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.
Kemnal Technology College sits in the Sidcup and Lamorbey area on the Bromley border, serving students from age 11 through to sixth form. It is part of The Kemnal Academies Trust (TKAT), and recent years have been characterised by leadership change and an ongoing push to stabilise routines, behaviour, and academic outcomes.
The most recent inspection picture is clear. The February 2025 Ofsted inspection graded all four key judgement areas as Requires Improvement, under the post September 2024 approach where there is no single overall effectiveness grade. Safeguarding was judged effective, and the report recognises a strengthening curriculum ambition alongside inconsistency in classroom expectations and pupils’ learning habits.
For parents, the practical question is fit. This is a school for families who want a local, mixed secondary with sixth form, who value pastoral structures and are realistic that improvement work is still in progress. The upside is a broad offer with enrichment and careers activity. The challenge is translating that offer into reliably strong outcomes across subjects and year groups.
A key theme across official reporting is relationships. Staff are described as knowing pupils well, and there is a recognised layer of pastoral support that some pupils actively value, including mentor style support within the school’s ACE provision. That matters, particularly in a context where many families prioritise a school that can hold boundaries while still taking time to understand what sits behind behaviour, attendance, or confidence issues.
The atmosphere, however, is not presented as uniformly settled. The February 2025 report highlights that staff do not apply behaviour expectations consistently, which can lead to distraction in lessons and negative behaviour around the site. In practical terms, this is the difference between a school day that feels calm and purposeful, and one where learning time is lost in pockets of disruption. For students who need highly predictable classrooms to learn well, that inconsistency can be wearing.
Leadership context is part of the story. The June 2022 inspection recorded very recent leadership change, including the appointment of the executive headteacher in June 2022, and the head of school in April 2022. For families, this matters because the improvement journey at a school is often the product of systems bedding in over multiple years, rather than a single quick fix. In that sense, KTC is best understood as a school still working through the hard operational stage of improvement, where policies exist but implementation discipline is still being strengthened.
This review uses FindMySchool’s rankings and performance results for results measures, rather than third party summaries.
At GCSE level, the school’s 2024 performance indicators include:
Attainment 8 score of 32.
Progress 8 score of -0.92, which indicates students, on average, made substantially less progress than similar students nationally from the end of primary school.
EBacc average point score of 2.74.
5.3% achieving grade 5 or above across EBacc subjects.
On the FindMySchool ranking for GCSE outcomes, KTC is ranked 3,682nd in England out of 4,593 schools in the ranked set, and 4th in the Sidcup local area grouping. This places performance below England average, within the lower performance band. (FindMySchool ranking based on official data.)
The important implication is not that strong individual outcomes do not exist, they will. The issue is consistency at scale, across subjects and across the full cohort. A Progress 8 score of -0.92 typically aligns with gaps in curriculum mastery, uneven classroom routines, and weaker retention of prior learning. That interpretation is consistent with inspection reporting which notes pupils do not develop an in depth understanding securely enough, and that teachers do not consistently check and address misconceptions before moving on.
If you are comparing local options, it is worth using the FindMySchool Local Hub page and Comparison Tool to view KTC’s measures alongside nearby secondaries that serve the same travel radius.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
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% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum intent is described as ambitious and structured. The inspection narrative points to a broad curriculum with attention to sequencing, and in 2025 it highlights that the school has raised expectations for what pupils can achieve, supported by curriculum design that includes pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). The 2022 inspection also recognised a carefully considered and sequenced curriculum framework.
Where the work remains, based on the same evidence, is implementation reliability. In 2025 the report states teachers do not consistently use assessment and checking routines well enough to identify misconceptions, which leads to gaps persisting and some pupils moving on before core knowledge is secure. Put simply, students can experience lessons that feel busy but do not always build durable understanding. For families, the practical question is how well your child learns when teaching quality varies across subjects, and whether they can advocate for themselves and seek help proactively.
Reading also appears as a strategic priority. The 2022 inspection describes a strong emphasis on reading across the school, with targeted support delivered by trained staff for those who need it, including support for pupils who speak English as an additional language. That focus can be a significant advantage for students whose confidence depends on literacy, vocabulary development, and the ability to access content across the curriculum.
What can be stated from official reporting is the school’s emphasis on careers education and exposure. The 2025 inspection notes purposeful careers advice and guidance, including careers interviews and trips to universities. The 2022 report also references visiting speakers and careers events as part of guidance. The implication is that students who engage with these opportunities should gain clearer visibility of vocational, apprenticeship, and higher education routes, which is especially valuable when family networks do not already provide that information.
A practical suggestion for families is to ask directly about sixth form pathways during a visit, including the breadth of Level 3 courses offered, retention from Year 11 into Year 12, and the balance of academic and applied options. These details tend to drive whether a sixth form feels like a genuine pathway, or primarily a small internal option.
For Year 7 entry, applications follow the coordinated local authority process for Bromley residents, using the standard secondary transfer timetable. For September 2026 entry, Bromley states that applications open on 1 September 2025, close on 31 October 2025, and national offer day is 2 March 2026. Acceptance is typically required by mid March, and Bromley’s coordinated scheme references 16 March 2026 as the accept or decline date for on time offers.
