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SchoolsManchesterAbraham Moss Community School|Best Secondary Schools in Manchester
State School

Abraham Moss Community School

Crescent Road, Crumpsall, Manchester, M8 5UF·Manchester·URN: 150009A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
All-through
Nursery Provision
Mixed
Ages 3-16
Religious Character: None
Special Classes
GCSE Ranking
3,768
Academic
1,819
Overall
35
Local
Primary Ranking
10,225
Academic
Based on 2025 KS2 results
Based on 2025 KS2 results
4,902
Overall
Combines KS2 results with Ofsted-based inspection score
Combines KS2 results with Ofsted-based inspection score
79
Local
FMS Inspection Score

The FMS Inspection Score is FindMySchool's proprietary analysis based on official Ofsted and ISI inspection reports. It converts ratings into a standardised 1–10 scale for fair comparison across all schools in England.

Disclaimer: The FMS Inspection Score is an independent analysis by FindMySchool. It is not endorsed by or affiliated with Ofsted or ISI. Always refer to the official Ofsted or ISI report for the full picture of a school’s inspection outcome.

Excellent
8.9/10
Application Demand
Primary
100%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
Secondary
99%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewGCSEPrimaryOfstedApplication DemandAttendance Heatmap

Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Abraham Moss Community School Review 2026: Large All-through Academy with Strong Community Anchors

At a Glance

An all-through school on a major Manchester community site is unusual, and it shapes day-to-day life here. Children can start in Nursery and remain through to GCSEs, with routines, expectations, and curriculum sequencing designed to reduce the disruption that can come with changing schools at age 11. The school sits within The Dean Trust, joining the trust in September 2023, and the website positions the model as a seamless pathway from early years to Year 11.

Size matters in both directions. With capacity around 1,830 pupils, the school can run a broad timetable, sustain specialist clubs, and offer structured pastoral systems. It can also feel busy, and families should expect clear systems, consistent expectations, and a school day designed around punctuality and routines, with enrichment after lessons.

On performance, the picture is mixed. Primary outcomes show 60% reaching the combined reading, writing and mathematics measure in the 2025 dataset, while secondary outcomes, including Progress 8, indicate slightly below average progress overall. The school is oversubscribed at both Reception and Year 7 entry routes, so the practical question for many families is less “is it right” and more “how realistic is entry.”

Character & Atmosphere

The school’s published values place community, diversity, ambition, curiosity, and wellbeing at the centre, and it uses distinctive language such as “Our Diversity is our Identity” alongside ideas like generous spirit, community-driven culture, and insatiable curiosity. This values framework is not presented as a small add-on, it is framed as part of how curriculum intent and daily expectations are set.

Leadership is presented in a trust transition context. Mrs Josette Arnold is listed as headteacher across official listings, and in early trust-era communications she is described as leading the school day-to-day as Head of School following the move into The Dean Trust. For families, the practical implication is that many of the school’s current systems and policies are designed to align with a trust model introduced from September 2023 onward.

The school’s all-through structure is also reflected in how it talks about phases. The website emphasises shared expertise and resources across early years, primary, and secondary, and it explicitly positions transition as a continuity story rather than a “fresh start” at Year 7. This will suit children who do best with stability and familiar settings. It may be less appealing to families who prefer a clear reset point at secondary transfer.

A final part of the school’s identity is place. The wider Abraham Moss site is a genuine community hub, with a library and leisure centre alongside the school, including swimming pools and indoor sport facilities. That brings opportunities for sport and community connection that many schools cannot replicate on a standard urban footprint.

Results / Academic Performance

Primary (Key Stage 2)

In the 2025 dataset, 60% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined. At the higher standard, 10% achieved greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics.

Subject-level indicators show a varied profile: 70% met the expected standard in reading, 70% in mathematics, 70% in grammar, punctuation and spelling, and 80% in science. Scaled scores were 103 for reading, 104 for mathematics, and 105 for grammar, punctuation and spelling.

FindMySchool’s primary ranking places the school at 10,225th out of 14,978 in England for academic outcomes, based on official data used within the FindMySchool methodology. The Manchester local hub lists it 79th locally, with an overall England rank of 4,902nd. For parents, that still suggests performance has strengths but is not consistently high across the full basket of measures used for the ranking.

