On Aldwych Drive in Ashton, the day does not stop at the final bell. BOOST Clubs are a fixture of school life here, and The Diggery adds something rarer in a mainstream secondary: a purposeful outdoor learning space, built with The Lancashire Wildlife Trust, with an outdoor classroom and pond-dipping set-up.
Ashton Community Science College is a state secondary school for boys and girls aged 11 to 16 in Preston, Lancashire, with a published capacity of 800. There is no sixth form, so the job is to prepare students well for the jump to post 16. The most recent Ofsted inspection rated the school Good. The big question for families is fit: a school that leans into structure, enrichment, and specialist support, even though exam outcomes sit below the England average overall.
The school’s expectations are summed up in one word that students will see often: PROUD. It is not left as a vague slogan. The letters spell out punctual, responsible, organised, uniform, determined, which tells you something important straight away. This is a school that prefers clarity to hints, and routines to constant negotiation.
That tone can suit students who like knowing where the line is. It can also help families who want consistency across classrooms, especially in a large, mixed intake school where Year 7 confidence can vary wildly. The trade-off is that the rules need to feel fair and applied evenly, so it is worth asking how the school balances firmness with flexibility for students who need reasonable adjustments.
A published capacity of 800 brings energy and variety, but it also demands systems that stop students getting lost in the crowd. The house structure is one of the ways Ashton tries to do that. Students are placed into one of six houses, and inter-house competition is built into the year through the House Championship, giving day-to-day school life a familiar team identity.
A school like this lives or dies on relationships. The most useful lens is simple: how quickly staff get to know a child beyond their timetable, and how easy it is for a student to find “their people”, whether that is through sport, a club, a support base, or a leadership role.
Start with the overall positioning. Ranked 3,013th in England and 19th in Preston for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), Ashton sits below the England average overall, placing it in the lower 40% of state secondaries on this measure.
The Attainment 8 score is 40.3. Progress 8 is -0.07, which indicates students make slightly below average progress across their GCSE subjects compared with other students with similar prior attainment across England. For parents, that is a useful reality check: outcomes are not the main reason to choose this school, but neither is the data shouting that students are being left behind en masse.
The English Baccalaureate measures add another layer. The school’s EBacc average point score is 3.46, compared with an England average of 4.08. The percentage achieving grade 5 or above across the EBacc suite is 7.3%. That combination points to a school where the EBacc pathway is not currently a dominant driver of results, so families who care strongly about a very academic, EBacc-heavy route should ask how option choices are guided and how ambition is built without narrowing the experience for everyone else.
If you are comparing Ashton with other local options, it is worth using FindMySchool’s comparison tools to line up Progress 8 and Attainment 8 side by side, then sanity-check the result against what your child actually needs day to day: pace, support, structure, and the breadth of what happens beyond lessons.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum story here is built around sequencing and recall, rather than isolated “projects” that look good but do not stick. Subject specialist teaching matters in an 11 to 16 school, because the gaps between a strong department and a weaker one show up quickly by Year 10. When the approach is consistent, students benefit from clear routines: what to learn, how to revise, how to be tested, and how to improve.
Reading is treated as a whole-school priority, including targeted support for students who arrive in Year 7 with weaker literacy. Phonics intervention at secondary age is not a fashionable headline, but it can be a practical lifeline for students who have been coping quietly for years. It also tells you something about the school’s mindset: address gaps directly, rather than hope they disappear.
The best question to ask on any visit is about grip and feedback. How do departments check that students understand, not just that they have completed work? Where does support sit, in-class or pulled out? And how is that balanced with keeping students part of the mainstream experience?
Quality of Education
N/A
Behaviour & Attitudes
N/A
Personal Development
N/A
Leadership & Management
Good
With no sixth form, the end of Year 11 matters more. The aim is not simply “a next destination”, but a next destination that matches the student’s strengths and temperament: sixth form, further education college, technical routes, apprenticeships, or training programmes.
A school that runs a large enrichment programme and puts time into routines is often trying to build readiness as well as results. For some students, that is the difference between drifting into a post-16 option and choosing one with intent. Families should ask how careers guidance is built into the years before GCSE options, and how the school supports students who need a more practical route to feel motivated.
Ashton uses Lancashire’s co-ordinated admissions process, so families apply through the local authority rather than directly to the school.
Demand is strong. Recent data shows 371 applications for 158 offers, which works out at about 2.35 applications per place. The practical implication is straightforward: build a preference list that is honest. Put Ashton where you genuinely want it, but make sure your other choices are schools you would be comfortable with if your first preference does not come through.
For many families, the deciding factor is not the admissions form, but the daily reality. This is where using a distance and journey-time check can help. FindMySchool’s map tools are useful for sanity-checking how the school run looks at peak time, and what staying for clubs does to the day.
