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.
Outwood Academy Riverside is a relatively new 11 to 16 secondary in Middlehaven, Middlesbrough, opened in September 2020 as a free school within Outwood Grange Academies Trust.
Its story is closely tied to place and regeneration. The academy has operated from temporary accommodation while a permanent new build in Middlehaven progresses, with official updates indicating a Spring 2027 opening for the new building.
For families, the headline questions are practical as much as philosophical: does the school’s culture feel calm and purposeful, is teaching consistent across subjects, and how confidently does the academy support a genuinely comprehensive intake. On governance and leadership, the current principal is Melissa Brant-Smith, shown in academy governance information with an appointment date of 01 September 2020.
A defining feature here is intentional routine. The day begins with a dedicated Personal Development and Growth slot, before five taught periods, creating a predictable structure that tends to suit pupils who benefit from clear expectations and a steady tempo. The published timetable also makes it easier for families to understand the rhythm of learning time, breaks, and lunch arrangements.
There is a strong “institutional clarity” feel to how the academy describes itself: curriculum planning emphasises sequencing of knowledge and skills year-on-year, and there are explicit references to wider curriculum content such as relationships education and British values. That points to a school trying to build culture deliberately rather than relying on legacy tradition, which makes sense for a school opened in 2020.
The most useful external snapshot is the first full inspection, which rated the academy Good overall in May 2023, with Good judgements across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management.
Published headline exam and performance measures are limited provided for this school, so the best available indicators are those the academy itself presents in its statutory performance section. That table includes Attainment 8 (43.2), the proportion achieving grade 5 or above in English and maths (27%), entry to EBacc (47%), and an EBacc average point score (3.94).
A sensible way to interpret this, particularly for a newer school still building cohorts through to Year 11, is to focus less on a single set of numbers and more on whether teaching routines, attendance culture, literacy, and behaviour consistency are steadily improving. It is also worth noting that the academy describes a programme of additional academic support sessions after school and targeted catch-up interventions, which is often how schools build outcomes over time when cohorts have mixed starting points.
The academy frames its curriculum as planned across a five-year journey, with subject overviews mapped through Key Stage 3 and Key Stage 4, and a clear emphasis on literacy and numeracy as enabling skills.
Two implications matter for parents. First, a tightly planned curriculum usually increases consistency between classes, which can be reassuring if your child needs clarity and repetition to master content. Second, it often goes hand-in-hand with a strong homework and revision expectation, because knowledge-focused approaches rely on recall and practice as well as classroom explanation.
For pupils with higher prior attainment, the academy also sets out an approach for “most able” learners that includes fast-tracking where appropriate and enrichment activities, which may appeal to families looking for stretch without academic selection.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
This is an 11 to 16 school with no sixth form, so transition at 16 matters. The academy’s careers information stresses structured guidance across year groups, encounters with employers, access to labour market information, and personal guidance interviews at key decision points. It also names the Careers Programme Leader (Gemma Gibson) and refers to drop-in careers support and careers software access for students.
The practical implication is that families should expect a “guided pathways” approach for post-16 rather than a default internal progression. When shortlisting, it is worth thinking early about the local college and sixth-form options your child may want at 16, and how well the academy supports applications, taster days, and decisions around vocational versus academic routes.
Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated by Middlesbrough Council via the Common Application Form, rather than direct application to the academy.
For September 2026 intake, Middlesbrough’s published timetable states that online applications open 08 September 2025 and close 31 October 2025. Offers are communicated on 01 March 2026.
For open events, Middlesbrough’s published open evening listings for the September 2026 intake include Outwood Academy Riverside on Tuesday 07 October 2025, 4pm to 6pm. Even if dates change year to year, this gives a useful pattern: open evenings typically fall in early October for Year 6 families.
The academy’s admissions policy for 2026 entry indicates a planned admission number of 180 for Year 7 in September 2026.
