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SchoolsManchesterWhalley Range 11-18 High School|Best Secondary Schools in Manchester
State School
Whalley Range 11-18 High School
Wilbraham Road, Whalley Range, Manchester, M16 8GW·Manchester·URN: 141264A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary & Post-16
Sixth Form
Girls
Ages 11-18
Religious Character: None
A-levels Ranking
1,978
Academic
1,957
Overall
19
Local
GCSE Ranking
1,009
Academic
1,296
Overall
23
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
2,502
England
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.

Good
7/10
Application Demand
96%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewA-levelsGCSEOxbridgeOfstedApplication 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Whalley Range 11-18 High School Review 2026: South Manchester's Rising Comprehensive

At a Glance

Whalley Range has travelled a remarkable arc. When the doors opened at the present Neo-Georgian building on Wilbraham Road in 1939, this was an elite grammar school serving 370 girls from Manchester's professional families. Today it stands as something far more complex and important: a multicultural state comprehensive serving over 1,600 young women from some of England's most economically disadvantaged postcodes. That transformation is visible in the numbers. In 2022 the school earned its Ofsted rating of Good, following nearly three decades of steady improvement. With GCSE results positioning the school around the top quarter nationally (FindMySchool ranking: 1,009th out of 3,895 academically), Whalley Range has become a genuine gateway to opportunity. It sits central to greater Manchester's education landscape as part of the newly formed Greater Manchester Education Trust alongside Levenshulme High School and Parrs Wood High School.

Character & Atmosphere

Step through the gates and the first impression is scale. Nearly 1,700 students move through this campus daily, alongside 200 staff. Yet the school sustains an atmosphere that feels intimate and purposeful. The Victorian core of the original building, extended significantly in 1962 and 1997, creates a sense of continuity. Walking through corridors, conversation is respectful. Uniform is worn properly. The school expects and models discipline.

The current leadership under Mr Michael Lea, who took over as Academy Headteacher in September 2024, continues a vision of educational inclusion without compromise on standards. The school motto, drawn from its history, encapsulates the aspiration: "Striving to educate, inspire and empower young women to be the next generation of leaders." This is not hollow rhetoric. The school actively courts applications from girls with every starting point, celebrates the fact that 98% of pupils speak English as an additional language, and has built a culture where diversity is genuinely understood as an asset rather than a barrier.

The school's designation as a Sports College from 2007 onwards remains visible in everything from the quality of PE provision to the way physical activity is woven into pastoral care. The Manchester Mystics basketball team trains here. Students stream into the sports halls throughout the day. Yet sport does not dominate the character. The investment in sixth form facilities, the specialist business and enterprise heritage (the school was designated a Business and Enterprise Hub for the North West from 2002), and the serious academic expectations create a more rounded identity.

Results

GCSE Performance

In the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset, the school achieved an Attainment 8 score of 52.1, reflecting strong academic outcomes across the board. An average Progress 8 score of +0.79 places pupils markedly above their expected progress trajectories, indicating the school is successfully adding value to students' starting points.

The school ranks 1,009th out of 3,895 schools academically in England for GCSE performance (FindMySchool ranking), placing it around the top quarter of schools nationally. Within Manchester, it ranks 21st on the local secondary table. These figures represent substantial and consistent progress from previous years.

The English Baccalaureate shows 34.6% of pupils achieved grade 5 or above across the core EBacc subjects (English, mathematics, sciences, languages, history and geography), and 66.5% were entered for the EBacc. This reflects deliberate curriculum design that pushes girls toward the academic foundations needed for competitive degree courses.

A-Level Performance

The sixth form, now established as Whalley Range Sixth Form College, has grown substantially in recent years through a deliberate strategy of offering both advanced academic and vocational pathways. In the 2025 A-level dataset, the sixth form recorded 168 exam entries, with 10% achieving A*/A and 30% achieving A*–B.

