FindMySchool LogoFindMySchool
  • Schools by Location

    Cities and townsLondon boroughs

    Best by Phase

    Primary SchoolsSecondary SchoolsGrammar SchoolsSixth Form

    Browse All

    PrimarySecondarySixth form and A-levels
  • Find Nurseries

    Browse nursery areasSearch all nurseries

    Nursery Hubs

    Nurseries in LondonCities and townsLondon boroughs

    School Nurseries

    Primary schools with nursery
  • Combined A-levels & GCSEPrimary SchoolsOxbridge Success
  • BlogMethodologyOfsted ReportsCompare schools side by side
  • School Match
For Schools
FindMySchool LogoFindMySchool

Helping parents and students find the best schools in England with comprehensive data and insights.

GET IN TOUCH

  • Contact us form
  • info@findmyschool.uk

Quick Links

  • Find Schools
  • All school areas
  • Primary by Area
  • Secondary by Area
  • Grammar Schools by Area
  • Sixth Form Schools by Area
  • Map Search
  • Primary School
  • Secondary School
  • Sixth Form and Grammar Schools

Nurseries

  • Browse nursery areas
  • Search all nurseries
  • Nurseries in London
  • London boroughs
  • Primary schools with nursery

Rankings

  • All Rankings
  • Combined A-levels and GCSE
  • Primary Schools
  • Oxbridge Success

Resources

  • About Us
  • Our Methodology
  • Ofsted Reports
  • Data Disclaimer
  • FAQs
  • Blog

© 2026 FindMySchool. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceCookie Policy
SchoolsPenkridgeThe Rural Enterprise Academy|Best Secondary Schools in Penkridge
State School

The Rural Enterprise Academy

Rodbaston Drive, Penkridge, ST19 5PH·Staffordshire·URN: 138351A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary
Mixed
Ages 11-16
Religious Character: None
GCSE Ranking
2,549
Academic
3,869
Overall
1
Local
FMS Inspection Score

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.

Rebuilding
1.6/10
Application Demand
100%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewGCSEOfstedApplication DemandAttendance Heatmap

Last reviewed: February 2026 · Rankings and key information above update regularly, however, this review below is refreshed bi-annually and may not reflect recent changes. If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

The Rural Enterprise Academy Review 2026: A specialist secondary with an environmental and land based lens

At a Glance

This is not a conventional 11 to 16 secondary. The Rural Enterprise Academy’s identity is built around sustainability, enterprise, and land based learning, with elements such as Forest School in Years 7 and 8 and a dedicated Countryside and Environment strand that develops into sustainable land management themes in Year 9.

That distinctive curriculum makes the school a clear option for children who prefer practical, applied learning and who are motivated by outdoors, environment, and rural industries. It also means fit matters more than usual, because a pupil who actively dislikes those themes may find the day to day offer less engaging than a more traditional local comprehensive.

Context is important. The most recent graded inspection judged the academy Inadequate (9 to 10 July 2024), and the school has been operating through special measures improvement work since then.

Character and Atmosphere

The academy’s published values, Kindness, Respect, Ambition, and Resilience, set the tone for how staff want students to behave and how students are expected to treat each other.

The current headteacher is Mrs Annabel Stoddart, recorded as taking up the role on 28 April 2025. Leadership stability matters here, because recent improvement work has relied on clearer roles, tighter accountability, and a consistent approach to behaviour and attendance.

A practical detail that often shapes the feel of a smaller secondary is the daily rhythm. The published school day runs from 9.00am to 3.30pm, with registration open until 9.30am. That slightly later start than many secondaries can suit some families, particularly those travelling across a wider area.

Results and Academic Performance

FindMySchool’s GCSE ranking places the academy 2,549th in England for GCSE academic outcomes and 1st in Penkridge in the local secondary ranking (FindMySchool ranking based on official data).

On headline GCSE measures provided:

  • Attainment 8 is 37.6.

  • Progress 8 is -0.21, which indicates students made below average progress across eight subjects compared with similar starting points.

  • The average EBacc average point score is 3.1.

  • The percentage achieving grades 5 or above across EBacc subjects is recorded as 0.

