Within walking distance of two iconic football stadiums, North Liverpool Academy occupies a £40 million purpose-built campus opened in 2009. The school emerged in 2006 from the merger of two underperforming institutions, transforming what could have been closure into one of the North-west's most improved secondaries. Mrs Emily Vernon, Principal since 2018, has steered the academy through significant growth. Today, the school educates 1,305 students across Years 7-13, with an Ofsted rating of Good and university destinations that include both Oxbridge and Russell Group placements. The sixth form, rated Grade 1 in its last Ofsted inspection, collaborates with Notre Dame Catholic College and Alsop High School to offer an unusually broad curriculum spanning vocational qualifications to advanced academics.
This is a school visibly invested in infrastructure and student experience. The 2009 building, a replacement on the Heyworth Street site formerly occupied by Breckfield Comprehensive, demonstrates clear intent to provide contemporary facilities in an area where school buildings often reflect decades of underinvestment.
North Liverpool Academy in Kirkdale, Liverpool has a clear sense of identity shaped by its setting and community. The school operates within a transparent house system (Redmond, Patten, McGough, Russell, and La Plante), with staff intentionally distributed to create vertical communities rather than year-group silos. This model emerged from evidence that students thrive when overseen by adults who know them across years, not just within a single cohort.
Mrs Vernon describes the academy's core values as built around "enjoyment and achievement," language that might sound generic until you observe its operationalisation. Staff turnover is low by Liverpool standards. Teachers like Ms Kennedy (sports; since 2010) and Mrs Darlington (geography; since 2013) represent institutional memory and continuity. The school sits at the geographic heart of Liverpool, situated between Everton and Liverpool football clubs, a fact that shapes both practical partnerships and cultural identity. For families unfamiliar with the area, this proximity signals robust community engagement and access to established local networks.
Behaviour is notably consistent. External observations highlight punctuality, respectful language, and what inspectors describe as "sensible interactions during social time." This is not achieved through oppressive systems but through clear expectations consistently reinforced. The zero-tolerance approach to bullying, introduced by current leadership, has created perceptible safety, a significant achievement in an inner-city comprehensive serving students from diverse backgrounds and postcodes.
North Liverpool Academy ranks 2,762nd in England for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in the lower 40% of schools. This ranking, while honest, requires contextualisation.
In 2024, the school achieved an Attainment 8 score of 44.1 across the cohort. This represents the average points students accumulated across eight qualifications (English, maths, and the best six other subjects). the England average stands at 45.9. On this raw metric, North Liverpool sits marginally below the England average, a gap of 1.8 points that, while notable, is narrower than many inner-city state schools achieve.
The Progress 8 score of -0.02 indicates that students made progress broadly in line with national peers once their starting points at the end of primary school were accounted for. Some cohorts show positive progress; others show marginal decline. This variability reflects the school's authentic mixed-ability intake rather than selection by prior attainment.
Disaggregating results reveals a complex picture. Approximately 46% of students achieved grades 5-7 in English and mathematics combined (the government's "standard pass" threshold). This sits below the England average of 54%. However, among students for whom English is an additional language, a significant portion of the roll, outcomes are stronger: approximately 57% achieved grades 5 and above in both English and mathematics.
The school specialises in Business, Enterprise, Computing, and Mathematics. The curriculum reflects these strengths, with computing education integrated from Year 7 and business studies available from GCSE onwards. This specialism means fewer students pursue English Baccalaureate qualifications (which require languages, sciences, and humanities studied in conjunction), contributing to the overall attainment figures.
The picture shifts substantially at sixth form. The school ranks 885th in England for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in the middle 30% of sixth form providers, solidly in the "typical national performance" band.
In the most recent results cycle, students achieved A*-B grades in 49% of A-level entries. the England average stands at 47%. This 2-percentage-point advantage, while modest in absolute terms, represents a meaningful shift: at sixth form, North Liverpool students are performing slightly above the England average. Approximately 28% achieved A* or A grades individually.
Sixth form Value Added (known as Progress 8 at post-16) stands at +0.73, indicating that students make above-average progress from their GCSE starting points. The academic pathways in STEM and the Scholars Programme (a direct partnership with the University of Liverpool for gifted science students) contribute to this trajectory.
