A school can be in the middle of a results story and still feel as though it is in a period of change. Deyes High School, in Maghull, is a good example. The 2024 opening of a new, three-storey building has reset the practical day-to-day, with specialist science laboratories, a learning resource centre, an art studio, and a multi-use games area giving staff and students the tools for more consistent routines and stronger teaching.
Leadership is clearly identified. The Head of School is Mrs Victoria Beaney, a title and name also reflected across official records.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (24 September 2024) graded Quality of Education and Leadership and Management as Requires Improvement, with Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, and Sixth Form Provision graded Good.
For families, the headline is straightforward. This is a state school with no tuition fees, strong local demand for Year 7 places, and a sixth form that is actively designed to keep options open across university, apprenticeships, and employment.
Deyes describes itself as a community school serving Maghull and beyond, and its public-facing messaging is consistent, it places a lot of emphasis on ambition and opportunity for all students. That matters because it frames how the school manages mixed needs within a large mainstream setting (capacity 1,426) and how it talks about inclusion, careers, and personal development.
The physical context has changed sharply. In April 2024 the contractor handover marked the practical completion of a 10,000m² build, designed to be net zero carbon in operation, with features such as photovoltaic panels and air source heat pumps referenced in project communications. For students, this kind of rebuild typically shows up in fewer pinch points between lessons, more reliable specialist spaces, and better consistency for practical subjects. The school’s own site highlights the specialist science labs, learning resource centre, art studio, and multi-use games area as core components of the new footprint.
Pastoral structures are also easier to read than at some schools, because staff roles are clearly signposted. The safeguarding structure lists named leads and includes both senior and deputy designated safeguarding roles, which is helpful for parents trying to understand who does what.
For sixth form students, the branding matters. “College@Deyes” is positioned as a distinct stage, with its own enrichment, guidance, and a programme structure that aims to bridge GCSE choices into post-16 pathways.
Deyes is a secondary school with post-16 provision, so the most useful way to read performance is to separate Key Stage 4 (GCSE) from post-16 (A-level). The two phases can feel quite different, even within the same institution.
On the FindMySchool GCSE ranking (based on official outcomes data), Deyes High School is ranked 2,080th in England and 19th in the Liverpool local area. This reflects solid performance, in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile).
Attainment 8 is 45.7. EBacc average point score is 4.03. The percentage achieving grades 5 or above in the EBacc is 13.8%. Progress 8 is -0.63, which indicates pupils make less progress than pupils with similar starting points nationally, and is the key number to discuss with the school if you are weighing whether it is the right academic fit for your child.
A practical implication for families is that outcomes are likely to vary more by subject and by teaching team than at a school with consistently positive progress measures. That does not mean students cannot do well, it means parents should look for clarity on how the school is addressing gaps, how intervention works, and how it supports students whose progress dips in Years 9 to 11.
A-level headline outcomes sit below England averages. A* grades are 4.65% of entries and A grades are 9.3%. A*-B combined is 35.47%. England averages are 23.6% for A*/A and 47.2% for A*-B, so the gap is meaningful.
On the FindMySchool A-level ranking (based on official outcomes data), Deyes is ranked 1,846th in England and 25th in the Liverpool local area, which corresponds to below England average performance overall.
The most constructive way to interpret this is not as a verdict on individual students, but as a prompt to ask about teaching group sizes, subject viability (which subjects run, and at what minimum numbers), and what the sixth form does to raise attainment across the academic and vocational mix.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
35.47%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
At Deyes, the most distinctive teaching signal is how deliberately the school talks about consistent approaches, both in numeracy and in subject planning. The numeracy strategy explicitly describes a whole-school approach to numerical methods across subjects, with an emphasis on consistent pedagogy and collaboration between departments.
Subject pages also point to targeted support, for example within Science, where the school describes using interventions and structured classroom routines to close attainment gaps for disadvantaged students, alongside challenge for higher prior attainers.
The new build matters here. Specialist laboratories and dedicated learning spaces tend to support better practical sequencing and reduce the compromises that happen when departments are sharing unsuitable rooms. Deyes’ own description of the facilities is specific enough to treat this as a real improvement lever rather than a marketing line.
For post-16, “College@Deyes” is explicit that it offers both academic and vocational routes, and it links subject choice to next steps rather than treating A-levels as the only prestige pathway.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Requires Improvement
The most reliable destinations picture here comes from the published 2023/24 leavers destinations data (cohort size 98). 42% progressed to university, 13% to apprenticeships, 32% to employment, and 1% to further education.
This mix is worth taking seriously. It suggests that the sixth form needs to support multiple “routes to success” at once, including UCAS guidance, apprenticeship readiness, and employability skills for students who aim to move straight into work. The school’s sixth form pages align with that, listing work experience, speaker events, academic societies, and specific application support for competitive routes.
For more academically ambitious students, the “High Flyers Programmes” are a clear signal that Deyes is trying to build structured pipelines for higher-tariff routes, including Aspiring Medics, Vets and Dentists, and an Aspiring for Oxbridge programme. (Oxbridge outcome numbers are not available for this school, so it is best to treat this as preparation support rather than evidence of a high-volume Oxbridge pipeline.)
Demand is clear. For the most recent admissions data there were 530 applications for 225 offers, a ratio of 2.36 applications per place offered. Put simply, competition exists and family planning matters.
