West Middlesex College is a very small post-16 provider in Hillingdon, listed for learners aged 18 and over, with a published capacity of 15. It has historically operated as a specialist day college supporting adults with autistic spectrum conditions, in particular high functioning autism, with a curriculum centred on independence, employability preparation, and social understanding.
This is not a mainstream sixth form experience, and it is not designed for large cohorts or a broad exam timetable. The published public record also shows that the most recent available Ofsted inspection outcome is historic, so families should treat the official picture as dated and do their own due diligence through direct contact, visits, and current commissioning information.
The defining feature here is scale. With a cohort that has historically been in single digits, the day-to-day experience is likely to feel closer to a specialist learning setting than a college campus. For learners who find busy environments difficult, that can be an advantage, provided the programme is structured, purposeful, and genuinely stretching.
The provider’s own stated mission in the available inspection documentation focused on helping adults with autistic spectrum conditions develop academic, vocational, and life skills through an individualised programme that supports wellbeing and social inclusion. In practical terms, that intent translated into work on interpersonal understanding and managing behaviour appropriately in social situations, alongside daily living and community-based skills.
Because there is no current official school website clearly associated with this provider in public listings, parents and commissioners should expect to rely more heavily on direct conversations about what is offered now, how targets are set, and how progress is evidenced.
There are no current published GCSE or A-level performance measures for this provider and it should not be approached as an exam-results institution.
The most recent available Ofsted documentation indicates that, at the time, the college did not itself offer externally accredited courses and learners’ accredited outcomes were a significant concern. The latest available Ofsted inspection outcome is Inadequate, based on an inspection that took place in December 2007 and was published in February 2008.
Given the age of that evidence, the most useful question for families now is how the current programme measures progress. Ask for examples of individual targets, how they are reviewed, how independence and employability skills are assessed, and what meaningful progression looks like over a term and across a year.
The curriculum described in the inspection record was heavily practical and pastoral by design, with a strong emphasis on helping learners understand social situations and manage interpersonal behaviour. Activities referenced included independent living and home management, shopping and community access, citizenship, relaxation and wellbeing work, sport and fitness, plus literacy, numeracy, and ICT.
A key test for quality in a setting like this is whether learning is carefully planned, regularly assessed, and pitched high enough for each learner. It is also important that any literacy and numeracy needs are identified early and then used to shape targets and teaching, rather than sitting in a file.
Because learners’ needs can vary significantly, families should ask how staff personalise learning, what specialist training staff have in autism support, and how the provider adapts for co-occurring needs such as dyslexia or anxiety.
This provider is listed as post-16, adult-focused provision, so “destinations” are best understood as progression into greater independence, supported employment, further training elsewhere, or structured community participation.
Historically, the provision described included work placements and, in some cases, attendance at external courses at other colleges for parts of the week. If that model still applies, it can be a strength when it is planned well, because it allows learners to practise skills in wider settings while keeping a stable home base for support.
When exploring options, ask for examples of recent progression routes, such as supported internships, paid work with adjustments, voluntary placements that build employability evidence, or transitions into adult services where appropriate.
Admissions for very small post-16 specialist settings can look different from mainstream college enrolment. Places may be shaped by local authority commissioning, adult services involvement, or individual funding arrangements, depending on the learner’s profile and the provider’s current remit.
What matters is clarity. Families should ask:
Who can apply, and through which route (direct application, local authority referral, or both)
What assessments are used before an offer is made
What a transition plan looks like, including phased starts if needed
Whether the programme is suitable for the learner’s level of independence and support needs
FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature can help families keep track of questions, visit notes, and next steps, especially when comparing specialist post-16 options across borough boundaries.
The pastoral core should be explicit in a setting like this, including predictable routines, clear expectations, and staff who understand autistic communication and behaviour as communication. Look for a culture that builds self-advocacy, not dependence, with adult-appropriate boundaries and respect for learner autonomy.
Because adult learners may have mental health needs alongside autism, families should ask what support is available for anxiety, emotional regulation, and confidence, and how the provider works with external professionals when needed.
Enrichment here is less about a long clubs list and more about practising real-world skills repeatedly, with coaching that transfers into community contexts. The activities referenced historically, including community access, independent living skills, sport and fitness, and relaxation strategies, are meaningful when they are taught with clear goals and assessed outcomes.
If work placements are part of the programme, ask how they are sourced, what support is provided on-site, and how feedback is used to set new targets. A good placement programme builds stamina, workplace communication, punctuality, and problem-solving, rather than offering passive observation.
Public listings confirm the Hillingdon location. Beyond that, key practical details such as the daily timetable, term dates, transport expectations, and on-site facilities are not consistently published in the public record. Families should request these in writing.
For travel planning, ask about the feasibility of public transport, any supervised travel training, and expectations around independent arrival and departure. For adult learners, those details can be central to whether the placement is sustainable.
Inspection evidence is historic. The latest available Ofsted judgement is Inadequate, based on an inspection in December 2007 (published February 2008); that is too old to rely on without current verification through visits and up-to-date commissioning information.
Very small scale. With a published capacity of 15, peer group breadth may be limited; this can suit learners who prefer calm environments, but it may not suit those who want a busier social setting.
Clarity on qualifications and progression. Historically, accredited outcomes were a weakness; families should ask directly what is accredited now, what is not, and how progress is measured and reported.
Fit matters more than labels. This setting will suit some learners extremely well, but only if the current programme matches the learner’s needs, independence level, and long-term goals.
West Middlesex College appears, on the public record, to be a niche post-16 provider with a historic focus on supporting adults with autistic spectrum conditions through life skills, social understanding, and supported steps into wider community or workplace settings. It is best suited to learners who need a small, structured environment and a practical curriculum that prioritises independence and adult life readiness. The key challenge is evidencing what the provision looks like now, because the most recent official inspection information available publicly is dated, so families should rely on current documentation, visits, and clear progression planning.
West Middlesex College is listed as a post-16 provider with a very small capacity. The latest publicly available Ofsted inspection outcome is historic and rated Inadequate, so families should treat the official picture as dated and make decisions based on current evidence from the provider, including programme detail, progress reporting, and progression outcomes.
Public inspection documentation describes it as specialist day provision for adults with autistic spectrum conditions, with a curriculum emphasis on social understanding, independent living skills, and preparation for adult life.
Admissions routes can differ from mainstream colleges for very small specialist settings. Families should ask whether applications are direct, via local authority referral, or via funded placement routes, and what assessment and transition process is used before offers are made.
This is not presented as a mainstream GCSE or A-level provider in the available records. Families should ask directly what qualifications, if any, are offered now, and how non-qualification outcomes such as independence and employability skills are assessed.
Ask for the current weekly timetable, staff specialism in autism support, how individual targets are set and reviewed, what community access and work placement opportunities exist, and what progression routes recent learners have taken.
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.