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 middle-school model brings its own rhythm, pupils arrive with primary-school habits and leave four years later as confident teenagers. Gosforth Junior High Academy sits in that sweet spot, bridging Key Stage 2 and early Key Stage 3, with a culture that aims to keep learning calm, structured, and ambitious. External evaluation describes a friendly, inclusive community with high expectations and a purposeful atmosphere in lessons.
Leadership has shifted into a trust-wide model: Steve Campbell is listed as headteacher on official records, and the trust announced he would become Executive Headteacher from the start of the summer term 2025, alongside Mark Fryer as Head of School (from after the Easter break 2025).
What stands out here is the emphasis on relationships as a driver of standards. The most recent inspection describes a welcoming, supportive environment where pupils feel safe, feel listened to, and trust that adults take concerns seriously. That combination matters in a Years 5 to 8 setting, where children are old enough to want independence, but still need consistent boundaries and predictable routines.
Expectations are deliberately explicit. Behaviour is framed as something pupils practise and refine, not something left to chance. A whole-school “PRAISE” approach is used to reinforce positivity, resilience, aspiration, inclusion, success, and empathy, and external evaluation notes that disruption is rare and classrooms feel calm and purposeful. The practical implication for families is that students who benefit from clear rules, steady adult presence, and a quieter learning tone often do well in this kind of environment.
The school also operates as a bridge between phases. Pupils still carry the language of primary school, especially around reading and SATs preparation in Year 6, while students in Years 7 and 8 start to build the habits they will need in a larger high school. That creates a mixed social dynamic: younger pupils often gain confidence from seeing older students modelling routines, and older students get opportunities to take responsibility through roles such as reading buddies and other leadership activities.
Because this is a Years 5 to 8 academy, the most relevant published performance picture is Key Stage 2. In 2024, 82.67% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and mathematics combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 36.67% reached greater depth in reading, writing and mathematics, compared with an England average of 8%. Science outcomes are also strong, with 90% reaching the expected standard, above the England average of 82%.
Looking across the component measures, the profile suggests consistently secure basics rather than a single spike. Reading and mathematics scaled scores are both 107, and the grammar, punctuation and spelling scaled score is 109. High-attainment indicators are substantial too: 44% achieved the high score measure across reading, mathematics and spelling, grammar and punctuation, and 52% achieved the high score measure in spelling, grammar and punctuation.
Rankings provide extra context, as long as they are interpreted correctly. Gosforth Junior High Academy is ranked 2,360th in England and 26th in Newcastle upon Tyne for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data). This places the school above the England average, within the top 25% of schools in England.
A useful way to read these numbers is through implications for everyday learning. A high combined expected-standard figure often points to consistent curriculum coverage, good attendance for most pupils, and teaching routines that get the whole class over the line. A higher-standard figure well above England average usually suggests that more able pupils are being stretched with meaningful challenge, rather than being left to coast. Families with children who thrive when work is demanding, but still carefully scaffolded, should see these outcomes as encouraging.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
82.67%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum intent is described in external evaluation as ambitious and logically sequenced, with “crucial knowledge” identified and built over time so that pupils deepen understanding rather than skim topics. That matters in a middle school, where continuity can be harder to maintain and where subject teaching begins to look more secondary in style.
Assessment is a current development focus. The inspection notes that questioning and retrieval quizzes are used to check what pupils know, but consistency is not yet uniform across the school, which can limit how precisely teaching is adapted for the next steps. For parents, this is less about test culture and more about whether learning gaps are spotted early enough to prevent pupils drifting, especially around the Year 6 to Year 7 transition point.
Reading is treated as a priority, with structured time devoted to novels, poetry, and non-fiction, and extra support for pupils who struggle, matched to their needs. The implication is twofold. First, pupils who arrive needing confidence-building in reading are more likely to get targeted help. Second, pupils who already enjoy reading are likely to find their tastes broadened, which supports writing quality and vocabulary across the curriculum.
Provision for pupils with additional needs is described as prompt and specific. The school is reported to identify needs quickly, provide staff with concise information, and support pupils with special educational needs and disabilities to access the same ambitious curriculum as their peers. There is also an additionally resourced provision for pupils with visual impairment, referenced in the latest inspection report.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
The key transition here is the move into Year 9 at a high school. In a middle-school system, that shift can feel significant, socially and academically. One of the more practical indicators of transition planning is that school documentation explicitly references students transferring to Gosforth Academy at the end of Year 8, with additional visits intended to ease the move.
In day-to-day terms, a school that serves Years 5 to 8 has to balance two priorities: protecting the confidence of younger pupils while preparing older students for the scale and independence of a larger setting. The inspection evidence supports that the atmosphere is calm, expectations are clear, and pupils develop positive attitudes to learning. Those factors tend to transfer well into Year 9, especially for students who benefit from predictable routines.
If you are comparing different pathways locally, FindMySchool’s Local Hub pages and the Comparison Tool can be useful for checking how different schools perform at the points that matter, including Key Stage 2 measures and any later-stage outcomes where relevant.
Entry is into Year 5, and applications are coordinated through Newcastle City Council, rather than being handled directly by the school. For September 2026 entry, the school advertised an open evening for prospective families on Monday 6 October 2025, 4:00pm to 6:00pm.
