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SchoolsPoolePoole Grammar School|Best Secondary Schools in Poole
State School
Poole Grammar School
Gravel Hill, Poole, BH17 9JU·Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole·URN: 136850A 6-digit identifier assigned by the Department for Education (DfE) to uniquely identify schools in England and Wales.
Secondary & Post-16
Grammar School
Sixth Form
Boys
Ages 11-18
Religious Character: None
A-levels Ranking
362
Academic
427
Overall
2
Local
GCSE Ranking
342
Academic
384
Overall
1
Local
Oxbridge Ranking
408
England
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.

Excellent
8.1/10
Application Demand
80%
1st preference success
Oversubscribed
School official?Claim Profile
OverviewA-levelsGCSEOxbridgeOfstedApplication 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Poole Grammar School Review 2026: Four Centuries of Selective Excellence

At a Glance

The bells of John Cleave Theatre echo across the Gravel Hill campus, a reminder of history that stretches back to 1628 when Thomas Robarts, Mayor of Poole, established the original grammar school to teach Latin and kindred subjects. That institution collapsed by 1835, but when Poole Secondary School reopened in 1904, it set in motion a trajectory that would astonish educators. By the 1930s, the school held the record for the most history distinctions in the entire country for three consecutive years and achieved an average pass rate of 87% when the national grammar school average stood at just 60%. Today, under the leadership of Mrs. Katie Etheridge (appointed in 2024), Poole Grammar continues that legacy: a selective state boys' grammar school ranking 342nd out of 3,895 schools in England for GCSE academic performance and 362nd out of 2,549 for A-level academic performance (FindMySchool rankings). For 2027 Year 7 entry, applications through Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council open on 1 September 2026, close on 31 October 2026 and receive offers on 1 March 2027. The school enrolls 1,199 pupils across Years 7 to 13 on its 1966-built campus, recently enhanced by a £3.8 million government investment in new sports facilities.

Character & Atmosphere

On a Tuesday morning, past the gates at Gravel Hill, you encounter organised purposefulness: green-blazered boys moving between classrooms with notebooks in hand, the hum of focused learning audible from open windows. The campus itself tells a story. Princess Margaret ceremonially opened the current buildings in October 1966, replacing the original Seldown site that had served the school since 1907. That mid-century brutalist structure has been thoughtfully extended: the Ashley Thorne Building, constructed between 2006 and 2009, now houses the music and drama departments in spaces specifically designed for creative work. The Cleave Hall theatre bears the name of John Cleave, headmaster from 1954 to 1972, who championed the performing arts. These physical anchors matter. Boys here talk about belonging to something with roots.

The school's motto, "The End Crowns the Work," appears throughout, encouraging long-term perspective rather than short-term exam obsession. Religious character is listed as "None," and the school explicitly positions itself as non-denominational, welcoming boys of all faiths (or none). Behaviour is consistently described as calm; exclusions are rare. The wearing of a green blazer and uniform until Sixth Form (discontinued for Year 12 and 13 students since 2024) creates visible cohesion and identity, though the school has moved away from the "smart business attire" requirement that previously applied to Sixth Formers, recognising shifting cultural attitudes towards formality.

Results & Academic Performance

GCSE Attainment

In the 2024-25 / 2025 GCSE dataset, Poole Grammar achieved an average Attainment 8 score of 70.2. This statistic demands context: Attainment 8 measures the average grade achieved across eight GCSEs (English, maths, and six further subjects), with higher scores indicating better performance. At 70.2, Poole's score reflects a student body performing strongly, a pattern that accounts for both the selective admissions process and high-quality teaching.

Drilling into specific grades: 57.1% of published GCSE grades were at 9-7 level. The school's Progress 8 (which measures progress from starting points) scored +0.55, indicating that students make well-above-average progress relative to their prior attainment at Key Stage 2. In other words, the school is adding value beyond what the selective intake alone might predict.

With rankings at 342nd out of 3,895 schools in England for GCSE academic performance (FindMySchool ranking), Poole sits comfortably among the strongest GCSE performers nationally. Locally within Poole, it ranks first among the town's secondary schools, though Parkstone Grammar (the neighbouring girls' school) performs at a similar level.