At A-level overall, 30% of grades achieved A*–B, placing the school below the national midpoint (FindMySchool academic ranking: 1,978th out of 2,549 schools in England). Some 10% achieved A*/A grades across all subjects.

The sixth form pass rate stands at 95% for Level 3 qualifications, with BTEC Level 3 achieving a 99% pass rate. The average BTEC grade is Distinction, demonstrating that vocational pathways deliver genuine achievement alongside their academic counterparts.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

33.33%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

University Destinations & Pathways

In 2024, 66% of sixth form leavers progressed to university, with the remainder entering further education (2%), apprenticeships (3%), or employment (7%). The school has particular strengths in supporting students toward competitive degree courses. Oxford secured one of the year's headline success stories, with a student progressing to read Medicine at the university. Beyond Oxbridge, students progressed to a range of universities reflecting their interests and grades, from local institutions to universities across England.

The school's investment in careers guidance, partnerships with local universities, and deliberate curation of sixth form subject offerings (including BTECs in Health and Social Care, Applied Science, and ICT) means pathways are truly varied. This breadth is deliberate: not every student needs a traditional academic A-level route, and the school refuses to treat vocational progression as second-tier.

Teaching & Learning

Teaching follows a structure that places knowledge acquisition at the centre. Teachers demonstrate strong subject expertise, particularly in STEM subjects where the school invests in continuous professional development. The curriculum is ambitious and deliberately broad. Students in Key Stages 4 and 5 choose from a substantial range of options, yet all are expected to engage with the core foundations of literacy and numeracy alongside their chosen specialisms.

The school's heritage as a Business and Enterprise specialist continues to shape learning. Project-based work, enterprise activities, and real-world application feature across the curriculum. Year 11 students have undertaken live project work with external organisations. Sixth formers developing advanced assignments benefit from mentoring that mirrors university-level research practices.

Assessment remains an identified area for development. Ofsted and internal observation have flagged that some teachers miss opportunities to verify understanding in real time, though the school has implemented new tracking systems to strengthen this practice. What is consistent across classrooms is high expectation. Teachers do not lower expectations based on prior attainment; they adjust pedagogy instead.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:7/10Good

Quality of Education

Good

Behaviour & Attitudes

Good

Personal Development

Good

Leadership & Management

Good

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

Beyond the Classroom

Sports: From Grassroots to Competitive Excellence

The school's Sports College designation reflects genuine institutional commitment. Three sports halls, a fitness suite, and access to outdoor pitches and courts create infrastructure for diverse athletic activity. Girls participate in netball, basketball, football, athletics, volleyball, badminton, table tennis, and gymnastics. Many teams compete at borough and county level.

The Manchester Mystics basketball club trains at the school's stadium facility, giving girls direct access to a competitive pathway from age 12 through to adult level. FLAVA Netball, a competitive Manchester netball club, operates from the school grounds. Hough End Griffins, a community junior football club recognised as an FA Charter Standard Club, provides girls' football opportunities. Sale Harriers Athletics Club and Trafford Metro Swimming Club use the school's facilities or partner venues, extending pathways in endurance sports. The City of Manchester Institute of Gymnastics operates sessions for all abilities.

The school holds the School Games Platinum Award for 2023/24-2024/25, a designation reflecting sustained high-quality provision and participation in competitive inter-school and community sport. Thursday afternoon activities timetables reveal dedicated coaching in volleyball, badminton, trampolining, and climbing. The Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme runs to Gold level, with girls across all year groups engaged in expedition planning and adventurous activity.

Creative Arts: Drama and Music

Drama thrives on campus. Student productions occur throughout the year, utilising school facilities alongside external venues. The school invests in student-led direction and production design, meaning girls gain real experience in all aspects of theatre. Parents report the quality of these productions rivals some youth theatre companies.

Music provision includes ensemble work and private tuition. The school benefits from musicians within the staff body and strong partnerships with Manchester music providers. Specialist music teaching at GCSE and A-level ensures girls can pursue music seriously, whether as a creative pathway or academic study.

