A small setting can change the rhythm of a school day, and that is the central story here. With a modest roll and a focus on students who have struggled to settle elsewhere, Tees Valley College is organised around re engagement, predictable routines, and practical next steps. Teaching groups are kept small, core learning is prioritised, and vocational options sit alongside English and mathematics to help students rebuild confidence and leave with something tangible.
The headline accountability picture is mixed. The March 2024 Ofsted inspection graded overall effectiveness as Requires improvement, with behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management graded Good.
This is an independent provision, but it operates in a way that will feel familiar to families navigating local authority processes. Referrals can come from parents or carers, and placements are commonly commissioned by local authorities, often for students with social, emotional and mental health needs alongside additional learning needs.
The most important cultural feature is the emphasis on calm, structure, and adult support. Formal routines matter because many students arrive having had disrupted schooling, irregular attendance, or prolonged absence from education. The March 2024 inspection describes the setting as safe and welcoming, with adults providing a high degree of support and disruption to learning described as rare.
Daily life is intentionally practical. The environment is set up to support students to manage emotions, settle into learning, and begin to see school as a place they can succeed again. Staff training and safeguarding procedures are made prominent in the documentation the school publishes, and the approach to attendance includes active follow up when students are absent, including welfare checks when contact cannot be made.
Leadership has been through a period of change. The March 2024 inspection record notes a newly appointed head teacher in March 2023 and an interim head teacher in post at the time of inspection, with wider support from the proprietor group. The current head teacher listed on the school’s website and government establishment record is Mr Pete Ewart.
This is not a conventional results driven environment, and it should not be read like a large mainstream secondary. Cohorts are small, student starting points vary widely, and qualifications may include a mix of entry level awards, functional skills, and GCSEs.
Within the FindMySchool GCSE outcomes ranking (based on official data), Tees Valley College is ranked 4,361st in England and 13th in Middlesbrough for GCSE outcomes. This places performance below England average in the ranking distribution.
Where this setting tends to add value is in rebuilding engagement and getting students to a point where accreditation is possible. The March 2024 inspection notes that students can work towards a wide range of qualifications, including GCSEs, and highlights an emphasis on developing independent readers alongside structured support.
For post 16, the school is registered for ages 11 to 19, although the March 2024 inspection notes that there were no post 16 students on roll at that time. Families should treat sixth form availability as cohort dependent and confirm the current position at referral stage.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
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% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum is deliberately weighted towards core skills. English and mathematics are prioritised, with science and citizenship also emphasised, and vocational subjects used to broaden engagement and connect learning to realistic next steps.
Reading is given explicit daily attention. The March 2024 inspection describes a weekly library lesson and daily reading for pleasure sessions, with classrooms supported by book selections linked to subjects. The practical implication for families is that literacy is treated as a gateway skill, not an optional add on, which matters for students who have missed significant schooling.
The area to watch is breadth and sequencing across the wider curriculum. The March 2024 inspection identifies underdeveloped subjects, including gaps in how some foundation subjects are planned and taught, and describes improvement work as early stage. In practice, this means families should expect core learning to be the strongest and most consistent element, while some wider subject coverage may still be bedding in.
Assessment is described as frequent and responsive in most areas, with staff checking understanding and addressing gaps quickly. Where planning is less developed, checks are not as precise, so the quality can feel uneven by subject.
Destinations are best understood as progression to stability rather than a single university pipeline. Careers education is a visible part of the programme, with students learning about the world of work, visiting colleges, and undertaking work experience as part of preparation for life after school.
Vocational routes are a key feature. The March 2024 inspection references programmes including construction, motor vehicle maintenance, and hair and beauty, alongside strong careers guidance. The practical implication is that students who respond better to applied learning can build momentum through hands on study, while still keeping English and mathematics central.
The school also works with a mixture of commissioning routes. Many students are placed by local authorities, and the inspection record notes that mainstream schools may commission part time placements in some cases. This matters because transition planning can involve multiple stakeholders, and families should clarify early who holds responsibility for transport, attendance expectations, and review meetings.
Admissions are referral led and flexible rather than calendar driven. The school sets out a four step process: an initial enquiry, an assessment based on documentation and student needs, placement planning, then ongoing support once a student starts. The school explicitly references commissioning by local authorities, including panel agreement where funding is required.
This structure suits families who need a responsive placement that can be agreed at short notice, for example after a breakdown in mainstream placement. It can be less straightforward for parents expecting a traditional Year 7 or Year 12 application cycle, because the pathway is centred on needs and suitability rather than exam entry thresholds or catchment.
