This is a school that has been through significant change and is now on firmer ground. The most recent inspection judged the school as Good across all key areas, including education quality, behaviour and leadership. That matters for families weighing up stability and day to day routines, particularly after a period when many local perceptions were shaped by older history rather than current practice.
Performance data paints a tougher picture. GCSE outcomes sit below England average on the FindMySchool ranking, and the Progress 8 score signals that, on average, pupils are not yet making the progress expected from their starting points. What makes the school interesting is the tension between those two realities, a better verified quality baseline, and results that still need time, attendance improvements, and curriculum momentum to catch up.
Expectations are a central theme. Behaviour routines and clear boundaries are presented as a deliberate choice, designed to protect learning for everyone. The published behaviour approach uses both sanctions and support, and the language is direct about the right to learn in a calm, purposeful setting.
A notable strand running through the school’s published information is the emphasis on ambition and personal development alongside academic learning. The curriculum framing highlights literacy, oracy, numeracy and cultural enrichment as pillars that sit across subjects rather than being treated as bolt-ons. That usually signals a school trying to standardise classroom practice, so that pupils experience a more consistent approach as they move from subject to subject.
Leadership information requires careful interpretation because different official documents reflect different moments in time. The current headteacher listed on the government Get Information About Schools service is Mr Damian McGeehin. The most recent inspection report records a different leadership structure at the time of inspection, which suggests the school has continued to evolve since then.
GCSE performance sits in the lower tier nationally on the FindMySchool ranking. Ranked 3,468th in England and 16th in Milton Keynes for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking, based on official data), this places the school below England average overall. The Progress 8 score is -1.02, which indicates pupils made less progress than their peers nationally across eight subjects.
Attainment 8 is 36.3. The English Baccalaureate indicators are also currently weak, with an average EBacc points score of 3.16 and 3.3% achieving grades 5 or above across the EBacc suite.
For parents, the practical implication is straightforward. The school’s verified quality improvements need to translate into better attendance, stronger recall across subjects, and more consistent classroom checking, because those are the building blocks that normally lift exam outcomes over time.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum story is broadly knowledge-led, with an explicit focus on building secure understanding over time and using practice to help pupils remember more. Where this approach tends to work best is when routines are consistent across departments, so pupils do not have to relearn expectations every lesson.
The most recent inspection evidence supports strengths in subject expertise and clarity of explanation, particularly for how teachers explain new ideas and support pupils with special educational needs and disabilities. Reading is treated as a whole-school priority, with regular reading embedded beyond English lessons and extra help for pupils who need to catch up.
The key development area, again grounded in the latest inspection evidence, is consistency. In some subjects, checking for understanding and revisiting earlier learning is not yet reliable enough, which can leave gaps that later become barriers in GCSE courses.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
As an 11 to 16 school, progression planning is important because pupils transfer out for post-16 courses. Families should expect the school’s careers programme and guidance to carry real weight, especially for pupils who need help to understand the range of routes after Year 11, including sixth forms, colleges, and technical pathways.
The latest inspection evidence highlights that pupils value the careers programme and that it supports awareness of study and employment options. The implication for families is that Year 9 options and Key Stage 4 choices should be approached thoughtfully, not just as a GCSE selection exercise, but as part of a longer plan for post-16 education or training.
Year 7 applications are co-ordinated by Milton Keynes City Council as part of the standard secondary transfer process. For September 2026 entry, the published timetable sets a national closing date of 31 October 2025, with offers issued on 2 March 2026.
The school’s admission authority status follows the typical academy model, with the council co-ordinating the process and schools applying their oversubscription criteria to rank applicants. If you are considering this school, it is sensible to read the Milton Keynes secondary admissions materials early in the autumn term and to attend an open event if available, as secondary open events in the area often run in September and October.
No verified “last distance offered” figure is available here, so families should avoid assuming proximity will be decisive. If distance becomes relevant, the FindMySchoolMap Search can help you sense-check your home location against the school and nearby alternatives before you commit to a moving plan.
Applications
118
Total received
Places Offered
88
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
Safeguarding is a clear baseline for any parent decision. The latest inspection confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective. Beyond that, the personal, social and health education curriculum is described as comprehensive, including online safety and emerging risks, which is especially relevant in a school serving early adolescence.
The school also positions wellbeing as a whole-school responsibility, linking safety, confidence and learning readiness. What matters in practice is follow-through, so it is worth asking, during open events, how pupils access support, how concerns are escalated, and how the school works with families when attendance or behaviour begins to drift.
Extracurricular provision is one of the more concrete ways pupils build belonging and routine, particularly in an 11 to 16 setting. The school’s published personal development activity listings include badminton, rounders, athletics, swimming, basketball, cricket and street dance across different days and times. There is also a football programme listed for Years 7 to 10, delivered on a 3G pitch.
A distinctive local feature is the on-site Leon Leisure Centre offer. The leisure centre information references a sports hall and a 4G astroturf with updated LED lighting, plus swimming provision and recognised training credentials connected to swimming and lifesaving standards. For families, the implication is practical: facilities that are used for community sport often become an asset for fixtures, clubs, and maintaining activity through winter months.
If you are shortlisting schools locally, the FindMySchool Comparison Tool on the Local Hub pages can help you compare results and admissions context side-by-side, which is often more useful than reading any one school in isolation.
The published school day structure shows tutor time beginning at 08:40, Period 1 starting at 08:55, and the final period ending at 15:15, followed by after-school clubs running to 16:15. Breakfast club is also referenced as part of the daily routine.
For travel, rail users often look first at Bletchley station as a nearby hub in the south of Milton Keynes. Local bus routing includes a stop named for the school, which is helpful for pupils travelling across the area.
Progress measures are currently weak. A Progress 8 score of -1.02 indicates pupils, on average, have not yet been achieving the progress expected from their starting points. Families should ask what has changed since the latest inspection, and how progress is tracked subject by subject.
Attendance remains a significant issue. The latest inspection evidence points to persistent absence levels for a notable group of pupils, which can limit achievement even when teaching quality is improving.
EBacc participation and outcomes are low. If your child is likely to follow an academic pathway that includes a modern foreign language, it is worth asking how the school is expanding take-up and support.
Post-16 transition is part of the plan. With no sixth form, families should factor in likely destinations after Year 11 and what guidance is provided across Years 9 to 11.
Sir Herbert Leon Academy is best understood as a school that has stabilised its quality foundations and routines, with verified strengths in behaviour culture, safeguarding, and clearer classroom practice, but where exam outcomes and progress indicators still lag behind England norms. It suits families who want a structured 11 to 16 setting with improving consistency, strong behaviour expectations, and a practical enrichment offer linked to substantial on-site sports facilities. The main challenge is ensuring your child’s attendance and engagement remain strong enough to benefit fully from the school’s improving classroom experience.
The most recent inspection judged the school as Good across all key areas, and safeguarding is confirmed as effective. Performance data is weaker, including a Progress 8 score of -1.02, so families should view the school as improving in quality, with outcomes still catching up.
Applications for September 2026 entry are co-ordinated by Milton Keynes City Council. The published timetable sets the closing date as 31 October 2025, with offers released on 2 March 2026.
On the FindMySchool ranking for GCSE outcomes (based on official data), the school is ranked 3,468th in England and 16th in Milton Keynes. The Progress 8 score is -1.02, which indicates below-average progress overall.
No. The age range is 11 to 16, so students move on to sixth form or college providers after Year 11.
The school’s published activities include options such as badminton, basketball, swimming, cricket and street dance, plus football on a 3G pitch. Facilities are supported by the on-site leisure centre, which includes sports and swimming provision.
Get in touch with the school directly
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