St Charles’ combines the feel of a close, faith-led primary with academic outcomes that put it among the very highest-performing primaries in England. In 2024, 89% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, and 56.7% achieved the higher standard, both far above England averages. Ranked 27th in England and 1st in Newcastle for primary outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), it is a high-demand school with oversubscription pressures at Reception. The school’s Catholic character is central, with daily prayer and a culture that links leadership roles, behaviour routines, and charitable action back to Gospel values.
A key theme is purposeful pupil leadership. The Safe Squad, for example, takes responsibility for everyday safety messages and practical improvements, while Laudato Si pupils link faith to environmental action through projects aimed at external recognition for living simply. That combination of responsibility and values shows up in how pupils talk about behaviour: the school uses clear “footsteps” expectations tied to its mission, and pupils understand the rationale rather than treating it as a rule list.
The Catholic life of the school is visible across the week. Collective worship structures the rhythm of school, with prayer built into daily routines and a Monday focus that translates scripture into practical action. Families who want a school where faith is integrated into assemblies, relationships education, and social justice work will recognise the intent and consistency.
Leadership stability is another anchor. Mrs Louise Nealings has led the school since 2015, after joining in 2012 as Deputy Head, and she also supports other schools in her trust through a wider primary leadership role.
The results profile is exceptional for a state primary.
Ranked 27th in England and 1st in Newcastle for primary outcomes. (These are proprietary FindMySchool rankings, calculated from official performance data.)
In 2024, 89% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with an England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 56.7% reached the higher threshold in reading, writing and maths, compared with an England average of 8%.
The scaled scores underline how secure core learning is by the end of Year 6: reading 109, maths 114, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 116, with a combined total of 339. Science is also strong, with 93% meeting the expected standard.
Parents comparing local options should use the FindMySchool Local Hub pages to view nearby schools side by side using the Comparison Tool, since outcomes at this level can vary sharply even within the same neighbourhood.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
89%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The curriculum is designed to build systematically from early years, with structured learning and play intended to prepare children for the knowledge and language demands of Key Stage 1. Reading is treated as a priority from the earliest stages, with phonics taught from the start of Reception and close checking to ensure pupils who need extra help get it quickly.
In Key Stage 2, the breadth is notable for a state primary. Latin is part of the curriculum offer, framed as a way to strengthen reading comprehension and vocabulary, while relationships, social and health education uses a Catholic programme designed to support school and home working together. The practical implication is a curriculum that feels academically ambitious without narrowing into exam preparation alone.
Teaching routines emphasise retrieval and editing. Pupils are expected to revisit earlier learning, correct work, and secure knowledge step by step, which aligns closely with the high proportion reaching the higher standard by Year 6.
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Good
As a Newcastle primary, Year 6 leavers move into the city’s secondary system via the usual local authority processes. The school puts emphasis on pupils being well prepared for the next phase, and transition work includes building independence through responsibilities, residential experiences, and structured routines that mirror secondary expectations.
For families thinking longer-term, the most practical step is to shortlist likely secondaries early, then sanity-check travel time and admissions rules. If you are weighing distance-based options, the FindMySchool Map Search is useful for comparing home-to-school distances accurately, especially when popular schools tighten year by year.
In the most recent dataset, there were 110 applications for 30 offers, which equates to 3.67 applications per place. The ratio of first preferences to offers was 1.23, which signals that many applicants list the school as a genuine first choice rather than a speculative backup.
St Charles’ is a Catholic school, and the admissions policy prioritises Catholic children first, then other looked-after children, catechumens and Eastern Christian churches, other Christian denominations, other faiths, and finally other children. Distance is used as a tie-break within categories, and the policy is explicit that attendance at the school’s nursery does not guarantee a Reception place.
applications opened 1 September 2025, closed 15 January 2026, with offers due 16 April 2026. (As of 26 January 2026, that closing date has passed; families looking beyond September 2026 should expect a similar pattern and confirm dates on the council site each year.)
