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.
There is a clear through-line to how this academy presents itself and how it operates day to day: great learning through politeness, hard work and honesty. Those values show up in routines, expectations, and the way students are encouraged to take responsibility, whether that is through a structured school day, leadership roles, or participation beyond lessons.
Academy life is shaped by two practical realities. First, it is an 11 to 16 school, so planning for post 16 pathways matters earlier than it would in a school with a sixth form. Second, the timetable is deliberately built with a character and life skills period at the start of each day, plus electives after 2.35pm on certain days, which suits families who value enrichment but requires a little more coordination around pick-up and clubs.
The latest inspection confirmed the school remains Good, with safeguarding judged effective.
The public-facing identity is unusually coherent. The values are not presented as abstract statements; they are broken down into practical behaviours, for example being courteous, persisting with difficult work, and taking responsibility rather than making excuses. That clarity tends to matter most in the secondary years, where consistency across staff can make the difference between a calm learning culture and a fragmented one.
Leadership has recently stabilised into a single named headteacher. Ed Mayell moved from a co-headteacher role into the headteacher post from 01 April 2025, after serving as co-headteacher until 31 March 2025. For parents, that timing is useful context: many operational changes in schools take a full academic cycle to bed in, so 2025 to 2026 is the first year with a single headteacher in post from the start of summer term onwards.
Student voice and responsibility are structured rather than left to chance. The academy runs a house system tied explicitly to four character pillars, Learning, Service, Leadership and Participation, with house captains and a wider ladder of student roles. It is designed to broaden participation beyond lessons and to create leadership opportunities that are not limited to the most confident students.
A distinctive safeguard for culture is the anonymous reporting route. The D.A.R.T reporting tool is designed for students to raise concerns confidentially, which is a practical lever for early intervention when issues sit below the formal safeguarding threshold but still need attention.
On GCSE outcomes, the school sits in a broadly middle-performing position nationally, with a FindMySchool ranking of 2039th in England and 42nd in the local Manchester area for GCSE outcomes. In plain English, that places results in line with the middle 35% of schools in England, roughly the 25th to 60th percentile band. (These are FindMySchool rankings based on official data.)
The Attainment 8 score is 46.9, and Progress 8 is 0.14, which indicates above-average progress from students’ starting points. The EBacc average points score is 4.06, close to the published England figure of 4.08. A smaller proportion of pupils achieved grade 5 or above across EBacc subjects, at 12.3%.
What this usually means for families is that the school’s academic story is not built on a narrow subset of high attainers. Progress measures matter most in comprehensive settings because they reflect how effectively the school moves students forward from their baseline, rather than simply the characteristics of the intake.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum is described as broad, balanced and ambitious, with subject content sequenced carefully so students can build knowledge over time. The academy also foregrounds literacy and numeracy as cross-curricular priorities, which is consistent with a school whose results depend on sustained improvement across the full ability range rather than a selective intake.
A key nuance for parents is the way support is balanced against breadth. At key stage 3, a small group has had adaptations to provide extra literacy and numeracy support, reflecting the reality that some pupils need targeted catch up. The trade-off is that this can temporarily reduce curriculum breadth, so it is worth understanding how pupils enter and exit that support, and how quickly they return to the full curriculum.
Reading is treated as a whole-school priority with a well-developed library offer. The library is positioned as both a reading hub and a study support resource, holding GCSE study guides and acting as a careers hub with further education and university prospectuses. Student librarians are trained through an external programme, which is a quietly effective way to build responsibility and employability skills in a non-academic setting.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
As an 11 to 16 school, the critical transition is post 16. Students need to plan earlier for their next setting, typically further education colleges, apprenticeships, training providers, or employment with training. The school’s own framing emphasises preparation for life in modern Britain and encourages students to make informed, ambitious choices about what comes next.
The school’s character curriculum supports that transition in practical ways. Life skills and character are timetabled daily, and leadership roles through houses, prefect responsibilities, and structured programmes such as the Combined Cadet Force and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award are designed to build reliability, teamwork, and persistence. For many students, those attributes become as important as grades when applying for apprenticeships or competitive college courses.
Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated through the local authority system, with the academy using the Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council process. Families apply via their home local authority, and applications typically close on 31 October for entry the following September. Offers are communicated on National Offer Day in early March.
For families who like to see the school in action before applying, open events are usually scheduled in early autumn. For example, an open evening was listed on 25 September 2025, 6.00pm to 8.00pm, in the admissions cycle for September 2026 entry. Dates change annually, so it is sensible to treat this as a typical month rather than a permanent fixture.