Secondary (GCSE)

At GCSE level, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 39.7, and Progress 8 is -0.07, indicating overall progress that is slightly below the England average for pupils with similar starting points.

EBacc indicators also suggest challenge at the more demanding end of the core academic suite. The average EBacc APS score is 3.6, and 12% achieved grade 5 or above in the EBacc measure used here.

Rankings give further context: ranked 3,768th out of 3,895 in England for GCSE academic outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). The Manchester secondary hub lists it 33rd locally, with an overall England rank of 1,680th.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Reading, Writing & Maths

58%

% of pupils achieving expected standard

Teaching & Learning

The primary phase reading strategy is explicit. The school states it uses Read Write Inc. for early reading and phonics, supported by staff training, regular assessment, and intervention designed to help pupils keep up with the programme. For families, the implication is a structured phonics approach with consistent routines and frequent monitoring, which often benefits children who need clear repetition and cumulative practice.

In secondary, curriculum intent is framed as “traditional and inclusive,” with a three-year Key Stage 3 and a two-year Key Stage 4, and with no early entry for core GCSEs. GCSEs are positioned as linear examinations at the end of Year 11. This matters because it signals a preference for depth and consolidation over accelerated examination entry, which can reduce short-term exam tactics but requires sustained study habits.

The published Key Stage 4 offer combines the expected core with a broad set of additional subjects. Alongside English, mathematics, science, and history or geography, the school lists options including computing, Spanish, French, Arabic (with a home language route where appropriate), GCSE PE, art and design pathways (fine art, textiles, 3D), drama, music, hospitality and catering, and design technology. For many students, this breadth will be a positive because it allows strengths to show in both academic and applied domains.

Provision for higher achieving pupils is also described, including supervised Mensa tests and an annual overnight visit to Oxford University for Key Stage 4. The practical value is not the label, it is the exposure to stretch opportunities and to post-16 and post-18 pathways, especially for families who are new to those systems.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:8.9/10Excellent

Quality of Education

Good

Behaviour & Attitudes

Outstanding

Personal Development

Outstanding

Leadership & Management

Outstanding

FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.

Read the official Ofsted reportWhat do Ofsted reports mean?

Where Pupils Go Next

This is a school with no sixth form, so progression planning focuses on post-16 routes elsewhere. In practice, that means students and families need to engage early with Manchester’s post-16 landscape, including sixth-form colleges, further education colleges, and school sixth forms across the city. The school’s curriculum framing, including a full Key Stage 4 with linear GCSEs, is consistent with preparing students for a wide range of post-16 options rather than a narrow pipeline.

For pupils moving from primary into secondary within the same school, the all-through model reduces the scale of transition, but it does not eliminate admissions constraints entirely. The school’s published admissions arrangements for Year 7 set an admission number of 270, with 60 places allocated to the school’s own Year 6 pupils, and remaining places available to external applicants if internal transfer numbers are below that threshold. The implication is that the internal route is structured, but families should still treat Year 7 organisation as a formal process rather than assuming unlimited automatic progression.

Admissions: How to Get In

Demand is strong at both main entry points shown in the available data.

For Reception and primary-phase entry, the school is oversubscribed on the published application and offer numbers. In the latest figures provided here, there were 146 applications for 49 offers, which is close to three applications per place. When a school is operating at this level of demand, families should expect criteria, timing, and proof-of-address requirements to matter, and they should avoid leaving applications until late in the cycle.

For Year 7 entry, the picture is similar: 539 applications for 260 offers, and an oversubscribed status. In other words, a large intake does not necessarily mean easy entry.

For September 2027 entry into Year 7, Manchester’s coordinated admissions timetable states that applications open on 01 July 2026 and close on 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 01 March 2027. The school’s own admissions policy confirms that Year 7 applications are coordinated by Manchester Local Authority and should be made through the local authority common application process, with an admission number set at 270. Parents comparing options should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check practical travel distance and realistic day-to-day routes, then cross-check the school’s oversubscription criteria so that preferences are ordered strategically rather than aspirationally.

For Reception entry in September 2027, Manchester’s timetable states that the application round opens on 17 August 2026, closes on 15 January 2027, and offers are issued on 16 April 2027.