Clubs and Societies

The school operates an extensive extracurricular clubs timetable throughout the year. Named clubs and activities available to students include: the Debate Society, the Student Council (providing leadership opportunities), the Creative iMedia Club (where Year 11 students worked with professional drone videographers on media projects), the Robotics Club, STEM enrichment groups, Art Club, Photography Club, Knitting and Crafts Society, Film Club, the Reader's Club, the School Newspaper, the Business Enterprise Club, and the Young Leaders programme. The school also hosts a mentoring scheme pairing sixth formers with younger students.

Languages clubs reflect the school's multilingual population, with Urdu, Arabic, and Spanish conversation groups running throughout the week. Some clubs are student-initiated and student-run, meaning girls develop leadership from the outset.

Facilities & Infrastructure

Beyond the sports facilities, the school benefits from dedicated spaces for specific learning. Science laboratories are equipped for practical work across biology, chemistry, and physics. Computing facilities include specialist ICT rooms where BTEC Applied Science and ICT qualifications are delivered. The Creative Media suite hosts the equipment used for media projects. Library provision is substantial; the school invests in text stock alongside digital resources.

The sixth form operates from dedicated facilities on the Wilbraham Road campus, providing a distinct college environment that students report feels different from the main school, fostering independence and university-ready study habits.

Admissions

All applications are coordinated through Manchester City Council and follow standard LA procedures. The school is non-selective, meaning places are allocated according to the council's admissions criteria (typically distance and siblings, with looked-after children and those with EHCPs prioritised). For 2027-2028 Year 7 entry, Manchester's coordinated scheme opens secondary application information on 1 July 2026, closes applications on 31 October 2026, and releases offers on 1 March 2027.

Entry to the sixth form is separate and does not guarantee students already at the school automatic progression. Sixth form entry requirements are published by the school and align broadly with GCSE performance thresholds, though girls are considered holistically. The vast majority of external sixth form entrants are successful, and the school actively recruits across Manchester.

Application Demand

Last distance offered:
All offered

Previous Year (2024/25 Entry)

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
0.876 miles

Applications

598

Total received

Places Offered

252

Subscription Rate

2.4x

Applications per place

Practical Information

The school day runs from 8:20am to 2:45pm Monday to Friday. Transport links are excellent; the school sits on major bus routes and is accessible via Metrolink. Parking provision exists (160 spaces) though most families rely on public transport or walking. The school provides information on student travel passes including the Our Pass and Igo Card schemes, which offer free travel for young people across Greater Manchester.

Wraparound care (breakfast and after-school clubs) operates during term time, supporting families with early departures or later finish times due to work commitments. Free school meals are available to eligible families; the school has invested in catering facilities and the school restaurant operates a balanced menu approach.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,650
  • Number of pupils: 1,647

Things to Consider

Oversubscription at main school entry. Year 7 entry can be competitive, and distance from the school is the primary factor post-siblings and looked-after children. Families should verify current distance thresholds with Manchester City Council and work to the 2027-2028 timetable: applications close on 31 October 2026 and offers are released on 1 March 2027.

Sixth form transition. The school does not guarantee internal sixth form places; students must reapply and meet entry criteria. This means students cannot assume continuation into post-16 education at Whalley Range. The school actively manages this transition with sensitivity, but families should be aware of the formal requirement.

Diversity as lived reality, not abstract concept. The school's setting in one of Manchester's most ethnically diverse postcodes means 66% of pupils speak English as an additional language. This is a genuine strength for tolerance and understanding, but it also means curriculum and teaching sometimes move quickly through linguistic and cultural complexity. Students new to English benefit from support, but intensive EAL intervention sits alongside mainstream provision rather than replacing it.

Progress from below the national average. Many pupils arrive at the school in Year 7 working significantly below age-related expectations due to their starting points. While the school's value-added measures confirm strong progress, some families seeking an "acceleration" model rather than a "catch-up" model might find the pace of initial GCSE years focused on foundational skills.