The school also puts effort into transition: a Year 6 open evening and a Year 6 induction day are part of how many students get their first feel for the place. If your child is anxious, ask what additional transition support looks like, and how quickly the school moves from “new starter” to confident secondary student.
Applications
371
Total received
Places Offered
158
Subscription Rate
2.4x
Apps per place
Pastoral systems need to be visible to be effective, and Ashton presents wellbeing support as a practical route rather than a vague promise. On-site counselling is offered on Tuesdays and Fridays, which gives students a predictable, regular way to speak to a trained adult outside their usual teaching relationships.
Specialist support is part of the picture too. The school describes specially resourced provision for students with hearing impairment and speech, language and communication needs, alongside structures such as a Deaf Support Unit, a Social Communication Difficulties Unit, and a Year 7 Bridge Class designed to support transition and access to learning. For the right child, that can be the difference between coping and flourishing; for families, the key is to understand how support is delivered day to day and how inclusion is handled in mainstream lessons.
The wider aim is a calm, workable school day where students feel known. Ask about how concerns are raised, how quickly they are responded to, and what communication looks like when things are going well, not only when there is a problem.
BOOST is the school’s umbrella for clubs and enrichment, and the range is unusually broad for an 11 to 16 mainstream secondary. Academic options include GCSE Astronomy Club, Up and Atom Science Club, STEM Club, Debating Club, Chess Club, Photography Club, and Dungeons and Dragons Club. Sport is part of the mix too, including boxing, rugby, netball, and badminton.
The value is not the list itself. It is what the list does for a student’s week. A club can be the place where a quieter child starts speaking up, where friendships form beyond tutor group, or where motivation returns after a difficult lesson.
The Diggery is a distinctive marker. Created with The Lancashire Wildlife Trust, it includes an outdoor classroom with a fire pit, a pond with a dipping platform, woodland, and spaces designed for quiet reading. That matters for students who learn best with their hands and their attention anchored to something real.
The BOOST offer also includes practical responsibilities, including beekeeping and caring for the school’s chickens. For some teenagers, that kind of steady, hands-on role can be more confidence-building than another revision session, and it fits the school’s wider message: responsibility is not just talked about, it is practised.
Ashton sits in the Ashton area of Preston. For rail, Preston is the main station for families commuting across the city or from further afield. Local bus routes across Preston also make the journey possible without a car, though most families will still want to plan around peak-time traffic.
The school day runs from 8.40am to 3pm. BOOST Clubs extend beyond lessons, with sessions running until 4.30pm, which can suit working families and students who benefit from a fuller, more structured afternoon.
Competition for places: With 371 applications for 158 offers, demand is high (about 2.35 applications per place). Treat Ashton as a competitive preference rather than a guaranteed local option.
Results profile: The GCSE picture sits below the England average overall, with Progress 8 at -0.07 and Attainment 8 at 40.3. Some families will prioritise structure and support over outcomes; others will want a stronger results profile.
Academic breadth and the EBacc: EBacc outcomes are low on the headline measures, including 7.3% achieving grade 5 or above across the EBacc suite. If an EBacc-heavy route matters to you, ask how the school builds participation and how options are guided.
Specialist support fit: Resourced provision and additional support pathways can be a very strong match, but it is worth being precise about what is offered, who it is designed for, and how mainstream integration works across the week.
Ashton Community Science College is a structured, busy 11 to 16 secondary where routines and enrichment are central to the offer. BOOST Clubs give many students an extra gear, and The Diggery adds a practical, outdoors dimension that is unusual in a mainstream setting.
It will suit families in Preston who want a clear expectations culture, visible wellbeing routes, and specialist support that is part of the school’s identity, even if headline exam measures are not the strongest locally. Competition for places is the limiting factor; for students who settle well into the routines, the day-to-day experience can be broad, steady, and purposeful.
Ashton Community Science College is rated Good. The culture places emphasis on clear routines, structured expectations, and a wide enrichment offer alongside specialist support.
Yes. Recent demand shows 371 applications for 158 offers, which is about 2.35 applications per place, so families should plan for competition.
On FindMySchool’s GCSE measures, Ashton is ranked 3,013th in England and 19th in Preston. Attainment 8 is 40.3 and Progress 8 is -0.07.
There are no tuition fees because this is a state school. Families should still budget for usual secondary costs such as uniform, equipment, and some trips or optional activities.
No. Ashton is an 11 to 16 secondary school, so students move on to post-16 providers after Year 11.
BOOST is the school’s programme of clubs and enrichment beyond lessons. Options listed include a mix of academic clubs (such as GCSE Astronomy and STEM) and wider activities, including sports.
Get in touch with the school directly
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