Performance remains below the national middle overall. The current GCSE academic rank is 2,549th out of 3,895 schools, while the overall secondary rank is 3,670th out of 3,688, so families should look closely at the detail behind the headline ranking.

The implication for families is straightforward. This is currently a school where the distinctive curriculum and the improvement trajectory may be more decision critical than raw outcomes alone, especially for children who learn best through applied contexts and who will benefit from the academy’s environmental and enterprise framing.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching and Learning

The school presents its curriculum as broad, with a specialised emphasis on environment and land based sectors, and students are expected to choose the academy because they have an interest in those areas and may want to build careers from them.

A practical, concrete example of that specialism is the Countryside and Environment pathway:

  • Years 7 and 8 include Forest School with outdoor activities designed to build confidence and problem solving, including bushcraft and environmental conservation activities.

  • Year 9 shifts towards sustainable land management, biodiversity, and conservation practice.

Alongside the specialist elements, subject pages indicate a conventional secondary structure in core areas such as science and computing, with an emphasis on skills like analysis, experimentation, and problem solving in science, and digital literacy plus programming and creative media in computing.

From an improvement perspective, the most recent monitoring evidence points to an emerging common lesson structure intended to create consistency across subjects, with next steps focused on assessment consistency and embedding adaptive teaching more widely.

Where Students Go Next

With no sixth form, the key transition is at 16. The academy’s published careers programme aligns to the Gatsby Benchmarks and sets out planned encounters with careers education, employers, and further and higher education information across year groups.

. The sensible question to ask is not only which local colleges or sixth forms students move on to, but how the school supports subject and pathway choices for students aiming for land based training routes, apprenticeships, or more traditional academic study.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:1.6/10Rebuilding

Quality of Education

Inadequate

Behaviour & Attitudes

Inadequate

Personal Development

Requires Improvement

Leadership & Management

Inadequate

FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.

Read the official Ofsted reportWhat do Ofsted reports mean?

Admissions: How to Get In

Applications are coordinated through Staffordshire for the normal Year 7 entry point. For September 2027 entry, the closing date is 31 October 2026, and offers are issued on 1 March 2027 for Staffordshire applicants.

The academy’s own published information reinforces the same closing date and points families to apply by the nationally coordinated deadline.

One nuance worth understanding is catchment. Trust level admissions documentation states that there is no catchment area for the academy. In practice, this can widen the potential applicant pool, and it increases the importance of understanding published oversubscription criteria and transport feasibility early.

Open evening information for the September 2026 cycle was published as Thursday 2 October 2025, 5pm to 7pm. If you are reading this later in the cycle, treat early October as the typical pattern and check the school’s latest published dates.

Parents weighing multiple options should also use FindMySchoolMap Search to understand travel practicality and compare nearby alternatives, especially where catchment structures differ across Staffordshire schools.

Application Demand

Last distance offered:
Not published by Staffordshire

Previous Year (2024/25 Entry)

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
Not published by Staffordshire

Applications

64

Total received

Places Offered

38

Subscription Rate

1.7x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care and Wellbeing

The improvement story here matters for wellbeing as much as for academics. A monitoring inspection on 15 July 2025 reported that safeguarding is now effective, with clearer systems and staff training leading to timely actions and stronger oversight, including for pupils educated off site.

The same monitoring evidence points to a simplified behaviour approach intended to be applied consistently, with early signs of improvement alongside remaining inconsistency that leaders are working to embed.

Attendance is also a stated focus. The school describes itself as an Inclusive Attendance school, and published materials describe strengthened tracking and interventions alongside a goal to continue improving overall attendance.

Beyond the Classroom: Extracurricular

The most credible indicator of enrichment is specificity. The academy’s curriculum information lists a set of named clubs and roles, including Forest School, Eco Club, Duke of Edinburgh, Chess, and Wellbeing Ambassadors, alongside creative and performance options such as drama, dance, and art.

The practical implication is that enrichment often aligns to the academy’s wider identity. Forest School and Countryside and Environment activities extend the school day’s outdoor and sustainability themes into structured experiences, which can suit pupils who prefer doing and building to purely classroom based learning.

Where enrichment is organised in blocks and changes termly, families should ask how allocation works and how the school ensures access for pupils who need support with routine, attendance, or behaviour, because participation is often where confidence and belonging are rebuilt during a turnaround phase.

