A former fire station site at the end of Roman Road Market is an unusual starting point for a secondary school, but it suits a University Technical College. This is a specialist 14 to 19 setting built around technical learning alongside GCSEs and post-16 study, supported by named industry partners and designed for students who learn best when theory links quickly to real roles and real briefs. The building itself is a major part of the offer, with spaces that mirror workplace environments, including a theatre modelled on the Dorfman at the National Theatre, plus film, radio, and health simulation facilities.
Leadership is currently under Mr Daniel Seed, who took up post in June 2023.
The most recent Ofsted inspection took place in March 2025 and graded the school Good overall across most areas, with Outstanding for personal development.
The defining feature here is professionalism, not as a slogan, but as a daily expectation. The UTC model brings adults from industry into curriculum delivery, and students are routinely asked to present, explain, and justify their work. That suits teenagers who like practical outcomes and are ready to take responsibility for deadlines, teamwork, and a more adult tone.
A second, important strand is the idea of a fresh start at 14. Many students join at the beginning of Year 10 or Year 12, often after mixed experiences elsewhere. The school puts substantial emphasis on rebuilding confidence and helping students re-engage through purposeful learning, careers exposure, and structured personal development.
The setting is co-educational, with an intake drawn from central east London and wider Greater London. Admissions are positioned as inclusive and aligned to the national admissions framework for academies and UTCs.
This is a school where the technical and workplace-facing curriculum is central, but exam outcomes still matter for progression. The published performance picture is currently weaker than many families will hope for, particularly at GCSE, and it is important to read this alongside the school’s intake profile and its mid-course entry model at 14.
Ranked 3697th in England and 23rd in Tower Hamlets for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This sits below England average, within the bottom 40% of schools in England. Average Attainment 8 is 34.1 and Progress 8 is -0.98, indicating students, on average, made less progress than students with similar starting points nationally.
Ranked 2504th in England and 16th in Tower Hamlets for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This also sits below England average, within the bottom 40% of schools in England. At A-level, 14.22% of grades were A* to B, compared with an England average of 47.2%.
A constructive way to interpret these numbers is to focus on fit. Students who will benefit most are typically those whose motivation increases when learning is applied, and who will take advantage of the technical pathways and employer access. For families comparing local options, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you view GCSE and A-level outcomes side by side with nearby providers.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
14.22%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum is built around a combined academic and technical offer. At Key Stage 4, the UTC describes a programme that includes core GCSE subjects alongside technical and vocational options, aiming to give students practical experience alongside qualifications.
The specialist areas are clearly defined. Ofsted describes the UTC’s specialist subjects as health and social care and creative and digital media, with employer partners playing a direct role in curriculum delivery.
The learning environment is designed for application. The facilities include hospital and healthcare simulation rooms, specialist science labs, and media production spaces that make it easier for students to understand the standards expected in professional settings. The benefit is immediate for many learners, concepts are reinforced through doing, not only through written work.
As a 14 to 19 provider, progression at 16 and 18 is a core measure of success. The school’s model is to keep students in a coherent pathway, with academic study and technical qualifications supporting either higher education or employment routes.
Where specific destination breakdowns are not published in a way that can be reported consistently, the Department for Education destination data provides a baseline view for the 2023/24 cohort (122 students). 50% progressed to university, 6% to apprenticeships, and 17% to employment.
This destination mix reflects the UTC purpose, multiple credible routes after 18, not a single university-only pipeline. For students aiming at apprenticeships, the employer-facing programme, work experience expectations, and careers guidance are likely to be particularly relevant.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
Mulberry UTC is not a Year 7 entry school. The main entry points are Year 10 and Year 12, which means the admissions decision is often made during Year 9 or Year 11, when students are ready for a change of direction.
For Year 10 entry for September 2026, Tower Hamlets’ secondary admissions guidance indicates applications open from 01 September 2025, with a closing date of 31 October 2025, and offers released on 02 March 2026. Because UTC admissions can involve different routes depending on home borough, families should use the relevant local authority process and confirm the route early.
For Year 12, the UTC promotes direct application routes and states that most students also join at this point. In practice, families should plan early, review course requirements, and check the school’s current application pages for live deadlines and next open events.