A-Level Performance

The Sixth Form presents a slightly different picture. In the 2025 A-level dataset, 20% of entries achieved A*, 20% A, and 20% B, meaning that 60% secured A*-B grades and 40% secured A*-A across 443 exam entries. The school ranks 362nd out of 2,549 schools in England for A-level academic performance (FindMySchool ranking), while its overall sixth-form ranking is 392nd in England and 2nd in Poole.

The Sixth Form admits up to 30 external students annually alongside internal progression, bringing fresh perspectives and slightly diversifying the peer group. Twenty-five A-level subjects are offered, with seven subjects taught in collaboration with Parkstone Grammar School: drama, English language, French, German, media studies, Spanish, and sociology. This partnership provides curricular breadth that a single-sex school might otherwise struggle to deliver whilst preserving the pedagogical integrity of single-sex teaching in core academic subjects. Two additional A-levels are rolling out: physical education from September 2025 and environmental science from September 2026.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

A-Level A*-B

64.33%

% of students achieving grades A*-B

GCSE 9–7

57.1%

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

The curriculum follows a traditional academic structure, prioritising depth over breadth. All students study double or triple science (separately taught biology, chemistry, and physics), English language and literature, mathematics, and religion and philosophy as mandatory GCSEs. Triple science, available to those demonstrating appropriate ability, allows a fourth GCSE slot to be allocated to an additional science subject, a pathway increasingly popular as universities recognise the intellectual rigour it demands.

Mathematics specialism was formally recognised when the school was designated a Mathematics and Computing Specialist in 2005, with "cognition" added as a third specialism in 2006. This designation has faded in formal terminology (the specialist school system itself was wound down in England in 2011), but the mathematical culture remains distinctive. Separate sciences taught from Year 7 onwards reflect the school's academic trajectory; most state secondaries do not begin sciences in separate departments until Year 9. Boys here study physics with physicists, chemistry with chemists.

The school operates on a traditional five-period day: registration at 08:30, first period ending at 12:05, lunch break, afternoon sessions from 14:25 to 15:30. Each period lasts 60 minutes, allowing extended engagement with complex topics rather than fragmented 40-minute slots. Setting in mathematics begins in Year 9, with students allocated to groups reflecting current attainment. The practice reflects the school's view that selective entry at 11+ does not preclude within-school ability differences; continued differentiation ensures pace matches need.

Teaching quality is consistently reported as strong. External validation comes from the school's Ofsted rating of "Good," awarded following the school's most recent inspection (specific inspection date not provided in available data, though the designation confirms current status). Teachers demonstrate secure subject knowledge, and the pastoral system ensures that struggling pupils receive additional support swiftly.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:8.1/10Excellent

Quality of Education

Good

Behaviour & Attitudes

Outstanding

Personal Development

Outstanding

Leadership & Management

Good

Ofsted did not issue a single overall grade for this inspection. This score is derived from the published subjudgements.

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

Where Students Go Next

University Destinations

Instead of relying on older destination percentages, families should ask the school for the latest university, apprenticeship and employment progression figures. The current 2025 A-level baseline is 443 exam entries, with 60% of grades at A*-B and 40% at A*-A, giving a current performance context without assuming every leaver follows the same route.

University entries across the sample were anchored by Cambridge, where three students secured places. This Cambridge focus aligns with historical strength: between 1950 and 1962, the Sunday Times celebrated Poole Grammar as one of the few schools to send more pupils to Balliol College, Oxford, than any establishment save "a handful of major public schools," with 23 entries across that twelve-year period. While the absolute numbers remain modest by the standards of major independent schools, the concentration of elite placement within a cohort of approximately 150 reflects selectivity and aspiration.

The Russell Group universities (Imperial College, Durham, Edinburgh, Bristol, Warwick, Exeter) regularly appear in leaver destinations, though specific numerical breakdowns are not publicly disseminated by the school.

A-Level to Sixth Form Transition

Progression from Year 11 to Year 12 depends on meeting the school's current Sixth Form entry criteria, including subject-specific GCSE thresholds. Families considering Sixth Form entry from Poole Grammar or another school should check the school's latest admissions timetable and available-place information rather than relying on older progression ratios.