Russell Group university progression reached 48% of sixth form leavers in 2025, a striking figure when compared to the GCSE cohort's more modest attainment. This indicates that the school successfully supports motivated students on demanding pathways.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
49.32%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The core curriculum reflects the school's specialism without narrowing breadth entirely. Latin has recently been introduced across the lower school, signalling ambition to expand academic rigour beyond the Computing-Business-Maths axis. Science is taught as separate disciplines (Biology, Chemistry, Physics) from Year 7, rather than as combined science, enabling greater depth.
Pedagogically, the school emphasises oracy and literacy as foundational. Every teacher, not just English staff, is trained in vocabulary development and speech. Mathematics lessons incorporate explicit discussion of mathematical language and reasoning, not merely procedural calculation. This aligns with evidence that oracy predicts outcomes more reliably than prior attainment alone.
The Scholars Programme represents high-ambition provision. Approximately 10% of each year group is identified for intensive enrichment in science, including mentorship by University of Liverpool doctoral researchers, laboratory access, summer schools, and structured preparation for medical and scientific university applications. This counteracts a common pattern in mixed-ability comprehensives: talented pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds may excel academically but lack the networks and confidence to pursue elite university pathways. The Scholars model deliberately addresses this gap.
At Key Stage 4, the school operates learning pathways with specialisations in Science, Mathematics, Further Maths, Technology, Business, and Sport. These are not separate streams (which would reduce access) but optional enhancement programmes running in parallel with core curriculum for interested students. This structure allows both breadth and depth.
Quality of Education
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Behaviour & Attitudes
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Personal Development
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Leadership & Management
Good
Approximately 80% of Year 11 leavers continue to the sixth form (internal progression) or other post-16 provision. 6% move directly to employment, reflecting the school's positioning within a local economy where some young people successfully apprentice or enter entry-level positions. Only a small percentage leave education entirely, a positive indicator of engagement.
For sixth form, students from North Liverpool Academy remain. The collaborative sixth form arrangement with Notre Dame Catholic College and Alsop High School substantially expands choice, students can study across three institutions' combined offerings while maintaining home-base affiliation. This matters practically (allowing subject combinations that single institutions cannot support) and culturally (exposing students to peers from different schools).
University progression reached 88% of sixth form leavers in the most recent reporting year. Destination data reveals:
Russell Group Universities: 48% of leavers progressed to Russell Group institutions, substantially above the England average of approximately 28%. Named destinations across recent years include Imperial College, University College London, Durham, Edinburgh, Bristol, and Warwick, demonstrating consistent access to England's most selective universities.
Oxbridge: The school recorded one combined Oxbridge acceptance in the measurement period (the most recent published cycle), with nine total applications submitted. This represents a 1-in-9 acceptance rate, below national sixth form averages, reflecting the academy's mixed cohort. However, the absolute numbers mask an important fact: nine applications from a state comprehensive in inner-city Liverpool represents strong aspiration. The school actively encourages applications through partnerships with Oxford colleges (St Peter's College hosting presentations on campus) and provides structured preparation through the Scholars Programme.
Other Destinations: 12% of leavers entered further education (Level 3 qualifications via BTEC or further studies); 6% secured apprenticeships (many in professional and technical sectors); 18% entered direct employment.
The A-level Value Added of +0.73 suggests that sixth form teaching is genuinely enabling students to exceed expectations set by their GCSE starting points. This is the metric that matters most: a school that takes students from variable GCSE performance and propels them toward selective universities is genuinely adding value.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 11.1%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
Mrs Emily Vernon, Principal since 2018, came from a deputy headship in an independent school context. Her leadership has consolidated the academy's earlier trajectory from "underperforming merger" to "most improved." Her senior team reflects both stability and diversity: Mrs Cawood joined in 2024 as Vice Principal for Behaviour and Inclusion; Mr Johnston heads the sixth form; Ms Kennedy manages community enrichment and the Learning Hub; Mr McGhee leads Teaching and Learning; and Mrs Darlington oversees curriculum and vocational qualifications.
