A large, popular 11 to 18 secondary in Rainworth, with a clear identity shaped by its house system, its Sport and Performing Arts specialism, and a sixth form that positions responsibility and leadership as part of the deal. Capacity is 1,250, yet recent roll figures sit above that, which matters for families weighing class sizes, movement around site, and competition for places.
The current headteacher is Mrs Carey Ayres, who took up post in September 2020.
Ofsted’s inspection on 12 and 13 November 2024 graded Quality of education, Behaviour and attitudes, Personal development, Leadership and management, and Sixth form provision as Good.
The school’s public-facing language centres on pride, belonging, and a calm, ordered day. That is reflected structurally in the house system: each house contains tutor groups across Years 7 to 11, runs weekly house assemblies, and drives inter-house competitions through an Inter-House cup and a points structure that rewards effort, helpfulness, homework, and contribution in clubs as well as sport. For students who respond well to visible routines and recognition, this can make expectations feel concrete rather than abstract.
A distinctive sixth form feature is the “Red Shirt” role, described by the school as a paid lunchtime position that builds work habits and confidence, and gives older students a visible leadership presence. Older Ofsted reporting also links Red Shirts to a structured leadership programme through the sport specialism, suggesting it has been part of the culture for some time rather than a passing initiative.
The school sits within East Midlands Education Trust (EMET). In practice, this matters most in how leadership capacity, curriculum development, and behaviour systems are supported beyond the school itself. The latest inspection notes trust oversight and support, alongside local governance arrangements.
At GCSE level, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 44.7, with an EBacc average point score of 3.98 and a Progress 8 score of -0.02.
On the FindMySchool ranking for GCSE outcomes, it is ranked 2,143rd in England and 2nd in Mansfield. This reflects solid performance, in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile).
At A-level, 4.36% of grades were A*, and 45.82% were A* to B. Compared with the England A* to B average of 47.2%, this sits close to the England picture.
On the FindMySchool ranking for A-level outcomes, it is ranked 1,396th in England and 3rd in Mansfield, again aligning with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile).
The implication for families is straightforward: this is not a narrow, exam-only model, but a broadly comprehensive offer where outcomes are steady and the sixth form remains a meaningful route for students who want a local post-16 option with structured support.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
45.82%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum is described in official reporting as broad and balanced, with an expectation that subject curriculums identify key knowledge clearly and build learning over time, even though there is recognised inconsistency between subjects. That matters for families because it suggests strong practice in many areas, with some variation depending on department and year group.
Support for students with special educational needs and disabilities is framed as inclusive, with the aim that students learn the same curriculum as peers with appropriate adaptation. The school’s SEND information also positions provision around the four broad areas of need, and directs families to a published SEND information report for detail.
Reading is also flagged as a developing whole-school priority, including targeted support for students who need help with fluency.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
The school website does not publish a full destinations breakdown with Russell Group or headline university counts. In the most recent available cohort data (2023 to 2024 leavers, cohort size 73), 47% progressed to university, 34% entered employment, 4% started apprenticeships, and 3% progressed to further education.
Oxbridge outcomes are modest in scale but still present: across the measurement period provided, there were two Cambridge applications and one Cambridge acceptance.
In a large comprehensive, even small numbers can be meaningful because they indicate that appropriate guidance and academic stretch is available for the highest-attaining students, without making Oxbridge the defining cultural norm.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 50%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
—
Offers
Year 7 entry is through coordinated admissions, with the school advising families to apply via the local authority route and to pay close attention to deadlines. The school states that the deadline for applications to a Nottinghamshire school is 31 October, with allocations notified on 1 March.
A key local feature is the “Family of Schools” relationship. The determined admission arrangements for 2026 to 2027 reference linked primary schools and give priority within the oversubscription criteria to children on roll at those schools by the closing date, alongside looked-after and previously looked-after children, siblings, and distance.
The same document also sets out specialist places: up to 20 places may be allocated to students who can show aptitude for sport or performing arts, supported through a supplementary form and assessment process.