Nursery operates differently. The school’s Nursery admissions information indicates that nursery places are applied for directly to the school, and published deadlines can vary year to year. For early years funding and session patterns, families should rely on the school’s current nursery admissions and early years information pages rather than assuming the Reception timetable applies.

Application Demand

Last distance offered:
All offered

Previous Year (2024/25 Entry)

Primary entry
Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
All offered

Applications

146

Total received

Places Offered

49

Subscription Rate

3.0x

Applications per place

Secondary entry
Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
All offered

Applications

539

Total received

Places Offered

260

Subscription Rate

2.1x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

The school describes a pastoral structure that includes form tutors, heads of year, pupil support managers, and wider support staff, with “Pastoral Services” positioned as a focal point for families who need help navigating attendance, behaviour, or wellbeing support. The practical implication is that there are multiple access points for help, which can be important in a large school where families may otherwise worry about being anonymous.

SEND support is clearly signposted, with separate named leadership for primary and secondary SEND coordination and a published SEND information report. The school’s curriculum information emphasises that pupils with a wide range of needs are included in mainstream, with support targeted appropriately and without restricting curriculum access. For families with SEND needs, the best next step is usually to review the SEND information report and discuss specific supports for the child, including any interventions and how progress is tracked, before naming the school as a preference.

Safeguarding documentation aligns itself explicitly with current statutory guidance, including Working Together to Safeguard Children (2023) and Keeping Children Safe in Education (September 2024). Families assessing fit should still ask practical questions about how concerns are raised, how the school communicates with parents, and what happens when issues span school and community contexts.

Beyond the Classroom: Extracurricular

The school makes structured enrichment time part of the day, with activities available after the main lessons window. On the published enrichment timetable in a recent newsletter, examples include Maths Club (Key Stage 3), Japanese Club, Persian Club, Knitting Club, EAL Homework Club, Choir, STEM Club, Strings Ensemble, Cycling, Swimming, Basketball, Drama Club, Dance Club, Netball, and Fitness. This matters because it shows a balance between academic support clubs, language and cultural clubs, sport, and performing arts. For many pupils, especially those new to English or new to the area, clubs like EAL Homework Club can provide an additional layer of stability and belonging beyond lessons.

The school also positions enrichment as part of wider character development rather than a soft extra. The prospectus states there are 19 clubs in the secondary phase, with many running at lunchtime, and it highlights pupil leadership roles such as pupil librarians, literacy representatives, a girls’ network, a charity and community committee, and a young interpreters group. For students who build confidence through responsibility, these roles can be just as influential as sports teams or performances.

Place-based opportunities are a further advantage. The school shares the site with Abraham Moss Library and Leisure Centre after a major investment, and the published facilities include swimming pools, a sports hall, gym spaces, and additional leisure provision. In practice, that infrastructure makes it easier to run swimming, indoor sport, and fitness activities without relying on off-site travel, and it supports consistency in PE delivery across a large pupil population.

Community events appear to be used deliberately to connect families. The prospectus references activities such as the Grand Iftar and a Winter Fest, plus engagement with local communities and support for parents and carers. For a diverse intake, these events can be more than symbolic; they can be practical touchpoints that help families build relationships with staff and with one another.

Practical Information

The school day is structured around punctuality and clear phases. Pupils can arrive from 8.15am, are expected on site by 8.28am, and the school finishes at 3.00pm, with an additional window for enrichment and extracurricular activity running until 4.15pm. Term dates for 2025 to 2026 are published on the school website, including planned inset days and an identified Eid date.

Breakfast provision is referenced as part of the daily routine (breakfast served from arrival time). For wraparound care beyond the school day, an on-site provider, Bearnecessities Wrap Around Care, is registered at the Abraham Moss site. Families should confirm current session times and booking approach directly with the provider, particularly if care is essential for work patterns.

On travel, the school sits within the Abraham Moss community campus area, with public transport links serving the site, and practical routes should be tested at the times you would actually travel, especially for younger pupils at drop-off.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,830
  • Number of pupils: 1,823

Things to Consider

  • Mixed performance signals: Primary combined expected standards are 60% in the 2025 dataset, while GCSE progress is slightly below average overall. Families should look for evidence that support and consistency are improving outcomes across both phases, not only in pockets.

