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.
On Ringinglow Road in Bents Green, Sheffield, one of the clearest clues to this school’s priorities sits in the timetable: structured sensory sessions, including sensory circle time and 1:1 work, built into what the school calls its Sensory Curriculum. For many families, that matters as much as any qualification list because it signals a setting designed around regulation and communication, not around coping.
Bents Green School is a state special school for boys and girls aged 11 to 19 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. The published capacity is 288. It operates across five sites: Ringinglow, Gleadless, Enterprise Works, Handsworth Hub and Westfield Hub, with each site taking a tailored approach for its cohort. The school is part of Nexus Multi Academy Trust.
The 2024 Ofsted inspection rated the school Good.
The school’s values set the tone before you get anywhere near exam entries: nurturing relationships, kindness and respect, and celebrating individualism are written plainly into its vision and values. That language matters in a setting serving young people with Autism Spectrum Condition (ASC) and communication and interaction difficulties, because the day often turns on predictability, trusted adults and routines that reduce friction.
A second defining feature is the way Bents Green separates “base” from “stretch” without forcing every student into the same mould. The Westfield Hub, for example, describes itself as an autism-friendly environment within a mainstream setting, aiming to combine targeted support with access to facilities and curriculum expertise offered by a mainstream school. It is not a one-size solution; it is an attempt to get the balance right for students who want some mainstream opportunities but still need specialist scaffolding to access them.
There is also a clear emotional-health frame running through the site. The school describes a trauma and mental health informed approach, with an explicit focus on safety, strong relationships and staff skills for responding to traumatic stress. For families, that tends to translate into fewer power struggles and more planned support around moments that can otherwise derail learning.
The language on the curriculum pages is refreshingly honest about what “success” looks like here: academic qualifications matter, but they sit alongside communication, independence and readiness for adult life.
We do not publish results data for special schools.
That said, this is not a school that opts out of formal accreditation. At the Gleadless site, the school describes pathways based on the National Curriculum, with some students working towards GCSEs (including English Language, Maths and Biology) alongside Entry Level qualifications and broader personal development and life skills. The point for parents is that the offer is flexible: some students will be working towards recognised exams, while others will be building the foundations that make learning and daily life manageable.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The Sensory Curriculum is described in practical, operational terms, not as a slogan. The school outlines timetabled whole-class sessions in a sensory area, small-group sessions for targeted pupils, sensory circle time, 1:1 sensory sessions and relaxation. It also describes sensory practice being integrated across curriculum areas, with a focus on learning, communication and regulation.
For students with ASC and communication and interaction difficulties, that structure can be transformative. It can reduce the cognitive load of “holding it together” and free up more energy for learning, social interaction and independence skills. Importantly, it also tells you something about staff alignment: when sensory work is timetabled rather than improvised, it is more likely to be consistent across classrooms and across the week.
Bents Green’s pathway model is another strength. At Gleadless, the school describes Pathway 1 and Pathway 2 as broad, balanced and relevant to students’ needs and interests, with an emphasis on communication support and life skills alongside the National Curriculum. At Westfield, the hub model emphasises targeted support and interventions for social communication difficulties, combined with access to mainstream facilities and teaching expertise.
For families, the key question is not “Is the curriculum ambitious?” but “Is the ambition calibrated?” Bents Green’s documentation suggests a school trying to match pace and demand to the student in front of it, rather than forcing every learner into the same ladder.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
At post-16, Bents Green is explicit about outcomes beyond school gates. The Enterprise Works post-16 curriculum is framed through Preparation for Adulthood, with four strands: employment, independent living, community inclusion and health. That is a useful lens for parents because it makes the destination conversation concrete. It is not just about leaving with certificates; it is about leaving with routines, travel confidence, community skills and a realistic plan.
Careers education is treated as a whole-school responsibility rather than a single week in Year 11. The school describes using Compass+ and the Gatsby Benchmarks to organise and evaluate careers education, including tracking involvement in careers activities and recording destinations after students leave. For some students, the next step may be further education or training with continued support; for others, the priority may be supported preparation for work and independent living skills. The common thread is that transition is designed, not left to chance.
The admissions page is clear on the central point: all students at Bents Green School have an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP). The school follows Sheffield City Council’s admissions approach and operates across five sites, each with a different tailored offer. In practical terms, admission is about fit between need and site model, not about a catchment line on a map.
For families already in the EHCP system, the questions become very specific: which site is being proposed, what pathway it offers, and how the support around communication and regulation will look day to day. For families earlier in the process, the first step is usually making sure needs are properly described and evidenced so that the right placement can be named.
