Named after Lilian Baylis, the legendary theatrical producer who brought opera and ballet to London's South Bank, this Kennington secondary school has undergone a remarkable transformation. Once described as "the worst-performing school" by a major newspaper, Lilian Baylis Technology School now delivers an Outstanding Ofsted rating and sits in the top 25% of schools nationally for sixth form results (FindMySchool ranking). Housed in a purpose-built facility on Kennington Lane since 2005, the mixed comprehensive serves around 620 pupils alongside a thriving sixth form of 240 students. The school's motto, "Educate, Empower, Excel," runs through everything: a genuinely multicultural environment where nearly all pupils progress to positive destinations, with 88% of 2024 sixth form leavers heading to university.
The school pulses with genuine energy. Walking through the gates, there's a sense of purposefulness without pressure; students move confidently between lessons, and staff greet pupils by name. The building itself speaks to modernisation; the 2005 move away from cramped 1960s premises to custom-designed facilities shows institutional investment in quality space. The school has deliberately created a house system to build community within the larger cohort. The four houses — Sapphire Sharks, Ruby Bears, Emerald Crocs, and Amber Lions — deliberately foster loyalty and support networks.
Under the leadership of Headteacher Karen Chamberlain, the school has cultivated a culture centred on anti-racism and social responsibility. The school earned the prestigious Anti-Racist School of the Year award, reflecting systematic work to dismantle institutional bias and embed equity throughout the curriculum. This isn't performative: inspectors noted that "leaders have created a broad and ambitious curriculum which provides pupils with the knowledge and skills they need for their next steps." One pupil, captured in the Ofsted report, described the school as "home"—a telling indicator of belonging and safety.
The pastoral support is notably strong. The school operates a Bullywatch system that students regard as effective, and leaders provide tailored support to vulnerable pupils. Formal observations show behaviour is calm and purposeful; students engage seriously with learning.
Attainment 8 averaging 45.9 places students solidly in line with England averages, though not in the top tier. Around 50% of pupils achieved grade 5 or above in both English and maths, meeting the standard pass threshold. The school's Progress 8 score of +0.01 indicates pupils make progress in line with their starting points nationally — a fair measure given the high proportion of students eligible for free school meals and those with English as an additional language.
What matters most here is consistency. The school ranks 2097th in England for GCSE outcomes, placing it in the middle 45% of schools nationally (FindMySchool ranking). This represents solid, dependable education without the selectivity of grammar schools. The school specifically notes success in narrowing attainment gaps between boys and girls, and delivering improved results for disadvantaged cohorts compared to national figures.
The sixth form tells a different story. With 23% of A-level grades at A*/A and 57% achieving A*-B, results push considerably higher. The school's sixth form ranks in the top 25% nationally for A-level attainment (FindMySchool ranking). A-level Mathematics, Sciences, and Business have consistently strong results; BTECs and T-Levels offer vocational pathways.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
41.46%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Teaching follows structured approaches with high expectations. The school emphasises breadth; pupils study the English Baccalaureate range (including separate sciences, history, geography, and languages), creating a comprehensive foundation. For key stage 4, students choose four options alongside compulsory subjects, with the expectation that most will follow an EBacc curriculum.
Creative Project Days break the timetable each half-term, allowing pupils to spend an entire day pursuing a single subject via practical, project-based learning. This pilots deeper engagement and lets students do work they wouldn't otherwise access. All pupils can take free individual or group instrumental music lessons, removing a traditional barrier to musical participation.
The curriculum explicitly addresses identity and representation. Teachers carefully examine intersectional aspects — how race, gender, and other identities interact — and celebrate diverse voices across subjects. This reflects the school's commitment to anti-racism embedded in the values framework.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
In 2024, 100 of 112 sixth form leavers applied to university, with 98 placed successfully (and a remarkable 81 securing their first-choice institution). Twelve students pursued high-profile apprenticeships or direct employment. This progression rate sits comfortably in the top tier nationally.
The sixth form emphasises university readiness through systematic careers guidance and links with London institutions. Students undertake visits to universities including Imperial College, Brunel, and Goldsmiths. The sixth form specifically positions itself as a launchpad: leaders promise "opportunities, experiences and guidance to ensure your progression to University and/or into your desired future career."
The majority of Year 11 pupils progress to further education or employment; some transition to the sixth form internally. The school benefits from strong local partnerships that support vocational pathways and apprenticeships.
This is where the school's technology and arts heritage truly surfaces. Named after a theatrical visionary, the school offers far more than generic clubs.
The school holds Music Mark School status, indicating systematic commitment to music across the cohort. All pupils can access free instrumental lessons, significantly widening participation beyond affluent families. The school hosts regular music events and trips; students attended the London Philharmonic Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall and completed a specialist music taster day at London College of Creative Media. Jazz workshops feature prominently, and the school has built genuine expertise in contemporary music genres.
The drama programme includes full productions; students recently studied Macbeth at Shakespeare's Globe, embedding theatrical experience into curriculum.
A Robotics Club operates with sustained engagement; multiple news items highlight STEM learning showcased by the national STEM Learning organisation. Science Club has gained external recognition. Year 10 students visited Imperial College specifically for an astronomy taster day, building aspiration in Physics pathways. Year 8 students undertake construction projects with Turner Townsend, a major consultancy, learning professional design processes. The Worshipful Company of Information Technologists hosts annual dinners for LBTS sixth-form students, offering networking and mentoring from industry leaders. A Hackathon competition drew students into coding and digital problem-solving.
The school offers traditional and newer sports. Football is central — multiple teams compete with victories over Archbishop Tenison's and other local schools. Basketball features prominently through the Greenhouse Basketball programme. The school also promotes fitness through multi-skills camps and general PE provision. Notably, students engaged with the Chicago Bears and Enthuse Kids NFL Flag Football event, introducing American football to the cohort.