Deyes follows Sefton’s coordinated admissions process for Year 7 and states a Published Admission Number (PAN) of 240 for September 2026. The on-time application closing date for secondary transfer (Year 7) in the Sefton admissions guide is 31 October 2025. Offers for secondary places are issued on 1 March, or the next working day if it falls on a weekend, which makes Monday 02 March 2026 the national offer day for this cycle.
Because last offered distance is not available here, parents should avoid assuming that living “nearby” is sufficient. The most practical approach is to use a precise distance tool (for example, FindMySchool Map Search) alongside the local authority’s admissions criteria, then sanity-check assumptions at open events.
Sixth form entry is presented as a direct school route rather than a local authority-coordinated one, with the sixth form positioned as open to a range of academic and vocational backgrounds.
The school states that the application window “is now open” and will close in Spring 2026, which is a helpful indicator but not an exact deadline. For families who plan early, the sixth form open afternoon has been advertised as 01 December 2025, which suggests an annual pattern around late autumn or early winter.
Applications
530
Total received
Places Offered
225
Subscription Rate
2.4x
Apps per place
Pastoral support is most credible when it is specific. Deyes publishes named safeguarding roles, including Head of School and designated safeguarding leads, which helps families understand escalation routes and accountability.
Systems also matter. The school promotes its parent and student information system as a way to track homework, behaviour, attendance, and communication. In practice, this kind of system can be a real advantage when it is used consistently, because it reduces the risk that families only learn about patterns when they have already become entrenched.
For older students, the sixth form support offer is framed around UCAS guidance, study support, and future planning, with tutor oversight positioned as the “first line” of help.
Extracurricular is where Deyes becomes more distinctive than the headline inspection grades suggest, because the school names specific clubs and structures rather than relying on generic “lots of activities” language.
A published list of activities includes Art Club, ICT homework club, Computer Club, and Drama Club, plus music opportunities such as orchestra and choirs, alongside instrumental tuition. This matters because it offers different entry points for different kinds of students: a creative route (Drama Club), a structured academic support route (ICT homework club), and a practical tech route (Computer Club).
There is also a clearer employability strand than many schools articulate. Enterprise Club is described as a lunchtime club for Years 7 to 11, run by the Careers department, with activities linked to decision-making, next steps, and community work.
For students who want a formal award structure, Duke of Edinburgh is explicitly offered. At sixth form, the enrichment list adds World Challenge, book club, societies, and an events committee, alongside work experience and higher-ambition academic activities such as university taster days and an Oxbridge conference.
The practical implication for parents is that the school seems to be trying to create multiple “hooks” for engagement, which can be useful at a large secondary where students can sometimes feel anonymous if they do not connect through sport or mainstream leadership routes.
The school day structure is clearly published. Students need to be in form by 08:45, and the day ends at 15:00, with a standard timetable that includes a morning break and a whole-school lunch.
Transport information is also specific. The school notes that bus services 722 and 725 serve Deyes High School, and points families towards timetable information via Merseytravel.
As a state school, there are no tuition fees. Families should still plan for the practical costs that can add up, such as uniform, trips, and any optional instrumental tuition or residential opportunities, which vary by year group and by student choices.
Inspection trajectory and improvement work. The 2024 graded areas include Requires Improvement for Quality of Education and for Leadership and Management, while behaviour, personal development, and sixth form provision were graded Good. Families should ask what has changed since September 2024, and how leaders are measuring impact.
Progress 8 is a real flag. A Progress 8 score of -0.63 suggests weaker progress than comparable pupils nationally. For some students, the right support and the right subject fit will matter more than headline averages.
A-level outcomes lag England averages. A*-B (35.47%) sits below the England benchmark (47.2%). If sixth form is central to your choice, ask about subject-by-subject performance, group sizes, and support structures.
Competition for Year 7 places. With 2.36 applications per offer admission is not automatic for all local families. Keep an eye on deadlines and be realistic about contingencies.
Deyes High School is a large, oversubscribed Sefton secondary that is clearly investing in the fundamentals, buildings, systems, and structured enrichment. The new facilities and the visibility of clubs and sixth form programmes point to a school trying to tighten consistency and improve outcomes. It suits families who want a local, mixed comprehensive with a defined sixth form pathway and plenty of ways for students to get involved beyond lessons. The key decision factor is whether the school’s current improvement trajectory, particularly around progress and academic outcomes, aligns with your child’s needs and learning style.
It has clear strengths, including Good gradings for behaviour, personal development, and sixth form provision, and it is also in a phase where improvement is a priority because Quality of Education and Leadership and Management were graded Requires Improvement in September 2024. Families should read the latest report, then ask the school what has changed since that inspection.
Year 7 places are allocated through Sefton’s coordinated admissions process. The school’s Published Admission Number for September 2026 is 240, and the on-time application deadline in the Sefton guide is 31 October 2025.
GCSE outcomes sit in line with the middle 35% of schools in England on the FindMySchool ranking. Attainment 8 is 45.7 and EBacc average point score is 4.03, while Progress 8 is -0.63, which indicates pupils, on average, make less progress than peers with similar starting points.
The sixth form is branded as College@Deyes and promotes both academic and vocational pathways. Leavers move into a mix of university, apprenticeships, and employment, and the school offers structured enrichment such as work experience, academic societies, and targeted programmes for high-ambition routes.
The school lists specific options including Enterprise Club (Years 7 to 11), Art Club, Computer Club, Drama Club, orchestra and choirs, and Duke of Edinburgh. Sixth form enrichment adds book club, an events committee, World Challenge, and university preparation activities.
Get in touch with the school directly
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