Bents Green offers information sessions and tours at Ringinglow, Gleadless and Enterprise Works, with dates published on the school website and places that can fill up. If you are juggling multiple options, it helps to use FindMySchool’s Map Search to sense-check travel time to the relevant site before naming preferences, especially when morning routines are already hard-won.
Unlike mainstream secondaries, there is little value in “gaming” admissions here. What matters is suitability: the student’s profile, the environment that helps them learn, and whether the site model matches the needs described in the EHCP.
The most persuasive evidence of pastoral intent is how much of the curriculum is built around regulation and safety. A school that timetables sensory work, and that talks explicitly about psychological safety and supportive relationships, is signalling that behaviour is understood through need, communication and stress, not just through sanctions.
This approach can be particularly important for students who mask well until they cannot, or who find transitions and uncertainty draining. When the environment anticipates pressure points, students are more likely to recover quickly and return to learning, rather than spiralling into repeated exclusions or long periods out of education.
Bents Green describes a trauma and mental health informed approach and links this to staff skills in responding to traumatic stress. For families, that is often the difference between a school that reacts and a school that plans. It should also reassure parents who have seen anxiety or shutdown patterns worsen in settings that move too fast or rely on constant social interpretation.
A special school’s enrichment is often less about “clubs” and more about building a life. Bents Green makes that logic explicit. Post-16 is structured through Preparation for Adulthood, and the school’s handbook guidance describes taking students off-site at times to build independent or small-group travel experience.
This is also where the five-site model comes into its own. A hub within a mainstream setting can widen the menu of experiences for the right student, while still keeping a specialist base. Meanwhile, a sensory curriculum that includes timetabled sessions, group work and 1:1 support can make after-school activities, trips and community learning more accessible because students are not running on empty by lunchtime.
Careers education sits alongside this, with the school describing use of Compass+ and the Gatsby Benchmarks. That matters beyond Year 11, because “what next?” is rarely a single decision for students with SEND. It is a sequence of steps, and the school’s structure is designed to keep those steps realistic and well-supported.
Transport is a real part of the offer here. The school’s family handbook signposts Sheffield City Council SEN transport for those who need it, and it also describes public transport passes being used at times when students are taken off-site to develop travel skills. With five sites in play, families should clarify early which site is being offered and what that means for the daily route.
Parking realities vary by site. The Enterprise Works site includes specific visitor parking arrangements via a barrier and intercom, and it warns that unauthorised parking may lead to fines.
At Ringinglow, Gleadless and Enterprise Works, the school day starts with morning registration at 8:55am and finishes at 3:30pm, with a total weekly time of 32 hours and 55 minutes.
EHCP-led admission: Entry is not a standard “apply and wait” process. All students have an EHCP, and the focus is on the right placement being named. Families should be prepared for detailed conversations about need, support and site fit.
Five-site model: The breadth is a strength, but it adds complexity. The educational experience can look quite different depending on whether a student is placed at a hub site or a more specialist base, so it is worth being precise about what each site offers.
ASC and communication focus: This is a school built around Autism Spectrum Condition and communication and interaction difficulties. That clarity is helpful, but families whose child’s primary needs sit elsewhere should ask searching questions about suitability and daily support.
Planning beyond 19: The Preparation for Adulthood framework gives a strong structure, but post-19 options still require early planning. The best transitions are usually those where travel, independence and community participation are built steadily over time.
Bents Green School reads like a setting designed for the realities of autism and communication needs: sensory work is timetabled, relationships and safety are foregrounded, and post-16 is organised around Preparation for Adulthood rather than vague ambition. Best suited to students aged 11 to 19 with ASC and communication and interaction difficulties who need specialist support to regulate, learn and build independence, and to families who value a clear pathway into adult life.
The challenge is not the principle of the school. It is the match between student and site. If you are considering it, use the Saved Schools tool on FindMySchool to keep notes by site and pathway as you narrow down what “right fit” really means.
The most recent Ofsted inspection rated Bents Green School Good. The school’s published approach is strongly focused on regulation, communication and Preparation for Adulthood, which will suit some students extremely well when the site and pathway match their needs.
It is a state special school for boys and girls aged 11 to 19 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, supporting students with Autism Spectrum Condition and communication and interaction difficulties.
Yes. The school states that all students who attend have an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP).
Yes. The school operates across five sites: Ringinglow, Gleadless, Enterprise Works, Handsworth Hub and Westfield Hub.
No. This is a state school with no tuition fees.
Get in touch with the school directly
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.