The presence of long-serving staff, Ms Kennedy (15 years), Mrs Darlington (12 years), alongside recent leadership appointments suggests a healthy balance between institutional memory and renewal. Teachers here describe feeling invested in student progress rather than rotating through the school.
Quality of Education
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Behaviour & Attitudes
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Personal Development
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Leadership & Management
Good
With over 20 enrichment clubs running annually, the school offers genuine breadth of experience. Rather than list exhaustively, the most distinctive offerings merit emphasis:
North Liverpool Academy operates a competitive rowing programme supported by Warrington Rowing Club. The team has competed at regional finals and achieved victory. For students without prior access to this sport (rare in inner-city contexts), school rowing becomes a gateway, providing elite coaching, access to competitive pathways, and the discipline-building benefits of a sport requiring synchronisation and commitment. Rowing success also creates visible icons within the school; student rowers are celebrated athletes, elevating the profile of both sport and academic rigour.
The school operates three tiers: a beginner's club welcoming newcomers, a general school team, and an elite squad. The elite team placed second in England's Schools Chess Competition in 2023, an extraordinary achievement that required sustained selection, coaching by certified chess educators, and internal competition. The Merseyside Youth Chess Association now hosts affiliated clubs at North Liverpool Academy, further embedding this culture.
The school hosts and participates in VEXiQ robotics competitions at local, regional, and national levels. Teams design, build, and programme robots to complete defined competition tasks. This sits squarely within STEM enrichment but requires creativity, problem-solving, and collaboration, skills that transcend engineering.
Year 9 students complete the Bronze Award, involving physical challenges, skill development, and volunteering. Year 12 students progress to Silver. These are not optional decorations but structured commitments involving residential expeditions (notably, expeditions are confirmed at Waddecar Scout Activity Centre, indicating deliberate outdoor education partnerships).
Sixth form students participate in competitive gaming leagues and tournaments, competing at national level. While this might initially seem frivolous, structured eSports requires strategic thinking, rapid decision-making, and team coordination, skills increasingly valued by universities and employers.
The purpose-built Drama Theatre (movable walls, bleacher seating for 220 spectators) hosts student productions annually. The high-quality facility means productions aren't constrained by technical limitations but can attempt ambitious staging. Recent involvement in the Liverpool Philharmonic's In Harmony programme demonstrates partnerships extending beyond the school.
Music practice and performance rooms are distributed across the building. The school participates actively in Liverpool Philharmonic initiatives, offering students exposure to professional ensembles and pathways into serious musical study.
Formal debating clubs complement the school-wide emphasis on oracy. Students develop argument, articulation, and persuasion, skills with direct application to GCSE English Language and university admissions.
The school organised educational trips to Rome for Year 7-10 students studying Classical Civilisation GCSE, providing hands-on encounter with archaeological sites and ancient architecture. This transforms abstract historical study into embodied learning.
A comprehensive library on the first floor provides reading space during form time, breaks, and lunches. Reading clubs are formally scheduled. The school participates in author engagement and student presentations, creating a visible literacy culture.
Beyond rowing, the school offers football (on a floodlit full-size artificial astroturf pitch, convertible to three 7-a-side pitches), basketball, tennis, badminton, and cricket. The sports hall accommodates four badminton courts, multiple basketball courts, and cricket nets. The appointment as a Sainsbury's School Sports Mark Gold holder reflects sustained commitment to physical education.
Ms Kennedy manages the Learning Hub, which coordinates community partnerships, enrichment programmes, summer school activities, and wellbeing strategies. This is not a remedial space but a centre for expanding opportunity and ensuring the school remains a "nurturing and supportive environment."
The house system sits at the heart of pastoral provision. Each house has a year leader and team of form tutors who know students intimately. Unlike schools where form time is administrative, North Liverpool uses form time deliberately for literacy, oracy, and wellbeing work. Tutors meet with their groups regularly, discussing progress, challenges, and next steps.
Mrs Cawood, Vice Principal for Behaviour and Inclusion (appointed 2024), brings 30 years of experience from North-West schools. Her portfolio explicitly includes attendance, behaviour, and inclusion, three areas where comprehensive schools often struggle. Early indications suggest a tightened focus: exclusions are documented as "reducing," and attendance targets are being actively pursued.
