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.
Hartshill Academy is a mixed, state-funded secondary for ages 11 to 16 in Hartshill, Nuneaton, with a published Year 7 admission number of 210. It is part of United Learning, following its registration as a new academy in December 2023.
The current principal is Miss Lorraine Taylor, appointed in January 2022, after beginning work with the school in November 2021. The school’s recent inspection picture is split across two registrations: the current academy (URN 150453) does not yet have an Ofsted report published, while the predecessor school (URN 138644) was judged Requires improvement following inspection on 24 and 25 January 2023, with Personal development and Leadership and management graded Good.
From a parent’s perspective, this is a school that reads as highly structured, with explicit expectations and routines, and with improvement work still in motion. The most important question for many families is fit: whether your child benefits from clear boundaries and coaching, and whether you are comfortable joining a school on an upward trajectory rather than one that is already comfortably settled.
The school puts a lot of weight on clarity: values, routines, and shared language. Its HART values, Heart, Ambition, Respect and Tenacity, appear consistently across the school’s messaging and in formal evaluation, which suggests they are not treated as wallpaper.
Daily operations reinforce that message. Movement time is built into the timetable, and the day structure is laid out in detail. That level of explicitness often suits pupils who like knowing exactly what happens next, and who respond well to predictable systems and adult follow-through.
Pastoral and safeguarding capacity is described as expanded in earlier monitoring work, and safeguarding culture is presented as a priority. For parents, the practical implication is that the school is trying to remove ambiguity, both in behaviour expectations and in how concerns are surfaced and acted on, which can be reassuring, particularly for families who have had inconsistent experiences elsewhere.
This review uses the published performance indicators provided for the school. supplied, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 36.2. Progress 8 is -0.7.
On interpretation, Progress 8 below zero indicates that, on average, pupils are not making as much progress as other pupils in England with similar starting points. That does not define every child’s experience, but it does set an important baseline for expectations and for questions to ask about targeted support, subject-by-subject variation, and how quickly improvements are translating into outcomes.
EBacc indicators include an average EBacc APS of 3.11, and 7.7% achieving grades 5 or above across the EBacc measure reported here. For parents, the useful next step is to ask how curriculum choices are being shaped at Key Stage 4, including which subjects are prioritised, how pupils are guided into pathways, and what intervention looks like for those at risk of falling behind.
Whole-school improvement work described in earlier monitoring and later graded inspection material places emphasis on coaching, consistency, and strengthening subject leadership so that expectations are embedded across faculties.
A repeated theme is reading, both for building a reading culture and identifying pupils who need extra support, with structured time and resources directed to that goal. The practical benefit for pupils is that literacy is treated as a shared responsibility rather than a bolt-on, which matters in a secondary setting where reading demand rises sharply in subjects like history, geography and science.
Families choosing the school should ask for specifics that show traction: how staff check gaps in learning in each subject, what happens when a pupil falls behind mid-term, and how the school balances whole-class routines with targeted catch-up.
Quality of Education
Requires Improvement
Behaviour & Attitudes
Requires Improvement
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Hartshill Academy is an 11 to 16 secondary, so the key “next step” is post-16 progression to sixth forms, colleges, apprenticeships, and training providers. The school is required to provide pupils with information and engagement about technical qualifications and apprenticeships, and this is referenced in formal inspection material for the predecessor registration.
. For parents, the best evidence to request is practical: which local post-16 routes are most common, how careers guidance is delivered in Years 9 to 11, and how the school supports applications, interviews, and transition planning.
Year 7 admission is coordinated through the local authority. The school’s admissions policy for 2026 to 2027 confirms that applications for Year 7 are made via the local authority coordinated process, with oversubscription handled through published criteria and distance tie-breaks within categories.
Demand data supplied shows 274 applications and 190 offers for the recorded cycle, with the route marked Oversubscribed. Practically, that suggests you should treat Hartshill as a realistic preference for many children, but not a guaranteed one, particularly if you are outside the priority area or competing within a tight distance bracket.