Because published distance cut-offs and application volumes are not consistently available in the public material, families who are sensitive to travel distance should treat any admissions plan as provisional until they confirm the current year’s criteria and tie-breakers through the coordinated admissions guidance.
75.1%
1st preference success rate
145 of 193 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
172
Offers
172
Applications
582
Pastoral support is presented as a structured programme rather than an add-on. Students are taught about healthy relationships, consent, and online safety, and the safeguarding system is described as training-led with clear reporting pathways and proactive work with external agencies when needed.
On-site early help is part of the model. Counselling and mental health support are referenced as first-line support available on the school site, which can be valuable in an 11 to 16 setting where pressures often peak in Years 10 and 11.
The academy also runs a dedicated reporting route for concerns. The existence of D.A.R.T does not replace normal safeguarding channels, but it can lower the barrier for students to speak up early, which is often what prevents small issues becoming entrenched problems.
This is one of the more distinctive parts of the offer, because it is built into the school’s model rather than presented as optional extras. The house system provides a competitive and participatory framework, including house points and inter-house activities linked to Learning, Service, Leadership and Participation. In practice, that creates more entry points for involvement than the typical sports-team-only approach.
Two named programmes stand out because they are structured, progressive, and skills-based:
Combined Cadet Force. The academy runs an Army section affiliated with the Royal Engineers, with activities including leadership, first aid, navigation, expeditions, field craft, and summer camps. Importantly for parents, it is voluntary and not positioned as a recruitment route into the military.
The Duke of Edinburgh's Award. Students can work towards Bronze, Silver and Gold levels across volunteering, physical, skills and expedition sections, with clear expectations about regular commitment over time.
For many families, the practical implication is simple: students who thrive on structured teams, responsibility and routine will tend to enjoy this approach; students who prefer quieter enrichment may need to find their niche through library leadership, student voice roles, or smaller-group activities.
The academy opens to students from 8.00am, with breakfast items available to purchase from 8.00am to 8.15am. Registration starts at 8.30am.
Finish times vary by day and year group. Years 7 to 10 typically finish at 2.35pm Tuesday to Friday, with electives after 2.35pm. Mondays run to 3.35pm for all students due to an additional lesson period. Year 11 has later finishes Tuesday to Friday, listed as 3.30pm, reflecting intervention and exam preparation.
Travel planning is explicitly encouraged. Walking is presented as the default, with bike racks available, and bus travel referenced as an alternative; families driving are asked to park considerately.
No sixth form. Students will move on after Year 11, so a good post 16 plan matters from Year 10 onwards, especially for specialist pathways such as apprenticeships or competitive college courses.
Timetable variability. A 2.35pm finish for many year groups on most weekdays works well for some households, but it can complicate childcare and transport unless after-school provision or clubs align with family needs.
Catch-up versus breadth. A small group has had a temporarily narrowed key stage 3 curriculum to prioritise literacy and numeracy catch up, which can be the right intervention; parents should ask how quickly students return to the full subject range.
Reading catch-up still developing. The inspection highlighted that the range and depth of support for a minority of pupils who struggle with reading knowledge needed further development, which is worth exploring if your child has known literacy gaps.
Droylsden Academy presents a clear, values-led model, with a structured day and a well-developed character programme that goes beyond generic club lists. The school’s academic outcomes sit in the broad middle of England by ranking, with progress measures suggesting students are moved forward effectively, and safeguarding judged effective at the latest inspection.
Best suited to families who want an 11 to 16 school with strong routines, explicit expectations, and substantial opportunities for leadership and service. Those who need a built-in sixth form, or who want a uniform finish time every weekday, should weigh the practicalities carefully.
The most recent inspection confirmed the academy continues to be a Good school, and safeguarding was judged effective. The culture described is one of high expectations for behaviour and learning, with students reporting that they feel safe and supported.
Applications are made through your home local authority as part of coordinated admissions. The academy uses the Tameside process; the closing date is typically 31 October for entry the following September, with offers made in early March on National Offer Day.
No. Students complete Key Stage 4 and then move on to further education, apprenticeships, training, or employment with training. Planning for post 16 pathways is therefore an important part of Year 10 and Year 11.
Students can arrive from 8.00am, registration is at 8.30am, and finish times depend on day and year group. Many year groups finish at 2.35pm Tuesday to Friday, with electives and catch-up on some afternoons, while Mondays run later.
Two standout programmes are the Combined Cadet Force, with structured training and outdoor and leadership activities, and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award across volunteering, skills, physical and expedition elements. The house system also creates frequent opportunities for participation and student leadership.
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.