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SchoolsRedruthPool Academy|Best Secondary Schools in Redruth
State School

Pool Academy

Church Road, Pool, Redruth, TR15 3PZ·Cornwall·URN: 136614A 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
2,651
Academic
3,767
Overall
2
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.

Developing
4/10
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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.

Pool Academy Review 2026: Structured secondary with strong routines and a clear improvement agenda

At a Glance

A clear daily rhythm sets the tone here, students arrive for an early meet-and-greet, then begin the day with Tutor Reading before lessons start. That routine matters because it signals the school’s current direction, calm classrooms, consistent expectations, and a sustained focus on literacy and behaviour.

Pool Academy is led by Mr Nick Ward, who has been Principal since 01 September 2021. Governance and school improvement support sit within Athena Learning Trust, which Pool Academy joined on 01 September 2023.

Academic outcomes remain a key workstream. The school’s most recent published GCSE indicators show that results are currently below England average, and progress is negative, so families should read the offer as a school in active improvement rather than one already operating at high performance levels.

Character & Atmosphere

Pool Academy positions its culture around three stated values, Aspiration, Belonging and Respect, and those themes show up in the way leaders describe expectations for conduct and learning. The emphasis is practical rather than abstract, routines are designed to reduce low-level disruption and increase time on task.

Formal external evaluation aligns with the idea of a school in transition. The most recent Ofsted inspection (26 and 27 September 2023, published 10 November 2023) judged Pool Academy as Requires Improvement overall, with the same judgement across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management.

Within that picture, the daily experience for students appears shaped by two parallel realities. On the one hand, classrooms are described as quiet and calm, supported by clear routines, and students are reported as feeling safe with pastoral support valued. On the other hand, the report notes that some older students have struggled to respond positively to raised expectations, and that the behaviour approach can feel frustrating for a proportion of students.

For families, the implication is straightforward. Students who respond well to clarity, predictable routines, and a firm approach to behaviour are more likely to settle quickly. Students who need a more negotiable style, or who are anxious about sanctions systems, may find the adjustment harder at first, especially if they are joining mid-phase.

Results / Academic Performance

Pool Academy’s current performance profile is best read through three indicators.

First, the school’s FindMySchool GCSE academic ranking places it 2,651st in England and 2nd locally (Redruth) for GCSE outcomes, based on official data. This sits below England average overall, outside the top half of schools in England.

Second, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 41.8. Attainment 8 is a measure of average achievement across eight GCSE slots, so it provides a broad sense of how outcomes look across a cohort, not just in English and maths.

Third, Progress 8 is -0.59. Progress 8 compares outcomes to pupils’ starting points, so a negative figure suggests that, on average, students are currently leaving with lower outcomes than similar pupils nationally.

EBacc-related indicators reinforce the same story. The average EBacc APS is 3.6, which suggests that where students do take the full EBacc suite, average grades are still an important part of the outcomes picture.

The implication for families is not that achievement is impossible, but that outcomes will depend heavily on fit and follow-through. Students who attend regularly, keep up with homework, and engage with catch-up and targeted support are likely to gain most from the school’s improvement focus. Students who need consistently high-performing exam outcomes with minimal prompting may want to compare local alternatives using FindMySchool’s Local Hub and Comparison Tool.

Academic Performance Summary

England ranks and key metrics (where available)

GCSE 9–7

—

% of students achieving grades 9-7

Teaching & Learning

Curriculum language on the school website stresses sequencing, defined teaching cycles, and knowledge organisers. The practical aim is retention and cumulative understanding, with assessment points built into cycles so leaders can evaluate what students know and can do.

Reading sits as a cross-school priority rather than a standalone initiative. Tutor Reading is built into the timetable, and the school describes a weekly Read Aloud tutor programme designed to increase both reading practice and comprehension strategies. In English and MFL, the school references theatre visits and whole-school literacy calendar events such as World Book Day, plus a homework reading platform used to support regular independent reading.

At Key Stage 4, GCSE courses begin in Year 10, following an options process that starts in the autumn term of Year 9 and includes an options evening for families. The school also states that, alongside traditional academic subjects, it offers vocational, work-based options through close links to Cornwall College.

The key implication is that students who like structure, clear endpoints, and a step-by-step progression should find the academic model intelligible. Families should still ask direct questions at open events about how the school identifies gaps, how quickly intervention begins, and what the expectations are for home learning, because those details are what turn a planned curriculum into improved results.