The school employs a dedicated SENDCo (Mrs Hammond, appointed April 2025) with a National Award in SEN Coordination. She coordinates support for students with identified special educational needs, working with external agencies (educational psychology, speech and language therapy) to ensure appropriate provision.
Bullying is addressed swiftly. External observations confirm that staff "resolve bullying issues quickly and effectively," and students report confidence in reporting concerns. The zero-tolerance approach communicated by leadership appears to have affected culture.
School day runs 8:50am to 3:20pm. For families within Liverpool, the school's location on Heyworth Street offers transport links; nearby bus routes provide access from across the city. On-site parking accommodates 140 vehicles, relevant for staff and families attending events. The school building is fully accessible, with modern facilities meeting disability access standards.
Uniform is compulsory, reinforcing the school's emphasis on structure and identity. The school uniform policy can be viewed on the website for specific details.
For families with younger siblings, the school does not offer nursery provision. Sibling access to the school at secondary entry is possible but not guaranteed; admissions follow Liverpool's coordinated scheme prioritising distance and siblings.
GCSE Results Remain Below Average: While the school has improved substantially, GCSE attainment (Attainment 8 of 44.1) sits marginally below the England average. Families with students targeting top universities should recognise that early secondary trajectory is important. The school supports ambitious students well (as sixth form value-added demonstrates), but the starting point for many is modest. If you prioritise immediate GCSE outcomes as the primary metric of school quality, selective schools or those with stronger cohort attainment may appear more attractive.
Inner-City Location and Student Diversity: The school serves a genuinely diverse roll, economically, ethnically, linguistically. This is educationally valuable but means the environment is noisy, crowded at breaks, and occasionally fractious. Some families prefer schools with smaller cohorts or more homogeneous intakes. The school has worked systematically to manage behaviour, but the reality of educating 1,305 teenagers on a single site remains complex.
Sixth Form Collaboration: While the collaborative sixth form with Notre Dame and Alsop High expands course choice, it means that not all sixth form provision is on-site. Students move between campuses for lessons, potentially reducing the intimacy of a dedicated sixth form building. This is offset by expanded curriculum access but is worth understanding.
Ofsted History: The school has never been rated Outstanding. The most recent inspection (ratings framework now modified under post-September 2024 changes) awarded Good. While Good is a respectable rating and the school has demonstrably improved, families seeking a school with an Outstanding Ofsted may prefer alternatives. However, Ofsted ratings are single snapshots; the school's improving trend in A-level outcomes and sixth form value-added suggest genuine momentum that may not yet be fully reflected in inspection grades.
North Liverpool Academy is a genuine success story within the constraints of a mixed-ability state comprehensive in an economically challenged area. It has transformed from merger into one of the North-west's most improved schools. The sixth form, rated Grade 1 by inspectors, sends students to Russell Group universities and beyond. The Scholars Programme deliberately nurtures students who might otherwise lack confidence or networks to pursue elite pathways. Rowing, chess, robotics, and drama provide enrichment that would not be possible in smaller schools.
The GCSE picture is honest: results sit below the England average, reflecting an intake without prior selection. However, sixth form value-added (+0.73) reveals that teaching here genuinely moves students beyond their expected trajectories. For families prioritising immediate GCSE outcomes or seeking the certainty of a selective school, alternatives may feel safer. For families who understand that secondary education is a five-year journey and believe their child will thrive in a structured, ambitious, diverse environment with strong post-16 prospects, North Liverpool Academy delivers. Best suited to families within the Liverpool catchment who want their child challenged, supported, and prepared for genuine post-16 opportunity. The school's commitment to inclusion, combined with its elite academic pathways, means it serves both the student aiming for Cambridge and the student building confidence for the first time.
Yes. The school holds an Ofsted rating of Good and has been identified as one of the most improved schools in the North-west. The sixth form was rated Grade 1 in its last inspection. However, GCSE results sit marginally below the England average (Attainment 8 of 44.1 compared to 45.9 in England), reflecting the school's mixed-ability intake. The key metric for sixth form is Progress 8 of +0.73, meaning students exceed their expected outcomes by year 13. In 2024, 88% of sixth form leavers progressed to university, with 48% securing Russell Group places and at least one confirmed Oxbridge acceptance.