The Verdict

Whalley Range is a school that works because it has committed to being genuinely inclusive without becoming academically modest. An Ofsted rating of Good, GCSE results around the top quarter nationally (FindMySchool academic ranking: 1,009th out of 3,895), and strong value-added progress represent outcomes that should be celebrated, not apologised for. The school succeeds with the cohort in front of it, adding value that rivals selective schools. It is best suited to families who believe in diversity as an educational good, who want their daughter challenged academically whilst supported pastorally, and who are seeking a school rooted in its community yet oriented toward genuine aspiration. For families living within reach of Manchester schools seeking a comprehensive with genuine strength, Whalley Range deserves serious consideration.

FAQs

Yes. The school holds an Ofsted rating of Good, awarded in April 2022. GCSE Attainment 8 is 52.1, and the school ranks around the top quarter of schools in England for GCSE results (FindMySchool academic ranking: 1,009th out of 3,895 nationally). Progress 8 scores of +0.79 confirm students make above-average progress from their starting points.

All applications to Whalley Range 11-18 High School are made through Manchester City Council's coordinated admissions scheme, not directly to the school. The school is non-selective and girls-only. Admission is based on distance from the school, with looked-after children and siblings prioritised. For 2027-2028 entry, applications close on 31 October 2026 and offers are released on 1 March 2027. Families should verify current distance thresholds with the council.

No. Sixth form entry is a separate admissions process. Students must reapply and meet the school's entry criteria, which typically require GCSE grades aligned to their chosen A-level or vocational pathway. However, the school's GCSE pass rate and consistent sixth form recruitment mean most students achieve this.

Whalley Range Sixth Form offers a broad range of Advanced Level courses alongside BTEC and vocational qualifications. In the 2025 A-level dataset, it recorded 168 exam entries, with 10% at A*/A and 30% at A*–B. The school emphasises breadth of choice to support students' university aspiration and careers planning. Parents should visit the sixth form pages or contact the school directly for a full subject list, as this changes year to year.

The school holds School Games Platinum Award status and operates as a designated Sports College. Facilities include three sports halls, a fitness suite, and access to outdoor courts and pitches. Teams compete in netball, basketball, football, athletics, volleyball, badminton, and table tennis. External clubs including Manchester Mystics Basketball and FLAVA Netball train on-site. The Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme operates to Gold level. The PE extracurricular timetable offers coaching in specialist areas including volleyball, badminton, trampolining, and climbing.

Yes. Whalley Range 11-18 High School joined the Greater Manchester Education Trust (GMET) when it became an academy in September 2014. GMET is a newly established trust operating schools across Greater Manchester including Levenshulme High School, Parrs Wood High School, and The East Manchester Academy. The school maintains its distinct identity whilst benefitting from trust-wide support and shared professional development.

The school teaches modern languages across the curriculum. At GCSE, Spanish is offered as a core language subject. The sixth form offers Arabic and Urdu A-levels, reflecting the linguistic diversity of the student population. Additional language clubs and conversation groups run throughout the year.

The school serves a genuinely multicultural cohort, with 98% of pupils identifying as ethnic minorities and 66% speaking English as an additional language. The school celebrates this diversity as a defining strength and has invested in support systems (speech and language therapy, EAL support, cultural liaison) to ensure all students thrive. This diversity is lived reality rather than abstract commitment.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Wilbraham Road, Whalley Range, Manchester, M16 8GW
01618619727
www.wrhs1118.co.uk
Michael Lea
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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
7/10
Good
Whalley Range 11-18 High School
#1,534
State · Secondary & Post-16

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Good
A-Level
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GCSE
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Oxbridge
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Gender
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Age Range
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Religious Character
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Sixth Form
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A-Level
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GCSE
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Oxbridge
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Gender
Mixed
Age Range
11-18+ years
Religious Character
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GCSE
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A-Level
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GCSE
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Oxbridge
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Age Range
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Religious Character
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Grammar
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