Ofsted Inspection
FMSInspection Score:4/10Developing

Quality of Education

Requires Improvement

Behaviour & Attitudes

Requires Improvement

Personal Development

Requires Improvement

Leadership & Management

Requires Improvement

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

Read the official Ofsted reportWhat do Ofsted reports mean?

Where Students Go Next

Because the school is 11 to 16, the core transition is from Year 11 into further education, training, apprenticeships, or employment. The school’s careers pages describe a programme built around the Gatsby Benchmarks, with employer encounters and guidance at key transition points, alongside support with CVs, applications, and interview preparation.

Work-related learning starts before Year 11. The Ofsted report highlights Year 10 work placements as a strength, and the school positions employability as a planned strand within personal development. Mock Interview Day and employer engagement are explicitly listed within the wider clubs and activities programme.

University aspiration is also present, even without a sixth form. The school describes arranging a university visit for every year group each year, with examples given as Year 7 visiting Falmouth University and Year 11 visiting the University of Exeter.

For families, the implication is that post-16 planning should feel visible rather than left to the final term of Year 11. If your child is undecided, the breadth of pathway guidance may be particularly helpful. If your child is already very academically driven, you will want to probe how the school stretches high prior attainers and how it supports triple science or higher-tier pathways where relevant.

Admissions: How to get in

Pool Academy is a state school, there are no tuition fees.

Admissions for Year 7 are coordinated by Cornwall Council rather than managed solely by the school. Demand is currently high. In the most recent admissions data, there were 308 applications for 152 offers, and the entry route is recorded as oversubscribed with 2.03 applications per place.

For September 2027 entry, Cornwall’s published timeline shows a 31 October 2026 deadline for on-time applications, with National Offer Day falling on 1 March 2027. Families should also check the council’s late application rounds if circumstances change.

Open events and tours are part of the school’s approach to recruitment and transition. The school advertises an annual Open Evening in late September and encourages Year 5 and Year 6 families to book tours, but dates can change year to year, so families should treat the timing as indicative and check the school’s current diary.

A practical tip: if you are comparing several local secondaries, use FindMySchool’s Saved Schools feature to keep a shortlist, then use the Comparison Tool to line up GCSE outcomes, Progress 8, and inspection history side-by-side.

Application Demand

Oversubscribed
Last distance offered:
Not published by Cornwall

Applications

308

Total received

Places Offered

152

Subscription Rate

2.0x

Applications per place

Pastoral Care & Wellbeing

Pastoral support is repeatedly positioned as a strength. The Ofsted report describes students as feeling safe and valuing the pastoral support available, with the morning greeting helping students start the day positively. That daily meet-and-greet, followed by Tutor Reading, creates a clear entry routine that can be stabilising for students who arrive anxious or unsettled.

The pastoral structure is visible on the staff listings, with a designated safeguarding lead, heads of year, attendance and behaviour mentoring roles, and a named reflection and behaviour lead. The school also flags a targeted approach for students who struggle with reading, with structured support intended to help them catch up.

The main consideration for families is how behaviour systems intersect with special educational needs and disabilities. The inspection report raises concern that a significant number of students with SEND have found it difficult to adjust to expectations, with sanctions affecting learning time. Families of children with additional needs should ask how adjustments are made in practice, how staff are trained, and what the school does to prevent repeated sanctions becoming a barrier to progress.

Beyond the Classroom: Extracurricular

Extracurricular life at Pool Academy is framed as an “Inspiration Programme”, and the school is unusually specific about the named strands and events it uses to broaden students’ experiences.

Sport

Facilities are a clear feature. The school lists an all-weather astro pitch, sports fields, a sports hall, tennis hard courts, a dance studio, netball courts and a fitness suite. That range matters because it enables both broad participation and sustained training for teams, particularly in winter terms when grass pitches become harder to use.

The school also highlights participation and performance across a wide span of activities, including rugby, surfing, swimming, golf and martial arts, and notes that the girls’ football team has reached regional and national finals. For students who need sport to stay regulated and motivated, those facilities and pathways can be a meaningful part of daily school life.

Leadership, character and enrichment

Leadership and character opportunities include the Combined Cadet Force, the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award, and Citizenship Awards. The school’s DofE page states that Bronze is offered in Year 9 and Silver in Year 10, with the programme running from 01 September each year.