For the wider local authority process for transfer places (including middle school entry), published guidance indicates:
Applications open 1 September 2025
Applications close 31 October 2025
National offer day 2 March 2026
The relevant transfer group includes children starting Year 5 in September 2026
Because admissions in a city can be sensitive to distance and oversubscription patterns, families should treat last year’s patterns as guidance rather than certainty. A practical step is to use FindMySchoolMap Search to sense-check your home-to-school distance and then validate the current-year admissions rules with the local authority.
Safeguarding is reported as effective in the most recent inspection. Beyond statutory safeguarding, the day-to-day pastoral picture described is one of pupils being listened to and feeling safe, backed by high expectations for behaviour that are actually met in classrooms and corridors.
Attendance is an area to watch in a nuanced way. The inspection notes that attendance is high for the majority, but some vulnerable groups attend less regularly than peers, leading them to miss learning and wider experiences. For parents, the implication is that the school understands the issue and has a clear improvement focus, but families of children with complex barriers should ask direct questions about how support, monitoring, and reintegration work in practice.
Extracurricular provision is one of the clearest ways a Years 5 to 8 school can build belonging, particularly for pupils who are new to the area or who find friendships form more easily around shared interests. External evaluation highlights after-school opportunities including choir, debate, and chess, plus residential trips and visits to local sites such as a nearby nature reserve and church.
The published clubs programme gives a useful sense of the range and the school’s intent to cater for different personalities. Examples include KS3 Debate Club, Chess Club, Gardening Club, KS3 Pride Club, Rock School, D&D and Board Games Club, and a structured Homework Club based in the library. The implication is not just variety, it is accessibility. Several options are scheduled at lunchtime or immediately after school, which makes it easier for families managing transport constraints.
Facilities support this breadth. The school describes a full-sized sports hall that can be divided into three courts, with a wooden sprung floor and high ceiling suitable for activities including badminton, basketball, gymnastics, and trampolining. Outdoor provision includes a MUGA and a grass sports field. On the academic and creative side, ICT provision includes 90 mobile laptops (in trolleys for classroom use), and the design and technology workshop lists equipment such as a vacuum former, CAD-CAM cutter, and a range of saws and drills.
The published daily timetable shows morning registration from 8:40am to 9:00am, with lessons running through to a 3:20pm finish for both Key Stage 2 (Years 5 and 6) and Key Stage 3 (Years 7 and 8). Breakfast and after-school provision is in place, and the latest inspection explicitly states the school runs its own breakfast and after-school club.
Library access is also structured, with opening hours published as Monday to Thursday 8:00am to 8:30am and 3:20pm to 4:00pm, plus Friday 8:00am to 8:30am. For travel, many families use local public transport and walking routes in Gosforth; it is sensible to check current services and allow extra time at the start of Year 5 while routines settle.
Phase fit for your child. A Years 5 to 8 setting suits children who benefit from a clear bridge between primary and high school. It can be less suitable for pupils who find multiple transitions hard, because Year 9 is another major move.
Assessment consistency is still developing. The school’s approach to checking what pupils know is described as a newer area of work, and not yet consistent across the school. If your child needs rapid identification of small gaps, ask how assessment information is shared between teachers and acted on.
Attendance for vulnerable groups needs attention. The latest inspection flags that some vulnerable pupils attend less regularly than peers. Families should ask what targeted attendance support looks like, especially where anxiety or health issues are part of the picture.
High expectations and calm classrooms. Behaviour is described as exceptionally strong, with disruption rare. This often benefits most learners, but children who struggle with strict routines may need time to adjust.
Gosforth Junior High Academy offers a structured, ambitious Years 5 to 8 experience, with Key Stage 2 outcomes that sit above England average and a culture described as calm, supportive, and focused on learning. The practical strength is in the combination of reading priority, clear behaviour expectations, and a wide set of clubs that help pupils feel part of something quickly.
Who it suits: families who want a steady middle-school bridge into Year 9, especially for children who respond well to clear routines and a purposeful classroom tone. The main consideration is ensuring the middle-school model and the later Year 9 transition match your child’s temperament and your family’s longer-term plan.
The latest inspection graded the school Good across all areas, with safeguarding effective, and it describes pupils as feeling safe, listened to, and supported by strong relationships. Academic outcomes at Key Stage 2 are also strong, with a high proportion meeting expected standards and a higher-standard figure well above England average.
Applications are coordinated by Newcastle City Council, rather than being made directly to the school. For September 2026 entry, local authority guidance indicates applications open on 1 September 2025 and close on 31 October 2025, with offers released on 2 March 2026.
Yes. The latest inspection report states the school runs its own breakfast and after-school club. For exact session details and availability, families usually need to check the school’s current arrangements, as these can change year to year.
The published timetable shows morning registration from 8:40am to 9:00am, with the school day running to a 3:20pm finish for both Key Stage 2 and Key Stage 3.
The offer includes a mix of academic, creative, wellbeing and sport. Examples from the published programme include Debate Club, Chess Club, Gardening Club, Pride Club, Rock School, D&D and Board Games Club, plus a library-based Homework Club.
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Information on this page is compiled, analysed, and processed from publicly available sources including the Department for Education (DfE), Ofsted, the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI), the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Freedom of Information (FOI) requests, and official school websites.
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