The school achieved an Attainment 8 score of 44.1 in 2024, marginally below the England average of 45.9. Approximately 46% of students achieved grades 5 or above in both English and mathematics (the government's standard pass threshold), compared to the England average of 54%. These figures reflect the school's comprehensive intake without selection by prior attainment. However, among students for whom English is an additional language, results are stronger at approximately 57% achieving grades 5 and above in both subjects. The school ranks 2,762nd in England for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in the lower 40%.
Sixth form results are substantially stronger than GCSE. The school achieved A*-B grades in 49% of A-level entries, marginally above the England average of 47%. Progress 8 at sixth form stands at +0.73, indicating students make above-average progress from their GCSE starting points. In 2025, 88% of sixth form leavers progressed to university, with 48% securing Russell Group places. Oxbridge acceptances are modest in absolute numbers (one in the measured period), reflecting the academy's mixed cohort, but the school actively encourages applications through partnerships with Oxford colleges and the Scholars Programme. The sixth form was rated Grade 1 (highest) in its most recent Ofsted inspection. The sixth form operates collaboratively with Notre Dame Catholic College and Alsop High School, expanding course choice beyond what a single institution could offer.
Entry at Year 7 follows Liverpool's coordinated admissions scheme. The school is significantly oversubscribed, with 3.56 applications for every place in recent years. Admissions prioritise looked-after children, those with statements naming the school, and then distance from the school gates. Families should verify their distance to 120 Heyworth Street, Liverpool L5 0SQ with Liverpool City Council, as the last distance varies annually based on applicant distribution. Sixth form entry requires a minimum of grade 6 in GCSE English and Mathematics and an overall GCSE average of grade 6 or above. Students progressing internally from the school to sixth form automatically have priority; external applications are competitive.
The school runs over 20 enrichment clubs annually, including rowing (competitive programme supported by Warrington Rowing Club; team achieved victory at regional finals), chess (elite squad placed second 's Schools Chess Competition 2023), VEXiQ robotics (competing locally, regionally, in England), Duke of Edinburgh Award (Bronze for Year 9, Silver for Year 12), eSports (sixth form competitive leagues), drama (purpose-built theatre with 220-seat capacity), formal debating and creative writing clubs, classical civilisation enrichment trips (recent Rome visit for GCSE students), music ensembles, and extensive sports provision including rowing, football, basketball, badminton, and cricket. Learning Hub coordinates community partnerships and summer school activities. All students participate in oracy and literacy development as embedded practice, not optional extras.
The school specialises in Business, Enterprise, Computing, and Mathematics. These areas receive enhanced investment and enrichment but do not narrow the curriculum significantly. Latin was recently introduced across the lower school. Sciences are taught separately (Biology, Chemistry, Physics) rather than as combined science, enabling greater depth. The school operates learning pathways with optional specialisms in Science, Mathematics, Further Maths, Technology, Business, and Sport at Key Stage 4. The Scholars Programme provides direct partnership with the University of Liverpool for approximately 10% of each year group identified as gifted in science, including laboratory access and mentorship. Sixth form offers a broad curriculum spanning vocational BTECs and A-levels, expanded through the collaborative arrangement with Notre Dame and Alsop High.
The school operates a house system (Redmond, Patten, McGough, Russell, La Plante) with vertical groupings ensuring students are known by staff across their entire time at school, not just within year groups. Form tutors meet regularly with students to discuss progress and wellbeing. A zero-tolerance approach to bullying has been introduced by current leadership. External observations describe bullying as "rare" and note that staff "resolve bullying issues quickly and effectively." The school emphasises oracy and literacy development as foundational to behaviour and engagement. Vice Principal for Behaviour and Inclusion (Mrs Cawood, appointed 2024) is actively managing attendance and exclusion targets. A dedicated SENDCo (Mrs Hammond, appointed April 2025, National Award in SEN Coordination) coordinates support for students with identified special educational needs, working with external agencies as needed.
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