Oxbridge Success

#395 in England

Total Offers

3

Offer Success Rate: 18.8%

Cambridge

3

Offers

Oxford

0

Offers

Beyond the Classroom

Sports: A Defining Pillar

Sport occupies a genuinely central role at Poole Grammar, a status underscored by recent infrastructure investment. The new Sports Centre, which opened in September 2023 following the £3.8 million government capital award, includes a full-sized gymnasium equipped with basketball hoops, a rope climbing wall, cricket nets, and extensive storage for specialist equipment. An adjoining weights room houses rowing machines, cycle machines, and weightlifting equipment, resources historically scarce in state school sixth forms. Five state-of-the-art classrooms within the centre are timetabled for PE lessons and physical education A-level delivery, marrying academic rigour with practical engagement.

The school owns substantial playing fields immediately adjacent to the main campus, configured to accommodate multiple sporting activities simultaneously. During winter, fields divide into rugby pitches; spring sees conversion to football; summer hosts two overlapping cricket fields and a full running track. Two astroturf tennis courts, installed in 2008 and resurfaced since, allow year-round racquet sports. A multi-use games area (MUGA), constructed in 2010, provides hard-court space for basketball, netball, and handball. Two large indoor gyms feature a climbing wall, indoor volleyball courts, and extensive changing facilities.

Competitive rugby achieved national prominence in 2022 when the Under-15 side reached the national schools rugby final, defeating Dr. Challoner's Grammar School 22–12 in the semi-finals before narrowly losing 19–17 to Hill House School at the Saracens' Stadium in Barnet Copthall. The senior rugby programme, with six annual matches, combines fixture intensity with broader participation: during the winter games block, all Year 7-9 boys engage in rugby coaching. Similarly, football, cricket, and tennis are offered as both competitive pathways and recreational participation during games lessons.

Sport for all and sport for excellence coexist here. Boys might represent the school in regional or national competitions in their primary sport whilst simultaneously participating in cross-country running at Canford Heath during lunch breaks (a local open space used for training) and House competitions in athletics. The school's inaugural croquet team, formed in 2022, beat Canford School, a signal that niche sports gain support when demand exists.

Music: Active and Well-Resourced

The Ashley Thorne Building, opened in 2009, provided dedicated music facilities: practice rooms, ensemble rehearsal spaces, and a recordings studio. The school hosts "a very successful set of music ensembles, choirs and orchestras," according to the Ofsted summary, though the specific names of ensembles, the Choir, the Symphony Orchestra, the Chamber Ensemble, the Jazz Band, are noted in some sources but confirmed through limited channels. Boys participate in both school-led and private music lessons; approximately 30% of the student body learn an instrument, a figure slightly above the England average for state schools.

Music is compulsory through Year 8, with GCSE and A-level pathways available thereafter. Sixth Formers choosing music A-level benefit from shared teaching with Parkstone Grammar, allowing specialisms (such as contemporary composition or historical performance practice) to be offered with sufficient student cohorts. Annual musical productions, typically staged in the Cleave Theatre or School Hall (which seats 400 and features a full stage), bring together musical and dramatic talent from both Poole and Parkstone Grammar schools, leveraging the twin-school partnership to create fuller, more ambitious performances than either institution could independently sustain.

Drama & Performing Arts

The Cleave Theatre, which commemorates John Cleave's 18-year tenure as headmaster (1954–1972), seats approximately 300 and functions as both teaching space and performance venue. GCSE and A-level drama students stage full-length productions, recent years have seen contemporary plays, classical drama, and original student-devised work, enabling pupils to develop technical theatre skills alongside performance. A-level drama students engage in set design, sound engineering, and lighting direction as integral curriculum elements, not bolt-on enrichment. The partnership with Parkstone adds depth: seventh formers from both schools regularly collaborate on joint productions, with shared responsibility for conceptualisation, design, and performance.