Practical Information

The published school day runs 9.00am to 3.30pm, with registration closing at 9.30am. Term dates for the 2025 to 2026 academic year are published, which is useful for planning.

Transport is a meaningful consideration because the school does not rely on a single tight neighbourhood intake. The academy states that some transport routes are provided for a charge and that local authority support may fund all or part of the cost subject to eligibility. Staffordshire also publishes dedicated school transport timetables for routes serving the academy, updated from 2 September 2025 for at least one service.

This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still plan for normal secondary costs such as uniform, trips, and optional activities.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 300
  • Number of pupils: 240

Things to Consider

  • Ofsted position and improvement phase. The academy is operating through special measures following the July 2024 inspection outcome, so day to day consistency is a key question for prospective families.

  • Curriculum fit matters. The environmental and land based lens is a strength for the right child, but it is less compelling for a pupil who prefers a purely conventional academic offer.

  • No published catchment area. A wider intake can be positive, but it makes travel planning and oversubscription rules more important to understand early.

  • Post 16 planning. With no sixth form, families should explore transition routes at 16 and ensure the careers and guidance programme matches the student’s ambitions.

The Verdict

The Rural Enterprise Academy is a distinctive Staffordshire 11 to 16 option, built around sustainability, countryside learning, and enterprise themes that can make education feel more relevant for practically minded pupils. Recent inspection history means families should weigh improvement momentum alongside outcomes and should ask direct questions about consistency in teaching, behaviour, and support. Best suited to students who are motivated by environmental and land based learning, and who will respond well to clear routines and a structured turnaround plan.

FAQs

It is a school with a distinctive curriculum and clear improvement priorities. The most recent graded inspection outcome was Inadequate (July 2024), and the subsequent monitoring evidence in 2025 indicates progress in safeguarding, behaviour systems, attendance strategy, and curriculum structure, with further work still needed to embed consistency.

Attainment 8 is 37.6 and Progress 8 is -0.21, indicating below average progress from starting points. The academy is ranked 2,549th in England for GCSE academic outcomes and 1st in Penkridge in the local secondary ranking (FindMySchool ranking based on official data).

Applications are made through Staffordshire’s coordinated admissions process. For September 2027 entry, applications close on 31 October 2026, with offers issued on 1 March 2027.

Trust admissions documentation states there is no catchment area for the academy. That makes it especially important to read the oversubscription criteria and plan travel carefully.

Alongside core secondary subjects, the curriculum includes a specialist focus on environment, sustainability, and land based sectors. A concrete example is Forest School in Years 7 and 8, and Countryside and Environment themes such as sustainable land management and conservation learning in Year 9.

School Match

Is this the right school? Get 5 personalised picks in 3 min.

Try School Match

Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Rodbaston Drive, Penkridge, ST19 5PH
01785333360
www.ruralenterpriseacademy.com
Annabel Stoddart
Get directions

Often Compared With

Is The Rural Enterprise Academy the right fit for your child?

Answer 11 quick questions and get 5 personalised school picks

Try School Match

Is this your school?

Claim this profile to update contact info, add photos, and more.

Claim profile

Disclaimer

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.

Our rankings, metrics, and assessments are derived from this data using our own methodologies and represent our independent analysis rather than official standings.

While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is current, complete, or error-free. Data may change without notice, and schools and/or local authorities should be contacted directly to verify any details before making decisions.

FindMySchool does not endorse any particular school, and rankings reflect specific metrics rather than overall quality.

To the fullest extent permitted by law, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from reliance on information provided. If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us.

Display Your Ranking

School Ranking Badge
Share this badge on your school's website
#1 Secondary
School
in Penkridge
#3,869 in England
The Rural Enterprise Academy
#2,972
State · Secondary

Stafford Manor High School

Staffordshire council
FMS Inspection Score
Developing
GCSE
#2,972 / 3,895
Oxbridge
#2,048 / 2,712
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
11-16 years
Religious Character
None
No special features
Details
Independent · Other

Little Kinvaston School

Staffordshire council
No rankings available
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
8-16 years
Religious Character
None
No special features
Details