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.
A secondary school that combines a traditional Church of England identity with the practicalities families care about most, calm routines, clear expectations, and plenty for students to do beyond lessons. The Priory sits on the west side of Dorking and is now an academy within Enlighten Learning Trust, following conversion in May 2024.
For parents, two features stand out quickly. First, demand is real, with 279 applications for 126 offers in the most recent admissions here, which equates to 2.21 applications per place. That shapes the admissions experience, because planning matters. Second, the school’s co curricular life is unusually tangible for a non selective 11 to 16. A 25m swimming pool, named clubs such as Greenpower, and a published enrichment timetable mean students who thrive when school offers structure plus variety will find plenty to latch onto.
The current headteacher is Mrs Jo Trimnell, in post from 01 September 2020, with a longer leadership history at the school before that.
The Priory’s identity is explicitly shaped by its Church of England foundation, but it is framed in inclusive language aimed at the whole community. The school presents its values as wisdom, hope, dignity, and community collaboration, and ties these to the idea of educating students for life in all its fullness.
That matters day to day because it influences how the school explains expectations. When values are used as behavioural and pastoral language, students tend to get a clearer sense of what “good choices” look like in practice, not just what rules they must follow. The house points system, visible on the website, reinforces the idea that contribution and consistency are noticed.
Leadership continuity is another stabilising feature. Mrs Trimnell’s biography on the governors page places her at the school since 2013, progressing through senior roles before becoming headteacher. For families, that typically translates into fewer sudden changes in direction, and a clearer institutional memory about what works in this context.
A further layer is the trust move. Since 01 May 2024 the school has been part of Enlighten Learning Trust, which includes other local Church of England schools. For parents, trust membership is usually most visible through policy alignment, shared professional development, and governance structures, rather than immediate changes to classroom experience.
There is enough published data here to sketch the academic picture, but not enough to claim a full set of headline attainment patterns by grade. The most useful indicators available are the school’s Attainment 8 score and Progress 8 measure. Attainment 8 is 39.8, while Progress 8 is -0.59. A negative Progress 8 figure indicates that, on average, students made less progress than pupils with similar prior attainment nationally.
This is where parents should be careful to separate three questions.
What is the overall attainment profile, for the full cohort and for disadvantaged students.
How consistent outcomes are across subjects, especially English and mathematics.
Whether the school’s culture and curriculum are a good fit for a particular child’s learning style.
The third question is often decisive. A student who responds well to clear routines, strong pastoral scaffolding, and a broad range of structured clubs may do particularly well in a school that can keep them engaged beyond lessons. Conversely, a child who needs rapid academic acceleration may require families to probe stretch pathways and how the school supports high prior attainers in practice, for example via setting, extension, and enrichment.
Ofsted’s most recent full inspection of the predecessor school, in March 2019, judged the school to be Good.
The most reliable way to understand teaching at The Priory is to look at what it publishes about curriculum intent and how it structures learning across key stages. The school’s curriculum pages emphasise clear sequencing and subject clarity, and it explicitly references a tutor programme plus chaplaincy offer as part of its wider provision.
Support for literacy and access also appears in practical terms, not just broad statements. The SEND page highlights homework support clubs, transition support from key stage 2 into key stage 3, and subject glossaries expected across year groups. That suggests an environment where students are repeatedly supported to build the vocabulary and routines that make secondary learning manageable, particularly for those who can find organisation and independent study challenging at 11.
For families who care about applied learning, Design Technology is a useful example of the school’s approach. The Greenpower club is a concrete, named offer where students build and race electric vehicles, which tends to develop teamwork, iterative problem solving, and pride in tangible output, especially for students who learn best by making.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Because The Priory is 11 to 16, the key destination transition is post 16. The school signposts local post 16 routes, including nearby sixth form and college options. It is sensible to treat this as a positive, because clear guidance helps Year 11 students and parents plan early, particularly where demand for certain courses is high.
For parents assessing “next steps” strength, ask the school for practical destination guidance, for example the range of pathways pursued, support for apprenticeships and technical routes, and how the school helps students choose realistically. Also ask how it supports students who want highly competitive pathways, such as medicine and dentistry. The careers policy references alignment with the Gatsby Benchmarks, which is a useful framework for judging whether careers provision is systematic rather than ad hoc.
This is an oversubscribed school with 279 applications and 126 offers, and an applications per place ratio of 2.21. That means families should plan around deadlines and be realistic about outcomes, especially if the local area has multiple popular secondary options.
For Year 7 entry in 2026, the school’s transition information page sets out a clear timeline. It indicates applications should be submitted via Surrey’s admissions system by 24 October 2025, with a final deadline of 31 October 2025. National Offer Day is stated as 03 March 2026, and acceptance is due by 16 March 2026.