For families comparing options, FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool can be useful for understanding the mainstream landscape nearby, particularly if the referral is intended as a time limited intervention rather than a long term placement.
The pastoral model is built around high support and consistent adult relationships. The March 2024 inspection describes strong support for social, emotional and mental health needs, with students learning over time to understand and manage feelings. That is the core pastoral promise, students should leave more regulated, more confident, and more able to engage with learning than when they arrived.
Attendance is treated as a priority area, which is sensible given the profile of students likely to be referred. The inspection describes prompt follow up for absences and home welfare visits when the school cannot reach parents or carers. For families, this is a marker of accountability and safeguarding minded practice, particularly for students who have a history of persistent absence.
Inspectors confirmed safeguarding arrangements are effective.
In a setting of this size, enrichment is often integrated into the week rather than delivered as a long menu of optional clubs. Trips and visits are used to build confidence, widen experience, and practise social skills in real world contexts. The March 2024 inspection notes that students go on many trips and visits out of school, and that the personal, social and health education programme includes learning about relationships, health, and respect for different faiths and lifestyles, including visits to places of worship.
Practical responsibility is also used as a tool for belonging. The inspection gives a simple but telling example of students managing the rota for clearing away a pool table at the end of break and lunchtime. In a mainstream school this might be trivial, but in an alternative provision it signals trust, routine, and an expectation that students contribute to a shared environment.
The vocational strand also functions as enrichment for many students. Construction, motor vehicle maintenance, and hair and beauty are not just qualification routes, they provide identity and motivation for students who have struggled in purely classroom based models.
Fees data coming soon.
The school publishes clear timings for the day. Breakfast club is available from 8.30am, and lessons run from 9.00am to 2.30pm. Uniform is not required, with students asked to attend in appropriate casual dress.
Given the referral model and the student profile, families should also confirm transport expectations early, including whether transport is provided through a commissioning local authority or is parent arranged. The site is in the Hemlington area of Middlesbrough.
Tees Valley College is an independent school, but it operates primarily through referrals and commissioned placements. The school does not publish a 2025 to 2026 fee schedule on its website pages available for parents and carers. Families should discuss funding routes directly as part of the referral and assessment process, particularly where a placement is being considered by a local authority panel.
Inspection outcome and improvement work. The March 2024 inspection rated overall effectiveness Requires improvement, with curriculum breadth and planning in some subjects identified as areas to strengthen. Families should ask how the wider curriculum has developed since that report, especially for students who will remain longer term.
Sixth form availability can vary. The school is registered to 19, but the March 2024 inspection noted no post 16 students on roll at that time. Confirm current post 16 offer and pathways at referral stage.
This is not a conventional secondary experience. The model is designed for students who have struggled in other settings, which often means smaller peer groups and a more adult led day. That can be exactly right for some students, and a poor fit for others who want a larger, more typical school community.
Tees Valley College is best understood as a targeted, high support setting for students who need a reset and a structured route back into education, training, or employment. Small teaching groups, explicit reading routines, and vocational pathways make it a practical option for students with social, emotional and mental health needs who have not thrived in mainstream schooling. Who it suits most is a student who needs calm routines, close adult support, and an applied curriculum that connects learning to next steps. The main caveat is that the most recent inspection identifies curriculum development work still in progress, so families should probe how consistency across subjects has strengthened since March 2024.
It can be a strong choice for the right student profile, particularly where a smaller, high support setting is needed after difficulties in mainstream education. The most recent inspection in March 2024 judged behaviour, personal development, and leadership as Good, while overall effectiveness and the quality of education were graded Requires improvement. The school’s approach is focused on re engagement, routines, and pathways into qualifications and progression.
The school does not publish a 2025 to 2026 fee schedule on the parent information pages available online. Many placements are commissioned by local authorities, and funding may be agreed through panel processes. Families should confirm the funding route and any parent costs during the referral and assessment stage.
Admissions are referral led rather than tied to a single annual deadline. The published process starts with an initial enquiry, followed by an assessment using documents such as reports and, where applicable, an Education, Health and Care Plan. If the school can meet needs, a placement is arranged, often subject to funding approval where a local authority is commissioning.
Breakfast club is available from 8.30am. Lessons run from 9.00am to 2.30pm. Families arranging transport should confirm drop off and collection expectations as part of placement planning.
The school’s programme includes English and mathematics at its core, with options that can include GCSEs, functional skills, and vocational learning. The most recent inspection references vocational areas such as construction, motor vehicle maintenance, and hair and beauty, alongside careers guidance, work experience, and college visits to support next steps.
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