STEM & Technology

The school's legacy as a Computing and Mathematics specialist school infuses curriculum design and club life. Coding and Computer Science GCSEs attract strong cohorts, with A-level computer science and further mathematics available at sixth form. The school's designation as a Mathematics and Computing Specialist (2005–2011) positioned it ahead of the curve in recognising digital literacy as foundational, a foresight reflected in the integration of coding across multiple subject areas.

Named STEM clubs include Coding Club (mentioned explicitly in school communications), Astronomy Club (organised under science enrichment), and what is elsewhere termed the Robotics Club or similar engineering focus (though specific naming is inferred from stated participation in "educational challenges"). These clubs run during lunch breaks and after school, engaging pupils who wish to extend beyond curricula examination boards' specifications.

Clubs & Societies: Breadth Beyond Academics

The school maintains an extensive clubs roster, rotating termly to accommodate changing interests and leadership capacity. Named clubs explicitly referenced in school sources include:

  • Coding Club
  • Astronomy Club
  • Law & Debate Society
  • Christian Union
  • Handchimes Ensemble
  • Gardening Club
  • Zoology Club
  • Orchestra
  • Choir
  • Jazz Band

Additional clubs documented in partnership with Parkstone Grammar include Music Ensembles, Drama groups, and cross-school societies. Sports clubs, football, rugby, cricket, tennis, volleyball, badminton, table tennis, operate with competitive fixtures and recreational pathways. The school hosts inter-form tournaments in rugby, football, and cricket, ensuring that those without inter-school representative aspirations still engage competitively within their year groups.

Leadership of clubs involves teachers, specialist staff, and senior students, creating a mentorship culture. The Parent Staff Association (PSA) actively supports enrichment, organising fundraising and events that extend educational opportunities.

Trips, Visits & Enrichment

The school's communications explicitly reference "external trips to support their studies" across year groups, though specific trip destinations are not detailed in publicly available materials. GCSE-bearing subjects typically include field work (geography fieldwork, history site visits), science practicals at external laboratories or museum collections, and modern language immersion visits.

Admissions & Entry

Poole Grammar operates a selective 11+ entry process, common across the four secondary grammar schools in the Bournemouth and Poole conurbation: Poole Grammar School, Parkstone Grammar School, Bournemouth School, and Bournemouth School for Girls. Applicants must sit an entrance examination in the autumn term of Year 6 to demonstrate "grammar school standard", defined through the test's marking rubric as approximately the top 10–15% of the ability distribution, though official pass marks are not publicly disclosed.

Admissions are coordinated by Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council for Year 7 secondary transfer. For 2027 entry, applications open on 1 September 2026, close on 31 October 2026, offers are released on 1 March 2027 and the acceptance deadline is 15 March 2027. Families should check the latest published admission arrangements for school-specific selection and oversubscription details rather than relying on older application ratios.

Entrance to the Sixth Form at Year 12 is separate from the council's Year 7 secondary-transfer timetable and depends on the school's current GCSE threshold and subject-entry criteria. Families considering external entry should check the latest Sixth Form admissions timetable and available-place information rather than relying on older external-place figures.

Tutoring Culture

The entrance examination to Poole Grammar, and the competing grammar schools, sits within a broader regional tutoring culture. Parents in Poole frequently engage private tutoring services; internet forums discuss "tutoring from Year 3" and specific test preparation. The school's official communication does not recommend tutoring, nor does it position the entrance test as test-coachable in the narrow sense. Nonetheless, the reality, evident from parental forums and tutoring centre advertising, is that external preparation is widespread. Families genuinely committed to grammar school entry should anticipate that their peers will have engaged tutoring, and plan accordingly.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed

Applications

313

Total received

Places Offered

176

Subscription Rate

1.8x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

The school's pastoral system centres on form groups and form tutors, the latter responsible for tracking academic progress, pastoral welfare, and liaison with parents. Additionally, the school employs a structured House system, though specific House names and traditions are not detailed in available public materials. Sixth Formers increasingly take on pastoral responsibilities, as prefects, mentors, and house leaders, creating an ecosystem where older students actively contribute to younger pupils' wellbeing.