100%
1st preference success rate
126 of 126 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
183
Offers
183
Applications
273
Daily structure includes form-time style pastoral delivery through the Personal Development and Growth slot, and the academy also describes a tutor programme designed for academic and pastoral monitoring, with tutor groups named after countries linked to continents.
A helpful indicator of pastoral intent is the way the academy links personal development to assemblies, careers education, and a wider enrichment programme, suggesting a school trying to build confidence, resilience, and readiness for the next stage alongside academic learning.
For a newer secondary, enrichment can be a major differentiator, because it signals how quickly a school is building identity and opportunity beyond lessons.
External commentary in the academy’s statutory information highlights clubs including chess and robotics, alongside sports, plus cultural experiences such as theatre trips, residentials to nearby coastal locations, and visiting speakers.
The strongest implication here is breadth. Chess and robotics, in particular, tend to suit pupils who want quieter, skill-based clubs as well as sport, and they also align well with a knowledge-led academic model where practice, problem-solving, and incremental improvement are valued.
The published school day runs 08:35 to 15:00, with a 20 minute Personal Development and Growth slot at the start of the day and five taught periods, plus break and lunch split across the day. The academy states this totals 32.5 hours in a typical week.
Because this is a secondary school, wraparound care is less commonly a standard offer than in primary, and specific before-school or after-school childcare-style provision is not clearly set out in the core school-day information. Families who need supervision outside the published hours should ask directly about any breakfast provision, supervised study, or after-school arrangements.
On term dates, the academy publishes its own calendar, which matters because academies can differ from local authority maintained-school term dates.
A newer school building outcomes over time. Opened in September 2020, this is still a young institution by local standards. That can mean energy and clarity of purpose, but it can also mean systems and results are still bedding in as cohorts mature.
Permanent site still in progress. Official updates indicate a permanent new build is planned to open in Spring 2027. Families should understand the practical implications of any interim arrangements during the build programme.
No sixth form. Post-16 progression will be to other providers, so it is wise to explore local sixth-form and college pathways early and ask how the academy supports applications and guidance at 16.
Competition for places can vary. Middlesbrough uses a coordinated admissions timetable and oversubscription rules. Even when a school has capacity, preferred schools can be pressured in some years, so families should apply on time and list realistic alternatives.
Outwood Academy Riverside is a young 11 to 16 secondary that has put structure, personal development, and curriculum planning at the centre of its approach. The May 2023 inspection profile presents a solid baseline across education, behaviour, personal development, and leadership.
This will suit families who want a clear daily routine, a school actively building culture and opportunity, and a comprehensive intake supported by consistent systems. It is less suited to families who want an “all-through to 18” journey on one site, or who would prefer a long-established local institution with decades of settled tradition and fully matured outcomes data.
The most recent full inspection in May 2023 judged the school to be Good overall, with Good ratings for quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management. Families should still look closely at day-to-day factors like teaching consistency, attendance culture, and support for individual needs, as these are what drive outcomes over time.:contentReference[oaicite:25]{index=25}
Applications are made through Middlesbrough Council’s coordinated admissions process rather than directly to the academy. For September 2026 intake, applications open 08 September 2025 and close 31 October 2025, with offers released on 01 March 2026.:contentReference[oaicite:26]{index=26}
Middlesbrough’s published open event listing for the September 2026 intake includes an Outwood Academy Riverside open event on Tuesday 07 October 2025, 4pm to 6pm. Dates can change year to year, but this suggests early October is the typical window.:contentReference[oaicite:27]{index=27}
No. The academy serves students aged 11 to 16, so students move to other sixth forms or colleges at 16. The academy publishes a careers programme framework aimed at supporting choices and applications for post-16 routes.:contentReference[oaicite:28]{index=28}
The academy publishes a day running from 08:35 to 15:00, starting with a Personal Development and Growth slot, followed by five periods with break and lunch integrated into the timetable. The published information states 32.5 hours in a typical week.:contentReference[oaicite:29]{index=29}
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