohorts. The practical implication is that curriculum breadth is trending upward, but families should still ask how choices are guided at options time, particularly for students who may benefit from a broad academic base.
At A-level, outcomes also sit below England average while still ranking first locally. Ranked 1,900th in England and 1st in Liskeard for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), performance falls into the lower band nationally.
In grade terms, 7.2% of entries achieved A*, 9.6% achieved A, and 29.6% achieved A* to B. England averages are 23.6% for A* to A and 47.2% for A* to B. The sixth form therefore appears to serve a broad prior-attainment range rather than a narrow, highly selective cohort, with outcomes reflecting that intake profile.
For parents comparing multiple schools, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool to set these figures alongside nearby alternatives, then interpreting them with the school’s inclusion profile in mind. A setting that supports a wide range of learners can look different on headline measures, yet still offer strong personal progress, subject fit, and post 16 continuity.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
29.6%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Curriculum intent is described in explicit “knowledge-rich” terms, with deliberate sequencing and an emphasis on long-term memory. That language is increasingly common across the sector, so what matters is whether it translates into consistent classroom practice.
The March 2025 inspection evidence is clear on several operational strengths. Teachers are described as having secure subject knowledge, routinely checking understanding, and maintaining calm, purposeful classrooms supported by clear routines. The main improvement point is also specific: assessment information is not always used effectively to plan precise next steps, which can leave some gaps unaddressed. For families, this is a helpful question to take into a visit, especially for students who need highly responsive teaching to stay confident.
Reading is positioned as a whole-school priority. Students who arrive with weaker reading are supported through phonics, while tutor reading introduces diverse texts and vocabulary, with subject-specific terminology reinforced across the curriculum. This combination suggests a structured literacy strategy rather than relying on departments to solve the issue independently.
At sixth form, the offer includes both A-level and vocational courses. The school also frames work experience as a core part of sixth form identity, with Year 12 completing a work experience week and guidance linked to specific pathways such as medicine, veterinary science, and teaching where relevant experience is essential.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The school does not publish a single, quantified “Russell Group” or “Oxbridge” headline across its website pages that were reviewed for this report. As a result, the most reliable numerical picture comes from the available results.
Oxbridge progression exists but is small in scale. In the measurement period, two students applied to Cambridge, one received an offer, and one accepted a place. That profile suggests occasional high-end destinations, but not a specialist pipeline. It is more consistent with a comprehensive sixth form where a small number of students pursue Oxbridge each year with tailored support.
Destinations data for the 2023/24 leavers cohort (cohort size 65) indicates 48% progressed to university, 3% started apprenticeships, and 32% entered employment. This points to a mixed destination profile rather than a single dominant route. The implication for families is that the sixth form is likely to suit students who want choice and guidance without a narrow “one route fits all” culture.
A practical detail that supports destination readiness is the school’s approach to careers education. The careers policy explicitly references the full range of pathways, alongside work experience in Year 10 and Year 12, and careers interviews for Year 11, Year 12, and Year 13.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 50%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
—
Offers
This is a state-funded school with no tuition fees. Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated through Cornwall Council rather than directly with the school. For September 2026 entry to secondary school (Year 7), the council deadline is 31 October 2025, with offers released on 2 March 2026.
Catchment is best understood through Cornwall’s designated area system rather than informal assumptions about proximity. Some schools prioritise designated area in oversubscription criteria, and families should check the relevant admissions arrangements before relying on “nearest school” logic. If you are using distance as part of your decision-making, the FindMySchool Map Search remains the most practical way to check your likely position against historic patterns, but it should be paired with the current published admissions rules from Cornwall Council and the school’s trust.
Sixth form entry is handled directly by the school, and the timeline is clearly described. Interviews typically take place in January and February, with offers usually issued in March and April, and formal enrolment taking place on results day and the day after. The sixth form welcomes external applicants, which is important in a local context where some students may look to change environment at 16 while staying within Liskeard for travel and community reasons.
Open events follow a predictable rhythm. The school has promoted an open evening in late September, supported by open morning tours in the following weeks, which is a common pattern for Year 7 recruitment. Families considering 2026 entry should treat exact dates as variable year to year and confirm the current schedule via the school’s published calendar and admissions pages.
Applications
272
Total received
Places Offered
197
Subscription Rate
1.4x
Apps per place
Pastoral strength is framed for belonging and relationships. The March 2025 inspection evidence states that pupils feel safe, benefit from positive relationships with staff, and experience calm, purposeful routines across lessons and social times. These are high-value indicators because they shape learning for all students, including those who are not naturally confident in school settings.
Behaviour expectations appear to be explicit and well understood. Derogatory or discriminatory language is described as not tolerated, and the wider culture is presented as disruption-free. The school’s PSHE programme also covers protected characteristics, healthy relationships, and community safety, with leaders responding to student feedback through additional workshops, including age-appropriate finance lessons delivered through an external banking link.
Attendance is the clearest wellbeing-adjacent concern raised in the most recent inspection evidence. Strategies are described as having a positive impact on punctuality, but persistent absence remains significant for some students, creating a learning gap that can be difficult to close. For families, the key question is what early intervention looks like, and how home and school coordinate where anxiety, transport, or wider family pressures are contributing factors.