Mental health and wellbeing resources are explicitly stated as a priority. The school publishes guidance on online safety, healthy eating, and mental health support, reflecting contemporary understanding that adolescent flourishing requires more than academic teaching. External counselling services are referenced, though on-site provision levels are not itemised.

Behaviour management policies reference the school's values (courage, respect, kindness, exact terminology varies in different school communications) and emphasise restorative approaches to conflict. Exclusions are noted as rare, consistent with the Ofsted "Good" designation, which typically requires demonstrable strengths in behaviour and safety.

Practical Information

School Day

Morning session 08:30–13:15; afternoon session 14:25–15:30. The day comprises registration and five 60-minute teaching periods.

Facilities

The campus, built in 1966, occupies substantial grounds on Gravel Hill (the A349), with recent additions including the Sports Centre (2023), Ashley Thorne Building (2009), and Cleave Hall. The School Hall accommodates 400 for assemblies, performances, and lettings. The Street Gallery provides display space for student artwork. The school is not located within walking distance of Poole town centre; accessibility by public transport requires bus links along the A349, though the local geography means most families are within a 5-mile drive.

Sixth Form

Uniform requirement was discontinued from September 2024; Sixth Formers are no longer required to wear formal business attire. Years 7–11 continue to wear green blazer, white shirt, and dark trousers, with coloured lanyards indicating year groups.

Transport

No school coach service is mentioned in available materials. Families typically arrange private transport or pupils use local bus services.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,375
  • Number of pupils: 1,199

Things to Consider

Selective Entry & Tutoring Reality. Securing a place requires passing the 11+ entrance examination, which is test-coachable despite the school's official position otherwise. Families should recognise that most peers will have engaged private tutoring, and that gaining entry involves genuine academic competition. Boys who are not among their primary school's top performers are unlikely to succeed, regardless of tutoring investment.

Single-Sex Education. This is an all-boys school for Years 7–11, with girls admitted to the Sixth Form only. For families prioritising co-education throughout secondary education, this is an immediate disqualification. Boys thrive in single-sex environments when they are broadly emotionally mature and when the school actively fosters respect for girls and women (through partnership arrangements like the shared A-level subjects with Parkstone, and through broader messaging). Younger adolescents who struggle with emotional regulation may find the absence of girls' perspectives limiting to their social development.

Location & Travel. The school is situated on the A349, a moderately busy road, and is not highly accessible by public transport from central Poole. Families without reliable car access should verify bus routes and journey times before assuming easy access. The commute from some parts of Poole or the wider conurbation could realistically exceed 45 minutes each way.

Ofsted "Good" Not Outstanding. Whilst "Good" is a respectable rating and Poole performs very well for results, the school has not been rated Outstanding. Parents should understand this context: the school's relative lack of curriculum innovation, its traditional pedagogical approach, and (potentially) limited provision for SEND students may have contributed to a "Good" rather than "Outstanding" assessment. This does not diminish the school's results or pastoral quality; it reflects the inspection criteria's emphasis on innovation and inclusivity in addition to outcomes.

Competitive Environment. The peer group here is academically selected and high-achieving. Boys who arrive with firm academic confidence tend to flourish. Those with fragile self-esteem or limited prior academic success, even if they scrape through the entrance exam, may struggle psychologically within a cohort of consistently high performers.

The Verdict

Poole Grammar School delivers first-class academic outcomes within a selective state system, offering admission based on ability rather than fees. The GCSE ranking of 342nd out of 3,895 in England, A-level academic ranking of 362nd out of 2,549, and 2025 A-level profile of 60% A*-B grades underscore genuine academic quality. The investment in sports facilities, the energetic performing arts programme, and the broad club life mean that academic study is balanced by other forms of development.

The school is best suited to academically able boys aged 11–18 whose families value selective education, single-sex teaching for the secondary phase, and a traditional academic curriculum. For those who secure entry and who thrive in competitive, purposeful environments, Poole Grammar offers excellent preparation for universities and beyond. The school's four-century history, from the 1628 Latin school through the celebrated 1930s success to contemporary strength, provides context: this is an institution with genuine educational roots and sustained excellence.

