New River College Secondary is a state-funded Pupil Referral Unit in Holloway, London, offering trauma-informed alternative education for up to 61 pupils aged 11–16. Pupils are referred through Islington's Securing Education Board following exclusion or risk of exclusion from mainstream schools, or due to medical and mental health needs. The school operates on a small-group model, with form groups capped at six pupils and a student-teacher ratio of approximately 1:1, ensuring intensive, personalized support. Currently rated Good by Ofsted following an inspection in April 2024, the PRU delivers a broad, balanced curriculum with strong literacy and personal development components. Its mission is to provide stabilizing intervention and equip pupils with the tools needed to reintegrate into mainstream education or transition successfully to post-16 pathways.
The Secondary site is part of New River College, a consortium of three PRUs across four locations in Islington, serving pupils from ages 5 to 16. Bill Dimmock serves as Head of Centre, with overall leadership under Executive Headteacher Nigel Smith. Pupils typically remain at New River College for a fixed intervention period, with individual timetables tailored to assessments completed during an intensive induction week. The school works in partnership with external agencies including Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS), Safer Schools, and Targeted Youth Support.
State Pupil Referral Unit
11–16
Approximately 61
Good (April 2024)
Lough Road, Holloway, London, N7 8RH
New River College Secondary describes its core purpose as providing "the tools and resources [pupils] need to make a positive transition," underpinned by a trauma-informed philosophy that recognizes the complex social, emotional, and mental health (SEMH) needs of its cohort. The school aims to create an environment where students develop positive attitudes to learning, behaviour, and relationships, treating each pupil's journey as unique. The emphasis is on short-term, stabilizing intervention designed to either preserve a pupil's place in their current mainstream school or facilitate a successful return to mainstream once circumstances improve.
Safeguarding and pastoral care are central. The school partners closely with specialist external agencies, including CAMHS, to address mental health concerns, and its high staff-to-pupil ratio allows for constant monitoring and rapid de-escalation of incidents. Ofsted noted in the most recent inspection that pupils usually have positive attitudes to learning and that lessons proceed in a calm, purposeful, and positive manner. Staff resolve behavioural incidents quickly, reflecting the relational approach embedded in the school's culture.
The atmosphere is deliberately nurturing rather than institutional. Small form groups of no more than six pupils reduce overwhelm and allow staff to build trusting relationships. The school's induction week is thorough, with comprehensive assessment informing each pupil's personalized timetable and support package. The overall tone is one of hope and incremental progress, rather than deficit labeling. Students are encouraged to achieve academically while developing the social and emotional skills necessary for future success.
As a Pupil Referral Unit, New River College Secondary does not publish traditional academic performance metrics such as Attainment 8 or Progress 8 scores, and its pupils are not included in national league tables. The school's curriculum is intentionally broad and balanced, covering core subjects (English, mathematics, science), foundation subjects, and vocational courses. Individual timetables are flexible and differentiated according to each pupil's starting point, needs, and realistic goals during their time at the PRU.
Literacy is a major curricular focus. Recognizing that many pupils arrive with gaps in basic skills, the school dedicates significant resources to improving reading, writing, and communication abilities, treating these as foundational for all other learning and future opportunities. Mathematics similarly receives tailored teaching, with staff trained to use effective strategies appropriate to pupils who may have experienced disrupted or fragmented education.
Ofsted's April 2024 inspection found that pupils begin to make good progress as soon as they start at the school, thanks to the thorough induction period. Teaching is rated Good, with inspectors noting that leaders provide effective training and support to ensure staff understand how to raise expectations and deploy evidence-based strategies. Staff expectations for what each pupil can achieve have risen, and staff development is prioritized to maintain teaching quality.
Personal development is treated as equally important as academic achievement. The curriculum includes opportunities for building resilience, self-regulation, and decision-making skills. Pupils receive careers guidance and support in exploring post-16 options, which may include mainstream school reintegration, alternative education settings, college courses, or entry-level employment and training routes.
Because New River College serves pupils with SEMH and medical needs, outcomes are measured more holistically: successful transitions back to mainstream, sustained engagement in learning, improved attendance, reduction in exclusions, and positive destinations upon leaving. These metrics are not publicly ranked but form the basis of accountability discussions between the school, Islington LA, and Ofsted.
New River College Secondary operates from its main site on Lough Road in Holloway, with a satellite centre at Elthorne Road for pupils with more acute social, emotional, and behavioural difficulties. The facilities are functional and designed to support small-group learning, with specialist teaching spaces and dedicated areas for pastoral work and therapeutic intervention.
In recent years, Islington Council has consulted on proposed improvement works to increase the school's capacity and upgrade teaching facilities. Plans include enhancements to the external playground using natural materials and sensory planting to create a safer, calming, and more engaging environment for both pupils and staff. These improvements reflect recognition of the importance of physical space in supporting pupils with SEMH needs.