For September 2026 entry (Year 7), Warwickshire’s published timeline states applications open on 1 September 2025, with a deadline of 31 October 2025, and offers issued on 2 March 2026. If you are considering an appeal, the county council also publishes a specific appeal timeline for 2026 offers.
Parents who want a high-confidence plan should use FindMySchool’s Map Search to check travel time and practical routes, then sense-check it against the school’s oversubscription criteria and your realistic preference strategy.
99.4%
1st preference success rate
180 of 181 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
190
Offers
190
Applications
274
The school’s documentation and inspection material place heavy emphasis on behaviour systems, consistent expectations, and increasing leadership capacity to support pupils and staff. For many pupils, strong routines reduce low-level disruption and make lessons feel calmer, which tends to matter as much as any individual initiative.
There is also evidence of structured support for pupils with additional needs, including the use of pupil profiles and in-class support roles referenced in inspection reporting. Families with a child who needs predictable structure, clear adult boundaries, and early identification of issues may find this approach reassuring.
The extracurricular offer is unusually easy to pin down because the school publishes a named club list. Examples include Glee Club, Art Club, Maths Circle (Year 7 and Year 8), Dance Club, Science Club, Engineering Club, School of Rock Band, and D&D.
This matters because it shows both breadth and intentionality. A Maths Circle can support confidence and stretch for pupils who enjoy problem-solving; an Engineering Club offers a practical hook into STEM pathways; School of Rock Band creates a clear “join in” route for pupils who might not see themselves as traditional instrumentalists. The wider implication is that the school is trying to give pupils structured ways to belong, which can be particularly important in Years 7 and 8 as friendship groups settle.
The academy day runs 8:40am to 3:20pm, with the Atrium and Library open from 8:00am. School-day timing is a real quality-of-life factor for working families, especially around transport and after-school supervision, so it is worth confirming how late clubs run on the days your child would attend, and what the expectations are for staying on site.
Transport questions are best handled in a grounded way: check your most likely route, look at peak-time reliability, and confirm any on-site arrangements directly with the school.
Inspection context is in transition. The current academy registration does not yet have an Ofsted report published, while the predecessor school was graded Requires improvement in January 2023. Families should weigh how comfortable they are joining during active improvement work.
Outcomes indicate a need for close tracking. A Progress 8 score of -0.7 signals below-average progress from starting points in England. Ask how the school identifies gaps early and how intervention is organised by subject.
Oversubscription is real. Demand data shows the Year 7 route marked Oversubscribed, with more applications than offers in the recorded cycle. Have a sensible set of alternative preferences if you are outside the strongest priority category.
This is a school built on routines. The structured day, explicit movement time, and published behaviour expectations can work brilliantly for some pupils, but others may need time to adjust to a tight framework.
Hartshill Academy looks like a school where leaders are trying to engineer consistency: clear expectations, coached practice, and a culture designed to be calm and purposeful. The recent inspection picture indicates work still to do, particularly on academic outcomes, but also signals areas of strength in personal development and leadership.
Best suited to families who value structure, want a clear behavioural framework, and are comfortable engaging actively with a school that is still improving. The limiting factor for some will be admissions competition and the need to see sustained progress in results.
Hartshill Academy is in a period of change. The predecessor school was judged Requires improvement in January 2023, with Personal development and Leadership and management graded Good, and the current academy registration does not yet have a published Ofsted report. Families should look for evidence of improvement in curriculum delivery, attendance, behaviour consistency, and outcomes, and ask how the school measures progress across year groups.
Year 7 applications follow Warwickshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2026 entry, Warwickshire states applications open on 1 September 2025 and close on 31 October 2025, with offers on 2 March 2026.
The supplied demand data shows more applications than offers for the Year 7 route in the recorded cycle and labels the route Oversubscribed. In practice, that means families should understand the oversubscription criteria and keep realistic backup options in their preference list.
The published academy day runs from 8:40am to 3:20pm, and the Atrium and Library are open from 8:00am.
The school publishes a club list including Glee Club, Art Club, Maths Circle (Year 7 and Year 8), Dance Club, Science Club, Engineering Club, School of Rock Band, and D&D. Club availability can change across the year, so it is sensible to check what will run in your child’s year group and on which days.
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