The main barriers are entry itself (genuine competition through the 11+ examination) and the single-sex boys' environment, which suits some families perfectly and disqualifies others entirely. Those who clear the entry hurdle and embrace the school's traditions will encounter high-quality teaching, strong pastoral care, and genuine opportunity for all-round development.

FAQs

Yes. The school holds an Ofsted "Good" rating and ranks 342nd out of 3,895 schools in England for GCSE academic performance (FindMySchool ranking). In the current GCSE dataset, Attainment 8 is 70.2, Progress 8 is +0.55 and 57.1% of published GCSE grades were at 9-7. At A-level, the 2025 dataset records 60% of entries at A*-B. The school has been educating boys to a high standard for over 120 years and consistently achieves strong academic results.

Poole Grammar is a selective state grammar school. Year 7 secondary transfer is coordinated by Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council. For 2027 entry, applications open on 1 September 2026, the deadline is 31 October 2026, offer day is 1 March 2027 and the acceptance deadline is 15 March 2027. Families should check the school's current admission arrangements for selection details and oversubscription criteria.

The school does not officially recommend tutoring and has designed the entrance test to be less coachable than traditional 11+ papers. However, in practice, tutoring is widespread among parents aspiring to grammar school entry in Poole. Families should recognise that peer-group preparation will often include external tuition, and plan accordingly if they wish to compete effectively.

Sport is central to school life. The recently opened Sports Centre (2023) includes a gymnasium, climbing wall, weights room, and cricket nets. The school fields teams in rugby, football, cricket, tennis, volleyball, badminton, and other sports. The Under-15 rugby team reached the national final in 2022. Most boys participate in games lessons during winter (rugby), spring (football), and summer (cricket, tennis, softball). Beyond competitive fixtures, inter-form tournaments ensure broader participation.

The Ashley Thorne Building houses dedicated music spaces, including practice rooms, ensemble rehearsal spaces, and a recording studio. The Cleave Theatre seats approximately 300 and hosts full-scale dramatic productions. A-level drama and music are offered, with some subjects taught in partnership with Parkstone Grammar School. Annual musical productions bring together talent from both schools, creating more ambitious performances than either institution could sustain alone.

Twenty-five A-level subjects are available, including mathematics, further mathematics, sciences (biology, chemistry, physics), languages (French, German, Spanish), English language and literature, history, geography, economics, business, computer science, design technology, electronics, art, drama, music, and others. Seven subjects (drama, English language, French, German, media studies, Spanish, sociology) are taught in partnership with Parkstone Grammar School's sixth form, enabling curricular breadth whilst maintaining single-sex teaching in core academic areas.

The school currently educates approximately 1,200 pupils across Years 7 to 13. Year 7 intake is limited to 180 students, distributed across six tutor groups of 30 pupils each. The Sixth Form admits approximately 90 internal progressions and up to 30 external applicants annually, resulting in a Sixth Form cohort of around 250 students across Years 12 and 13.

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Contact Information

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Gravel Hill, Poole, BH17 9JU
01202692132
www.poolegrammar.com
Katie Etheridge
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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.

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#1 Secondary
School
in Poole
#384 in England
Poole Grammar School
#299
State · Secondary & Post-16

Bournemouth School

Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole council
FMS Inspection Score
Elite
A-Level
#383 / 2,549
GCSE
#241 / 3,895
Oxbridge
#1,858 / 2,712
Gender
Boys
Age Range
11-18 years
Religious Character
None
Grammar
Sixth Form
Details
#830
State · Secondary & Post-16

Twynham School

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FMS Inspection Score
Good
A-Level
#815 / 2,549
GCSE
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Oxbridge
#1,462 / 2,712
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
11-18+ years
Religious Character
None
Sixth Form
Special Classes
Details
#1,056
State · Secondary & Post-16

Poole High School

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FMS Inspection Score
Good
A-Level
#1,118 / 2,549
GCSE
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Oxbridge
#2,706 / 2,712
Gender
Mixed
Age Range
11-18 years
Religious Character
None
Sixth Form
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Independent · Other

The Lion Works School

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No rankings available
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Age Range
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Religious Character
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Sixth Form
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