Open events are framed around a School in Action Evening in September for prospective Year 7 families, with the date typically published on the website from July and no booking requirement stated.
For families trying to be realistic about chances, FindMySchool’s Map Search is useful for sense-checking distance and local alternatives, particularly where schools use proximity as a tie-break after priority categories.
Applications
517
Total received
Places Offered
242
Subscription Rate
2.1x
Apps per place
The pastoral model is built around tutoring and houses, with leadership opportunities embedded through house roles and councils, plus the visible sixth form layer. The school also runs a pre-owned uniform scheme, which can help families manage costs over time, particularly in a large school where uniform expectations are clearly enforced.
The latest Ofsted report also confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
The extracurricular picture has two clear pillars: structured leadership and activity linked to the school’s specialism.
First, leadership. The house structure creates routine opportunities for students to contribute, and the sixth form Red Shirt role is a practical bridge into work-style responsibility. Students also reference EPQ support, extended study help, and staff availability as part of the sixth form experience, which is a useful signal for families who want a local sixth form that does more than timetable lessons.
Second, the Sport and Performing Arts specialism. Admissions arrangements formalise this through the specialist aptitude route, and the school also operates a sports venue used for a range of activities, including boccia, archery, and martial arts sessions, indicating facilities that can support both school and community sport.
The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award programme is unusually clearly explained and structured. It is a Directly Licensed Centre, offers Bronze in Year 9, Silver in Year 10, and Gold in Year 12, and sets out the expedition training and practice pattern in detail. For students who want a framework that rewards persistence and organisation, DofE can be a strong fit, particularly when combined with the sixth form’s leadership culture.
The school day runs from 8:28am to 3:05pm, with five taught periods and a lunch break from 1:20pm to 2:05pm.
Catering operates through a cashless system, with hydration points across the site.
Transport options, including any school bus arrangements, are signposted through the school’s parent information area, but routes and eligibility can change year to year, so families should verify the current position before relying on a particular service.
Competition for places. The school describes itself as oversubscribed in most year groups. Families should plan early, keep an eye on deadlines, and avoid assuming a place without checking criteria and the local picture.
Specialist admissions route. Up to 20 specialist places for sport or performing arts aptitude can be attractive, but it adds an extra layer of process and evidence. Families pursuing this route should prepare documentation well in advance.
Variation between subjects. Official reporting highlights strong practice alongside inconsistency in how some subjects sequence and check key knowledge. This can matter for students who need very predictable teaching routines across all subjects.
Large-school realities. Being above capacity can bring energy and choice, but it can also mean busier corridors, higher demand for optional activities, and less flexibility in timetabling.
A good, mainstream secondary with a clear pastoral structure, a practical leadership strand in the sixth form, and a specialism that influences admissions as well as enrichment. It suits families who want a local 11 to 18 school where expectations are explicit, students can earn responsibility through houses and sixth form roles, and post-16 stays on site rather than requiring a college move. Admission is the obstacle; the education is well organised once secured.
The most recent inspection graded all key areas as Good, including sixth form provision. Academic outcomes sit around the middle of England schools on the FindMySchool measures, which is consistent with a stable comprehensive model rather than an extreme high-pressure results culture.
The school states that it is oversubscribed in most year groups. For Year 7, families should apply by the stated deadline and understand how priorities such as linked primary schools, siblings, and distance apply in the determined arrangements.
The school states that the deadline for applications to a Nottinghamshire school is 31 October, with allocations notified on 1 March. Families should still check the local authority timetable each year, as coordinated admissions dates are set nationally but operational details can vary.
Yes. The sixth form is positioned as a continuation of the school’s leadership culture, including roles such as Red Shirts and a clear expectation that older students act as role models. Leavers data shows progression to university, employment, apprenticeships, and further education in the most recent cohort available.
The determined admission arrangements allow up to 20 places for students who can show aptitude for sport or performing arts, using a supplementary form and an assessment process that allocates places to the highest scores. This route is separate from the standard distance and feeder priorities, so families should read the criteria carefully.
Get in touch with the school directly
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