The school's student-teacher ratio of approximately 1:1 allows for close supervision and individualized attention throughout the school day. Pupils have access to learning assistants and pastoral mentors in addition to qualified teachers, creating a multi-layered support structure.
Extracurricular provision is limited compared to mainstream schools, reflecting the short-term nature of placements and the need to prioritize stabilization and core academic engagement. However, pupils are encouraged to participate in enrichment activities where appropriate, and the broader curriculum includes first-hand experiences and opportunities for personal growth.
Islington's New River College consortium model means that pupils can move between sites if their needs change. For instance, pupils with medical needs preventing attendance at the main Secondary site may access provision at the Medical PRU, which operates at the Whittington Hospital site and Elthorne Road and also offers home schooling where necessary.
New River College Secondary does not operate standard admissions procedures. Pupils are referred by Islington Council's Securing Education Board, typically following permanent exclusion from a mainstream Islington school or when exclusion is deemed likely. Medical referrals also occur when a pupil's health prevents them from attending mainstream education.
Once a pupil is permanently excluded from an Islington school, they are automatically referred to New River College, and a place is arranged within six school days. The pupil attends for at least the duration of the formal exclusion process and continues beyond that if the decision to permanently exclude is upheld and the pupil requires ongoing alternative provision.
Parents do not apply to New River College Secondary in the conventional sense. Placements are arranged by the local authority in consultation with the school and, where appropriate, families. There is no catchment area, no first-preference application data, and no distance-offered metric, as all pupils are Islington residents referred through statutory processes.
Capacity at the Secondary site is approximately 61 pupils, and the school operates at or near capacity. The planned expansion and facility improvements are intended to allow the school to support more young people effectively.
Because placements are referrals rather than parental choices, the school does not compete for pupils in the traditional sense. However, it plays a critical role in Islington's wider alternative provision strategy, working to prevent further educational breakdown and to support the borough's most vulnerable learners. Families whose children attend New River College Secondary do so because no other appropriate setting is available at that time.
New River College Secondary is a Good Pupil Referral Unit with a clear, compassionate mission: to stabilize and re-engage some of Islington's most educationally vulnerable pupils. It is not a school to which parents apply, but rather a safety net provided by the local authority when mainstream placements have broken down or become unsuitable. For families in that difficult position, New River College offers small-group, trauma-informed teaching with unusually high levels of staffing and pastoral support.
The school's strengths lie in its relational approach, its focus on literacy and personal development, and its commitment to individualizing education. Ofsted's 2024 inspection confirmed that pupils make good progress from often very low starting points, and that teaching is supported by ongoing staff development. The calm, purposeful atmosphere and swift resolution of behavioural incidents reflect the skill and dedication of the team.
However, as with all alternative provision, New River College is inherently transitional. Success is defined not by high GCSE grades, but by improved engagement, reintegration to mainstream where possible, and positive post-16 destinations. Families should understand that the curriculum, while broad, is tailored to intervention goals rather than traditional academic benchmarks. Extracurricular life is limited, and the school's resources are rightly focused on foundational stabilization.
For pupils referred to New River College Secondary, the school offers a structured, supportive environment designed to halt a cycle of disengagement and exclusion. It is a place where individual needs are understood, expectations are calibrated to realistic and meaningful goals, and every pupil is given the opportunity to reset and move forward. For Islington families navigating the complexities of exclusion or acute SEMH needs, New River College Secondary represents a vital second chance.
New River College Secondary is rated Good by Ofsted (April 2024) and fulfills its function as a Pupil Referral Unit effectively. It is designed for pupils who cannot currently access mainstream education due to exclusion or medical/mental health needs. For the specific cohort it serves, the school provides high-quality, trauma-informed support with excellent staffing ratios and individualized curricula. However, it is not a mainstream school, and its success is measured by pupil progress, engagement, and successful transitions rather than traditional academic outcomes.
Parents do not apply to New River College Secondary. Pupils are referred through Islington Council's Securing Education Board following permanent exclusion from an Islington mainstream school, or when medical or mental health needs prevent mainstream attendance. Once a referral is made, a place is arranged within six school days. Families should work with their child's current school, the local authority, and any relevant support services if alternative provision is being considered.
There is no traditional catchment area. The school serves pupils who are residents of Islington and have been referred by the local authority through statutory processes. All pupils attending are Islington residents.
The school accepts pupils aged 11 to 16 (typically Years 7 to 11). Pupils aged 5 to 11 are served by New River College Primary, and medical provision is available across all ages from 5 to 16 through the Medical PRU component of the consortium.
No, the school does not offer sixth form provision. It serves pupils up to age 16. Pupils leaving at the end of Year 11 receive careers guidance and support to transition to appropriate post-16 settings, which may include mainstream colleges, specialist provision, employment, or training.
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