Academic and cultural enrichment is not presented as generic club lists. The school names the Rotary Club Public Speaking Challenge, the Kernow Book Awards, BBC Schools News Report, and an annual Year 11 Prom as part of its wider offer. It also describes a Curriculum Enrichment Week that typically runs in early July, alongside a seasonally changing sports programme.

Trips and wider horizons

Trips are used as a deliberate widening piece. The school cites a Millionaire Reading Club, regular theatre trips, an annual Valencia trip, and a history trip to Berlin. Alongside these, the school states that each year group visits a university annually, which is a useful counterweight for students who may not otherwise see higher education as “for people like them”.

Creative arts and alumni examples

Pool Academy states that it has its own art gallery and that students work with internationally renowned artists. The alumni section reinforces a practical creative pathway example, describing former pupil Rob Cook moving from creative subjects into graphic design training and then into a long-term design career, and Delane Hammill progressing through university into work in higher education and community projects.

Practical Information

The school day is explicitly published. Students are expected to arrive by 08:25 for morning meet-and-greet, then Tutor Reading runs before Period 1. Lunch is scheduled 13:25 to 13:55, and the main teaching day ends after Period 5, with a Period 6 listed for Year 11 running 15:00 to 16:00. Total weekly taught hours are published as 32.5.

Transport-wise, families typically use local bus links serving the Pool area and connections into nearby towns. Cornwall’s public transport listings and timetables show multiple services running through Pool and linking into wider Cornwall networks, which can help students travel independently as they grow in confidence.

Features & Facilities

  • Sixth Form
  • Grammar School
  • Boarding
  • SEN Support
  • Nursery Provision
  • Section 41 Approved
  • School Capacity: 1,050
  • Number of pupils: 681

Things to Consider

  • Outcomes are still catching up. Progress 8 is -0.59 and Attainment 8 is 41.8, so families should ask what the improvement plan looks like in practice for their child, especially if they need rapid academic acceleration.

  • Behaviour culture may feel firm. The school has tightened expectations and reduced low-level disruption, but some students, particularly older cohorts, have found the changes difficult and frustration can arise when sanctions feel unfair.

  • SEND families should probe the detail. The inspection report raises concern about the proportion of students with SEND receiving sanctions that affect learning time, so it is worth discussing adjustments, reintegration, and pastoral coordination before choosing this option.

  • Competition for places is real. With 308 applications for 152 offers families should apply on time and have realistic back-up preferences.

The Verdict

Pool Academy reads as a school working hard to establish consistency, improve outcomes, and build a calm learning culture, with routines, literacy, and behaviour sitting at the centre of that strategy. The wider offer is more distinctive than many local secondaries, particularly around DofE, Combined Cadet Force, structured careers education, and a broad sport and trips programme.

Best suited to students who benefit from clear expectations, predictable routines, and a school that will push organisation and engagement day by day, rather than relying on informal motivation. Families who prioritise already-high exam outcomes should visit with focused questions about implementation, targeted support, and how quickly learning gaps are closed.

FAQs

Pool Academy is currently judged as Requires Improvement and is in a period of significant change. For many families, the key question is fit, students who respond well to structure, consistent routines and clear expectations may do well here, particularly with the strong emphasis on pastoral support and reading routines.

Current published indicators show Attainment 8 of 41.8 and Progress 8 of -0.59, suggesting outcomes are below where the school wants them to be and that progress from starting points is currently negative. The school’s FindMySchool GCSE academic ranking places it 2,651st in England and 2nd locally (Redruth), based on official data.

Yes. The latest admissions figures provided show 308 applications for 152 offers, with the entry route recorded as oversubscribed. Families should submit applications on time and use all preferences wisely.

Year 7 admissions are coordinated by Cornwall Council. The council’s published timeline states an on-time application deadline of 31 October 2026 for September 2027 entry, with offers issued on 1 March 2027. Families should also check the council’s late application rounds if circumstances change.

Students are expected to arrive by 08:25 for meet-and-greet, followed by Tutor Reading before Period 1. The main day runs through to the end of Period 5, and Year 11 have an additional Period 6 from 15:00 to 16:00. Families should check whether any clubs or intervention sessions extend the day for particular year groups.

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Contact Information

Get in touch with the school directly

Church Road, Pool, Redruth, TR15 3PZ
01209712220
poolacademy.co.uk
Nick Ward
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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.

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.

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