Nursery is an established part of the school, with two weekly attendance patterns offered across the week. The published application process requires evidence of identity and address, and faith evidence where relevant. The school sets a clear timeline for September 2026 nursery entry: applications close Friday 27 March 2026 (noon); offers are sent Wednesday 1 April 2026; acceptances are due by Friday 24 April 2026 (noon). Tours for prospective nursery families are scheduled in early February and early March 2026.
For eligible families, the school also references the 30-hour funded entitlement and the need to keep codes validated to maintain funding across the academic year. Specific nursery fee amounts are not published here, and families should check the school’s official information for current early years pricing.
Applications
110
Total received
Places Offered
30
Subscription Rate
3.7x
Apps per place
Pastoral work is built around clear routines, pupil voice, and a rights-respecting approach. The school’s Rights Respecting work is framed around children being listened to and taking active citizenship seriously, which fits with the leadership roles pupils hold across the school.
The September 2023 Ofsted inspection confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Beyond that headline, the practical safeguarding picture includes named safeguarding leads and a culture that encourages pupils to share concerns, supported by strong relationships with staff.
Enrichment is not treated as an optional extra, it is part of the school’s identity. Pupils benefit from trips, clubs and residential experiences, and leadership groups add a strong “service” thread to the week.
Clubs and activities change by term, but the school has recently offered a mix that goes beyond the standard primary menu. Examples include Forest School sessions and clubs (supported by staff with Forest School qualifications), languages clubs (including French and Spanish), British Sign Language, choir, chess, performing arts, and sport options such as football and rugby minis. OPAL play introduces structured play zones, including den building and construction, which is a practical way to broaden lunchtime experiences for pupils who do not naturally gravitate to competitive games.
The school also has a named school dog, Poppy, which is often used in primary settings to support calm routines, reading confidence, and emotional regulation when deployed thoughtfully.
The school day for Reception to Year 6 runs 8:50am to 3:20pm, with gates and classroom doors open from 8:40am. Nursery attendance is offered in two weekly patterns that split Wednesday between morning and afternoon options.
Breakfast provision is described as available from 7:45am, with a simple breakfast and quiet activities before lessons. After-school wraparound arrangements vary, so families should confirm the current offer directly when applying.
For travel, Gosforth is well served by local bus routes, and many families will be walking distance. The school explicitly promotes safe driving messages around the site, which is worth noting if you rely on car drop-off at peak times.
Oversubscription is real. With 110 applications for 30 Reception offers in the latest dataset, many families who apply will not secure a place, so it is wise to plan credible alternatives early.
Catholic priority matters. The admissions criteria prioritise Catholic children, then other faith categories, with distance as a tie-break, so families outside the higher-priority categories should be realistic about chances in heavy-demand years.
Nursery is not a route to guaranteed Reception entry. Nursery places can be a strong introduction to the school, but families still have to apply for Reception through the normal process.
This is a high-performing, values-led state primary with an unusually strong KS2 outcomes profile and a clear Catholic identity. It suits families who want faith integrated into daily school life, who value structured teaching and pupil responsibility, and who are prepared for competitive Reception admissions. Securing entry is where the difficulty lies; for those who do, the academic and wider-offer package is compelling.
Yes, it combines a Good judgement with an academic outcomes profile that is exceptionally strong. In 2024, 89% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, and 56.7% achieved the higher standard, placing it among the highest-performing primaries in England on the FindMySchool measures.
There is no single “catchment” boundary in the way some councils define it. If the school is oversubscribed, places are prioritised by faith criteria first, then allocated by distance as a tie-break within categories. The exact distance that gets a place can shift each year depending on demand.
Reception applications are made through Newcastle’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, applications opened on 1 September 2025 and closed on 15 January 2026, with offers due on 16 April 2026. For future years, the pattern is typically similar, but confirm each cycle’s dates.
No. The school is explicit that nursery attendance does not automatically guarantee admission to Reception, and families must apply for Reception through the usual process.
Pupils have access to a range of clubs that can include Forest School, languages, choir, chess, sport options, and pupil leadership groups such as the Safe Squad and Laudato Si activities. The mix changes by term, so families should check what is running in the year they apply.
Get in touch with the school directly
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