The practical implication is straightforward. If you are choosing between multiple Surrey schools, use FindMySchool’s Map Search to understand travel and practical distance, then cross check with the local authority’s published admissions guidance for the year of entry. Deadlines and criteria are unforgiving when a school is oversubscribed.
100%
1st preference success rate
83 of 83 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
126
Offers
126
Applications
279
The school is explicit about wellbeing as a priority, and it displays wellbeing related accreditation logos on the homepage. On its own, a badge is not proof of quality, but it does suggest leadership attention to mental health, staff training, and student support structures.
More importantly, pastoral systems appear embedded into the daily structure, with tutor time at both ends of the day, plus a consistent timetable that supports predictability. For many 11 to 16 students, especially those who find secondary transition daunting, that regular rhythm is a protective factor.
Faith based support is also part of the picture. A SIAMS inspection in February 2023 provides external evaluation of the school’s Church of England distinctiveness, and it is worth reading alongside Ofsted when you want a rounded view of ethos and values in action.
This is a genuine strength of the school, because it is described with specifics. The parents’ page references an on site 25m swimming pool and names clubs and activities such as rugby, trampolining, table tennis, steel and African drumming, rock band, plus groups for lego, craft, and chess. These details matter, because they show that extracurricular is not a generic promise but a set of practical options that different students can actually choose from.
The enrichment programme is also supported by published timetables. The Extra Curricular and Enrichment Timetable for 2025 to 26 includes named activities such as History Film Club and Drama Club, which is useful evidence that there is a routine offer rather than one off events.
The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is another distinctive pillar. The school’s own materials state that, since 2011, it has achieved 633 Bronze Awards, 274 Silver Awards, and 46 Gold Awards. That is a large participation footprint for a mainstream secondary and implies sustained staffing commitment. The benefit for students is not just the certificate, but the habit of sticking with a structured programme that blends volunteering, skills, physical activity, and expedition planning.
For music, the curriculum page lists specific clubs such as Steel Drums, Guitar Club, Percussion Club, and Choir, which reinforces the idea that music is not limited to timetabled lessons.
The school day runs from 8.55am to 3.25pm.
Breakfast is available in the canteen before tutor time, which helps families who need an earlier start, and can be a quiet support for students who concentrate better after eating.
For transport, Dorking benefits from multiple rail stations, and families commonly use a mix of walking, cycling, and buses depending on where they live. When visiting, pay attention to the routes your child would actually use at peak times, and ask about any school guidance on safe arrival and departure routines.
Oversubscription. With 279 applications for 126 offers here, competition is the limiting factor. If this is your first choice, make sure your application is on time and your back up options are realistic.
Academic progress profile. A Progress 8 figure of -0.59 indicates below average progress from similar starting points. Families should ask how the school is addressing this, including support for disadvantaged students, subject intervention, and how it monitors the impact of changes.
Faith character. The Church of England identity is real and visible in values language and chaplaincy. This suits many families, but those wanting a fully secular ethos should read the school’s published information carefully and visit with questions.
No sixth form on site. Post 16 transition is part of the student journey here, not an optional extra. For some students this is motivating, for others it is another change to manage, so look closely at how Year 11 support works in practice.
The Priory Church of England School is an oversubscribed 11 to 16 with clear routines, a strongly articulated values base, and a notably specific extracurricular offer, including a 25m pool, Greenpower, and a well established Duke of Edinburgh programme.
It will suit students who do well with structure and who benefit from having plenty of organised clubs and leadership pathways to anchor them through early adolescence. The main challenge lies in admission and, once in, parents should stay engaged with how the school drives progress across the full cohort.
The school’s most recent full Ofsted inspection judgement (for the predecessor school) was Good, and the current school continues as a closely related successor following academy conversion. Beyond inspection grades, it is worth weighing the school’s pastoral structure and its very concrete enrichment offer against your child’s learning needs and motivation.
Yes, here there were 279 applications for 126 offers, which indicates demand exceeds places. You should plan carefully around deadlines and ensure you list realistic alternative preferences.
The school’s published transition information states that applications should be submitted via Surrey admissions by 24 October 2025, with a final deadline of 31 October 2025. Offer Day is stated as 03 March 2026, with acceptance due by 16 March 2026.
The school states the day runs from 8.55am to 3.25pm. Breakfast is available in the canteen before tutor time.
The school explicitly references an on site 25m pool and clubs including Greenpower, plus music activities such as steel drums and choir, and a large Duke of Edinburgh footprint across Bronze, Silver, and Gold levels.
Get in touch with the school directly
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