The Sensory Garden provides outdoor learning space. The school has participated in the Arts Council Collection Take Two programme and welcomes visiting artists. Students attended a financial literacy drop-down day and took part in the Crystal Palace Football Stadium event centred on gender equality. Drama trips, speakers workshops, and book clubs (including the Phoenix Book Club) run regularly. The school hosted the launch of the Black Equity Organisation, bringing leaders including David Olusoga and Kwame Kwei-Armah to address pupils.
Students participate in Parliament visits, sit on the Anti-Bullying Committee, and lead Sixth Form Debating Club with support from external consultants. This embeds citizenship beyond lessons.
Entry to Year 7 is non-selective; the school welcomes all abilities and backgrounds. Last distance offered in the admissions cycle was 9.485 miles, suggesting a relatively wide catchment for London. The school is oversubscribed for Year 7 entry, with approximately 3.57 applications per place. Sixth form entry requires Grade 5 or above in five or more subjects for A-level study, Grade 4 or above for BTECs or T-Levels.
The school belongs to the Wyvern Federation, a multi-academy trust structure.
Applications
411
Total received
Places Offered
115
Subscription Rate
3.6x
Apps per place
School hours run 8:50am to 3:20pm. The school provides no nursery provision but does operate breakfast and after-school clubs. Kennington Lane is accessible via public transport; the area has good bus connections and is within walking distance of Vauxhall station. Uniform is required; dress code extends to the sixth form.
A dedicated counselling service operates, supporting mental health needs identified since 2024. The school takes safeguarding seriously; Ofsted noted that "pupils are safe." The Bullywatch anti-bullying system is highly effective and responsive. Pastoral tutors know pupils and families well, enabling early intervention where needed.
The school explicitly works to remove barriers to learning; staff provide intensive support for pupils with SEND and those facing other challenges. This commitment reflects the demographics: a significant proportion of pupils are eligible for free school meals, and the school serves refugee and asylum-seeker families. Rather than seeing this as deficit, leaders frame it as an asset, building curriculum that honours diverse experiences.
Solid but not elite for GCSE. Results are dependable and above some schools, but sitting at the middle-tier mark nationally means pupils cannot assume automatic entry to highly selective universities from Year 11 alone. Sixth form results are considerably stronger, so progression through A-levels significantly improves destination outcomes.
Oversubscription is a real factor. With 3.57 applications per place, securing entry requires proximity or ties to the school community. Distance alone does not guarantee a place.
Vocational and academic pathways co-exist. The school offers A-levels, BTECs, and T-Levels, creating genuine choice beyond traditional academic study. Families seeking purely academic routes should explore sixth form entry requirements carefully.
Anti-racism work is genuinely embedded, not decorative. The school has done systematic work here, but families uncomfortable with explicit discussion of identity, power, and equity in curriculum should consider this carefully. The school is unapologetic about centering social justice.
A comprehensively improved school that has moved from crisis to confidence. The combination of strong pastoral care, genuine commitment to equity, clear progression pathways, and increasingly capable sixth form teaching makes this a solid choice for families in the Kennington catchment. Results are honest: GCSE outcomes sit at middle tier, but sixth form performance sits in the top quarter nationally. The arts and technology heritage (evident in clubs, visits, and partnerships) are real strengths. Best suited to families seeking a mixed, multicultural comprehensive with strong safeguarding, genuine SEND support, and a sixth form with real destination credibility. Not for families seeking a selective academic hothouse, but excellent for those seeking broad, inclusive education with real progression routes.
Yes. Ofsted rated the school Outstanding in February 2023 across all areas including behaviour, personal development, and leadership. Sixth form results place the school in the top 25% of schools in England, and nearly 90% of sixth form leavers progress to university. The school has transformed significantly from earlier challenges, now delivering consistent, dependable education with particular strength post-16.
Attainment 8 average is 45.9, in line with England averages. Around 50% of pupils achieve grade 5 or above in both English and maths. Progress 8 at +0.01 shows pupils make progress consistent with their starting points nationally. The school ranks in the middle 45% of schools in England for GCSE outcomes, delivering solid education without the selectivity of grammar schools. Sixth form A-level results are notably stronger, sitting in the top 25%.
LBTS6 opened in 2012 and now serves around 240 students. Results place it in the top quarter nationally, with 23% achieving A*/A grades and 57% gaining A*-B. In 2024, 98 out of 100 sixth formers who applied to university were placed, with 81 securing their first-choice institution. The sixth form offers A-levels, BTECs, and T-Level qualifications, plus strong links with London universities for visits and mentoring.
Year 7 entry is non-selective and oversubscribed at approximately 3.57 applications per place. The last distance offered was 9.485 miles, so proximity matters, but the school serves a reasonably wide London catchment. Sixth form entry requires Grade 5 in five or more subjects for A-level study (Grade 4 for BTECs/T-Levels). Internal progression from Year 11 is supported but not automatic.
The school is named after Lilian Baylis, the theatrical producer who founded the English National Opera and Royal Ballet. This heritage shows in strong music and drama provision, free instrumental lessons for all pupils, and partnerships with London cultural institutions. The school also holds Artsmark Gold and Music Mark School status. Additionally, it is genuinely committed to anti-racism and social equity, with award recognition for this work. Technology and vocational pathways are well-supported alongside academic routes.
The school offers a dedicated counselling service and operates the Bullywatch anti-bullying system. Pastoral tutors know pupils and families well. For pupils with SEND, intensive support is provided with carefully planned adaptations. The school explicitly works to remove barriers to learning, particularly for disadvantaged cohorts and those with English as an additional language.
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