SEND support has both mainstream and specialist strands. The ARC is described as serving up to 36 pupils in Years 7 to 11, with primary needs including autism spectrum disorder and social, emotional and mental health needs. Beyond formal provision, the school also runs lower-sensory social options such as Games Club, aimed at students with autism, anxiety, and sensory needs who benefit from calmer spaces at breaktimes.
The extracurricular programme is unusually easy to evidence because the school names activities and gives them their own pages rather than keeping provision vague.
For creative students, there is a defined pathway through both drama and writing. Liskeard Drama Club is a formal part of the extracurricular structure, and the Liskeard Creative Writing Club, also known as Scribble Squad, has produced newsletters, entered competitions, and run internal events such as World Book Day competitions. The implication is not simply that “clubs exist”, but that students have routes to share work publicly and build confidence through sustained participation.
For students who prefer structured challenge and service, Duke of Edinburgh (Bronze and Silver) is offered, with enrolment and equipment expectations clearly communicated. The school also references National Citizen Service in its extracurricular structure, reinforcing the idea that enrichment includes community engagement, not only sport or performance.
Outdoor learning is anchored by a named Year 7 residential at Porthpean Outdoor Education Centre in St Austell, positioned explicitly as a bonding experience that supports relationships and transition into secondary school. That matters for Year 7 intake, where belonging in the first term is often predictive of longer-term engagement, especially for students moving from small primaries.
There is also evidence of quiet, craft-based provision that suits students who find large-group activities tiring. Stitchcraft and Knittery Club runs after school and is described as calm and inclusive, open to Years 7 to 13 and staff. This kind of offer often has outsized wellbeing value because it gives students a safe social anchor without performance pressure.
Sixth form enrichment has its own flavour. Work experience in Year 12 is formal, and student leadership appears to include internal elections, student-led coffee mornings, and structured roles that contribute to the wider school. For university and apprenticeship applications, these are the kinds of experiences that provide credible evidence of responsibility and initiative.
The school day runs 8.45am to 3.15pm, with tutor time and assembly at the start of the day and four teaching periods. There is also evidence that Year 11 support has, at times, included an extended day to 4.15pm on selected weekdays to strengthen learning in core subjects.
As a secondary school, it does not operate the same before and after-school wraparound care model seen in primaries. Families needing supervision outside the school day typically rely on home arrangements, local clubs, or transport coordination rather than on-site provision.
For travel, the school’s Luxstowe location is within Liskeard, making it accessible for town-based families and those using public transport into the town. For families coming from surrounding villages, transport planning should focus on the practicality of morning arrival for tutor time, and on after-school commitments if clubs, intervention sessions, or sixth form study support are part of the plan.
Attendance remains a key challenge for some students. The most recent external evidence highlights persistent absence as a continuing issue, which can hinder progress through the curriculum. Families should ask how early support works when absence is linked to anxiety, SEND, or transport barriers.
Assessment follow-up is not consistently strong across all subjects. Teaching checks understanding routinely, but next-step planning is not always as effective as it could be, leaving occasional knowledge gaps. This is worth exploring if your child benefits from highly responsive feedback and adaptive teaching.
EBacc pathway uptake is improving, but still below ambition. If you want a strongly academic GCSE route, ask how options are guided, how languages are promoted, and what support is in place for students who may find EBacc subjects demanding but beneficial.
Sixth form outcomes reflect a mixed destination profile. University, apprenticeships, and employment are all significant pathways. That suits many students, but families seeking a highly selective, university-dominant sixth form culture should probe how stretch and aspiration are structured for high prior-attainers.
Liskeard School and Community College is a large, inclusive 11 to 18 comprehensive with a structured day, a clear values framework, and a sixth form that aims to support students as young adults rather than simply exam candidates. External evidence points to calm routines, positive relationships, and a strong sense of belonging, alongside honest improvement priorities around attendance and consistency in assessment follow-up.
Best suited to families who want an all-round local comprehensive with continuity through to Year 13, strong inclusion capacity including an ARC, and a sixth form that supports multiple pathways. The key decision factors are fit with the school’s structured routines, and confidence in the attendance and learning support structures for your child’s specific needs.
The most recent Ofsted inspection took place on 25 and 26 March 2025 and confirmed the school has maintained the Good standard identified at the previous inspection. The report highlights a strong sense of belonging, calm routines, and positive relationships, alongside clear next steps around attendance and consistent use of assessment to plan learning.
No. It is a non-selective, state-funded comprehensive. Entry to Year 7 is coordinated through Cornwall Council rather than through an entrance test.
Applications are made through Cornwall Council. For September 2026 secondary transfer, the published deadline is 31 October 2025 and offers are released on 2 March 2026.
Sixth form applications are made directly to the school. Interviews typically take place in January and February, with offers usually issued in March and April, and enrolment on results day and the following day. External applicants are welcomed.
Alongside mainstream SEND support, the school has an Area Resource Centre for up to 36 pupils in Years 7 to 11, with needs including autism spectrum disorder and social, emotional and mental health needs. The ARC model combines specialist support with access to wider school life, and there are also lower-sensory options such as Games Club at social times.
Get in touch with the school directly
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