This is a relatively new post-16 provider in Rainham, opened in September 2023 and designed to serve local 16 to 19 students with an academic core and a small vocational pathway. At the time of its first external visit, the sixth form had 240 students on roll, with A levels as the main route and a smaller cohort taking level 3 vocational courses alongside or instead of A levels.
Being new matters. You are not assessing a long-established track record here, you are assessing the clarity of the offer, the seriousness of teaching and support systems, and whether the programme is the right fit for a student’s ambitions and study style. External evidence so far is a monitoring visit rather than a full graded inspection, but it contains unusually concrete detail about curriculum planning, careers guidance, and safeguarding culture.
The sixth form’s early identity is built around structured academic ambition, with enrichment presented as an expectation rather than an optional extra. A levels sit at the centre, with subjects including sciences, mathematics, social sciences, geography, history, English literature, product design and art. Vocational qualifications are also available in business, health and social care, and sport, with around a third of students on level 3 vocational routes at the time of the monitoring visit.
There is also a purposeful “study-plus” flavour to how the programme is described. Around 20 students were taking the Extended Project Qualification (EPQ) alongside their main programme during the monitoring visit period, which suggests the sixth form is actively encouraging the kind of independent research and writing that universities like to see.
Leadership context is clearer than the results picture, because published outcomes are necessarily early in the school’s life cycle. The Department for Education’s official records records the headteacher or principal as Mr Gareth Stananought, although the start date is not recorded publicly in that listing.
For families who want hard performance benchmarks, the key limitation is that this is a new sixth form and the usual public performance story is still emerging. You should treat any early narrative about outcomes as provisional until multiple cohorts have completed their programmes.
What is available is programme detail and quality signals. Teaching and assessment are described as highly structured, with careful sequencing across the two-year courses and integrated assessment points, plus frequent checks on what students already know so teaching can address gaps.
If you are comparing sixth forms locally, the practical move is to ask detailed questions about outcomes by subject, retention, and progression routes at open events, because published aggregate figures are not yet the most useful lens for a new provider.
The curriculum model is designed to be coherent from day one, with a clear two-year structure in each subject and planned assessment points, rather than a looser “we will refine it later” approach that sometimes shows up in new provision.
Teaching is also presented as strongly supported through the wider trust infrastructure, including subject consultant input and frequent, targeted professional development aimed at subject knowledge and classroom practice.
For students, the implication is a classroom experience that should feel organised and exam-relevant. There is explicit reference to students doing preparation work before lessons and then using lesson time to recap and extend, which tends to suit learners who handle independent study reliably and benefit from structured routines.
Published destination numbers are not clearly established in the accessible official material, so this section is necessarily about readiness rather than statistics.
Careers provision is described in unusually specific terms for a monitoring report: a planned careers curriculum with a balance of university, apprenticeship and employment guidance, including careers fairs, CV writing, interview preparation, and individual impartial guidance from a qualified adviser. Students interested in medicine were reported as having opportunities to visit hospitals and hear from medical professionals.
The practical implication is that the sixth form is trying to keep multiple high-quality routes open rather than signalling a single “university or nothing” mindset. For many families in Havering, that breadth is valuable, especially if a student’s plans change during Year 12.
Applications are direct to the sixth form, rather than via a local authority coordinated school admissions round. The published admission arrangements set out a clear annual rhythm: the closing date for applications is 31 March, with offers sent on or around 30 April, conditional on results, and late-August enrolment used to fill places that become available after GCSE results day.
Entry is conditional on meeting published minimum entry requirements. Students who have not achieved at least grade 4 in both GCSE English and maths are expected to study resit GCSEs alongside their level 3 programme.
If oversubscribed, the admission arrangements prioritise students with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the college, then looked-after and previously looked-after children, then students attending Harris Academy Rainham, followed by proximity to the sixth form.
A final practical point for families: the published capacity is 400 students overall, with planned admission of 200 students into Year 12 each year, so the scale is large enough for subject breadth but still small enough that the sixth form is likely to feel more like a focused centre than a sprawling college.
New sixth forms live or die on systems. The available official evidence points to safeguarding being treated as a high priority from the outset, including comprehensive policy coverage and frequent staff training tailored to local risks, plus careful recruitment checking and online safety monitoring.
For students, the likely day-to-day effect is a setting that combines high expectations with clear boundaries and practical support. Families should still probe how pastoral tutoring works, how attendance is monitored, and what academic support looks like for students who wobble mid-year, because those details often matter more than mission statements.
Enrichment here is not described as a general clubs list. It is linked to progression and skill-building. Students were reported as having access to elective courses such as sports coaching, engineering, theatre, and EPQ, with a clear aim of building confidence, communication, and applied skills alongside exam courses.
That matters because it signals an approach where “extras” are meant to strengthen applications and personal development. A theatre elective that focuses on voice projection and clarity of speaking is a good example of a practical, transferable skill that benefits presentations, interviews, and seminar-style learning.
If you are choosing between sixth forms, ask exactly how elective choices are timetabled, whether they are assessed or certificated, and how they fit alongside a full A-level load.
This is a state sixth form, so there are no tuition fees.
The published admissions arrangements indicate a substantial minimum study programme of 540 planned hours per year, which signals a full-time expectation rather than a light timetable.
Transport questions are worth raising early, particularly if a student is commuting across Havering. Ask what time the study day typically starts and ends, and what independent study expectations look like on site versus at home, because sixth forms vary widely on those practicalities.
A new provider means limited track record. The sixth form opened in September 2023, so parents are assessing a developing outcomes picture alongside early quality indicators.
Oversubscription rules can matter. Priority is given to specific groups, including students from Harris Academy Rainham, then distance, so applicants should understand how likely an offer is in their circumstances.
Academic structure suits some learners more than others. The programme described relies on preparation, frequent assessment, and a demanding two-year plan; students who struggle to self-manage independent study may need stronger scaffolding.
Harris Rainham Sixth Form is positioning itself as a structured, ambitious local sixth form with A levels at its core, a defined vocational strand, and enrichment designed to strengthen progression rather than simply decorate it. It is best suited to students who want a disciplined study culture, are open to electives that build application-ready skills, and value a careers programme that keeps university, apprenticeships and employment routes in view. The main question for many families is not ethos, it is how quickly outcomes and destination patterns mature as cohorts progress through.
Early external evidence is promising for a new provider. The February 2025 Ofsted monitoring visit reported significant progress in curriculum design, teaching support, careers guidance, and safeguarding arrangements.
Applications are made directly to the sixth form. The published admission arrangements state that the application closing date is 31 March each year, with offers typically sent on or around 30 April, conditional on results.
Entry depends on meeting minimum entry requirements based on GCSE grades or equivalent level 2 measures. Students who do not have at least grade 4 in GCSE English and maths are expected to study resit GCSEs alongside their level 3 programme.
At the time of the February 2025 monitoring visit, most students studied A levels across a wide subject mix, with vocational level 3 options including business, health and social care, and sport.
The published oversubscription criteria prioritise students with an Education, Health and Care Plan naming the college, then looked-after and previously looked-after children, then students from Harris Academy Rainham, and then proximity to the sixth form.
Get in touch with the school directly
Disclaimer
Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.
While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.
FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.