  • High demand at entry points: Both Reception and Year 7 routes are oversubscribed in the available figures, with roughly three applications per place for Reception and around two for Year 7. If you are relying on a place, treat timing and criteria as critical.

  • No sixth form: Students will need a post-16 plan that involves moving elsewhere after Year 11. This suits some teenagers well, but others prefer continuity through to A-level.

  • Inspection timing for the current academy: The current URN opened in September 2023, and there is not yet a published full inspection report for the academy itself, so families should rely more heavily on current policies, curriculum information, and direct engagement when assessing the school’s present-day strengths and priorities.

The Verdict

This is a large, community-anchored all-through school that uses structure, routines, and a clearly stated values framework to support a diverse intake. Enrichment is not treated as optional, and the combination of on-site clubs plus leisure and library facilities creates genuine breadth in what pupils and students can access. Academic performance is uneven across phases, so the key decision is whether the school’s current systems, trust alignment, and support structures match what your child needs right now.

Who it suits: families who value an all-through pathway, want a structured school day with accessible enrichment, and are comfortable engaging proactively with admissions and support systems in a busy, high-demand setting.

FAQs

The current performance data shows a mixed picture, with 60% meeting the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics in the 2025 primary dataset. GCSE outcomes are also mixed, with a Progress 8 score of -0.07 indicating slightly below average progress overall. Oversubscription at both Reception and Year 7 suggests many local families see it as a viable option, but it is sensible to look closely at whether the phase your child is entering matches their needs.

Reception applications for September 2027 are coordinated by Manchester Local Authority, with an on-time deadline of 15 January 2027 and offers on 16 April 2027. Year 7 applications for September 2027 close on 31 October 2026 with offers on 01 March 2027. Nursery applications are made directly to the school rather than through the Reception process.

Reception entry shows 146 applications for 49 offers, and Year 7 shows 539 applications for 260 offers, both recorded as oversubscribed. In practical terms, that means families should treat deadlines, proof of address requirements, and preference ordering as important.

Headline indicators suggest a mixed profile. Progress 8 is -0.07, which implies slightly below average progress overall from Key Stage 2 starting points. The EBacc APS score is 3.6, and 12% achieved grade 5 or above in the EBacc measure used here. Families should consider how the school supports both core learning and subject choice, especially for students aiming for more academic Key Stage 4 routes.

A published enrichment timetable includes a wide spread, such as Maths Club, STEM Club, Japanese Club, Persian Club, Choir, Strings Ensemble, Drama Club, Dance Club, Swimming, Cycling, Basketball, Netball, Fitness, Knitting Club, and EAL Homework Club. The school also describes broader leadership opportunities such as pupil librarians and a young interpreters group.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Crescent Road, Crumpsall, Manchester, M8 5UF
01615325400
www.abrahammoss.co.uk
Josette Arnold
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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.

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FMS Inspection
Score
8.9/10
Excellent
Abraham Moss Community School

Nearby nurseries and early years

Other nurseries and school nursery provision nearby.

  • Bearnecessities Wrap Around Care, Abraham Moss

    Nursery0.0 mi

    FMS7/10Good
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    Nursery School0.2 mi

    FMS7/10Good
  • Lote Tree Nursery

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  • Tiddlywinks Nursery Crumpsall

    Nursery0.2 mi

    FMS7/10Good
  • Acorn Grove Nursery

    Nursery0.2 mi

    FMS7/10Good
  • Aspire Learning Centres & Childcare

    Nursery0.3 mi

    No FMS inspection score yet
  • Crumpsall Park Day Care

    Nursery0.3 mi

    FMS7/10Good
  • Cravenwood Primary Academy

    Nursery School0.3 mi

    FMS7/10Good
  • CHEETHAM KIDS ACADEMY

    Nursery0.3 mi

    No FMS inspection score yet
  • Kumon Cheetham Hill Study Centre

    Nursery0.4 mi

    No FMS inspection score yet
  • Crumpsall Lane Primary School

    Nursery School0.4 mi

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#872
Independent · All-through

OYY Lubavitch Boys School

Salford council
GCSE
#872 / 3,895
Gender
Boys
Age Range
5-16 years
Religious Character
None
No special features
Details