If distance or travel time is a deciding factor, use FindMySchoolMap Search to model realistic daily travel from your front door to the site, then sanity-check it against your student’s timetable and the longer school day.
Pastoral strength is a consistent theme in the school’s external evaluation and its own positioning. The personal development programme is treated as a serious part of readiness for work and adulthood, covering personal, social, health and economic education, careers, leadership opportunities, and structured support for students joining at 14 with less positive experiences of education.
Behaviour is described as generally positive, with classrooms characterised as calm environments. The UTC’s approach relies on personalised support for students who arrive disengaged, alongside clear expectations about conduct and professionalism. Attendance and punctuality are identified as ongoing priorities, which is useful context for families assessing consistency and routines.
Enrichment is closely tied to the school’s purpose, building confidence through authentic experiences rather than a long menu of generic clubs. Employer-led challenge projects and termly exhibitions are positioned as regular features, with students presenting their work publicly.
Specific examples matter. The website highlights Model United Nations participation as a leadership opportunity, and describes a weekly Science Club that runs experiments beyond the taught curriculum, including practical activities such as making lip balm and dissection work.
Facilities significantly widen the extracurricular and project scope. A 250-seat theatre modelled on the Dorfman at the National Theatre, plus a studio theatre, film and TV studio with green screen, radio production suite, animation studio, and post-production suites make it realistic to run professional-standard performing arts and media projects. On the health side, hospital and healthcare simulation rooms support applied learning in care and health pathways.
The school day is longer than in many mainstream secondaries. The building opens from 8.00am for breakfast; students start lessons at 8.40am. On most days lessons finish at 3.50pm, and students can remain until 5.00pm. On Fridays, the day ends at 2.10pm.
Transport is a practical advantage. The UTC states it is a short walk from Bow Road, Bethnal Green, Bow Church, and Mile End stations, and is also close to Stratford and the Olympic Park.
Outcomes vs ambition: GCSE and A-level performance indicators are currently below England average. Families should look carefully at whether the technical pathways and applied curriculum are the main driver for their child, rather than expecting a conventional high-attainment academic profile.
Entry at 14 is a big change: Joining in Year 10 can be a positive reset, but it also means leaving an existing peer group and adapting quickly to a new culture and longer day. The best fit is usually a student who wants the change.
Attendance and punctuality focus: The school places strong emphasis on improving attendance and routines. That is positive, but families should probe how support works for students who struggle with consistency, especially in the first term.
Workload and maturity: Employer briefs, presentations, and professional expectations can be highly motivating. They can also feel exposing for students who dislike public performance or are anxious about speaking and presenting.
Mulberry UTC is a distinctive option for students aged 14 to 19 who want applied learning and credible routes into technical careers, apprenticeships, and higher education. The facilities and partner ecosystem are unusually strong for a state setting, and the personal development offer stands out. It suits students who learn best by making, doing, presenting, and reflecting, and who are ready for a more professional tone. The key trade-off is that published academic performance indicators are currently weaker than many local alternatives, so families should be confident that the UTC model is the right fit for their child’s motivation and learning style.
The most recent Ofsted inspection (March 2025) graded the school Good for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, leadership and management, and sixth form provision, with Outstanding for personal development. Academic outcomes are currently below England average on published measures, so “good” here often means strong personal development and applied learning for the right student profile.
Mulberry UTC is a 14 to 19 provider, so the main pre-16 entry point is Year 10. For September 2026 entry, Tower Hamlets guidance indicates applications open from 01 September 2025 with a closing date of 31 October 2025, and offers released on 02 March 2026. Families living outside Tower Hamlets should confirm the correct application route with their home local authority and the UTC.
No. This is a state-funded University Technical College, so there are no tuition fees. Families should still budget for standard school costs such as uniform, travel, and trips.
A UTC combines GCSEs and post-16 study with technical qualifications, built around employer and university engagement. At Mulberry UTC, specialist areas include health and social care plus creative and digital media, and the facilities are designed to mirror professional settings, such as health simulation rooms and industry-standard media production spaces.
Students start lessons at 8.40am. On most days lessons finish at 3.50pm, with the option to remain in the building until 5.00pm. Fridays end earlier, at 2.10pm.
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