KTC is an all ability academy and does not operate as a grammar school. There is no selection by academic test in the admissions description available through Bromley’s secondary admissions guidance.
In year admissions are more nuanced. Bromley’s in year guidance notes that some schools, including KTC, require direct application to the school rather than via Bromley’s standard in year form. Families considering a move mid year should plan for the practical constraints of Year 10 and Year 11, where course choices and exam specifications can restrict what is feasible, a point Bromley flags in its own in year guidance for secondary moves.
. If proximity matters for your shortlist, use FindMySchoolMap Search to understand travel distances in a realistic way, then confirm current criteria with the admissions authority.
Applications
151
Total received
Places Offered
99
Subscription Rate
1.5x
Apps per place
Pastoral systems are a visible strength in the way official reporting describes day to day support. The 2025 inspection states that pupils appreciate the pastoral guidance they receive through the ACE provision, and that mentor sessions support wellbeing and academic progress. Staff building positive relationships, and pupils feeling safe, are repeatedly referenced.
At the same time, wellbeing is closely linked to behaviour and attendance, which remain areas of concern. In 2025, the inspection reports that absence remains high, and although suspensions are reducing, they remain high. The implication for families is that the school is still working to secure consistent attendance culture and consistent classroom order, both of which directly affect learning time.
Safeguarding is the non negotiable baseline. Ofsted states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Extracurricular life at KTC comes through as a developing strength, with evidence of both enrichment and the need to improve participation.
In the 2025 report, pupils are said to have access to wider opportunities, including sports and music, and even a crochet club, with participation increasing. In 2022, the inspection notes that pupils could engage in activities such as looking after the school’s chickens, although take up was described as low at that time.
Example: The school provides structured opportunities beyond lessons, including creative, practical, and sports based options.
Evidence: Named examples in official reporting include crochet club, sports and music options, and caring for the school’s chickens.
Implication: For students who struggle to connect through purely academic identity, these programmes can be the route into belonging, better attendance, and stronger motivation. The benefit is highest for pupils who commit, and for families who encourage participation as a non negotiable part of weekly routine rather than an optional extra.
A second implication is reputational. Schools that can show strong participation, sustained clubs, and student leadership often find it easier to stabilise behaviour and improve culture. The 2022 report explicitly highlighted a need to increase participation and expand leadership roles.
KTC serves students aged 11 to 18 and is located in Sidcup, on Sevenoaks Way, with Bromley as the local authority for admissions.
The publicly accessible sources used for this review do not set out a single definitive daily start and finish time, or a verified pattern for before school and after school supervision. Families should confirm timings directly, particularly if transport or childcare planning depends on precision.
Academic outcomes remain a weak point. The current GCSE performance indicators include a Progress 8 score of -0.92, and the school ranks 3,682nd in England for GCSE outcomes in the FindMySchool results. This profile tends to suit students who can take ownership of revision and follow up when they miss knowledge in class.
Consistency of behaviour expectations. Official reporting highlights that staff do not apply behaviour expectations consistently, which can disrupt learning. This is a key consideration for students who need calm classrooms to thrive.
Attendance and suspension context. The 2025 inspection describes high absence and still high, though reducing, suspension levels. Families should ask about attendance strategy, reintegration after sanctions, and how the school supports students to reset.
In year moves require extra care. Bromley’s guidance flags that KTC requires direct application for in year admissions, and that Year 10 and Year 11 transfers can be constrained by subject and exam choices.
Kemnal Technology College is a local, mixed secondary with sixth form, and a clear improvement narrative rather than a finished product. Pastoral structures, mentor support, and careers activity are credible strengths, and safeguarding is judged effective.
Who it suits: families who want a nearby non selective school, value pastoral guidance, and are prepared to support learning at home while the school continues to build consistency in teaching, behaviour, and outcomes. The main trade off is that headline results, as currently captured in the FindMySchool results, are well below the England average profile for progress and attainment.
The school has clear strengths in pastoral support and safety, with safeguarding judged effective in the most recent inspection. However, the February 2025 Ofsted inspection graded key areas as Requires Improvement, and the FindMySchool results indicates weaker GCSE outcomes, including a Progress 8 score of -0.92.
The most recent inspection took place on 4 and 5 February 2025. Ofsted graded Quality of Education, Behaviour and Attitudes, Personal Development, and Leadership and Management as Requires Improvement.
For Bromley residents, the local authority application process applies. Bromley states that applications open on 1 September 2025, the closing date is 31 October 2025, and national offer day is 2 March 2026.
In the FindMySchool results, the school’s GCSE indicators include Attainment 8 of 32 and a Progress 8 score of -0.92. On the FindMySchool GCSE ranking, it is ranked 3,682nd in England. These measures suggest outcomes are currently below England average, and families should look closely at subject level provision and how the school is addressing gaps in learning.
Yes. The school is described as serving ages 11 to 18 and having a sixth form.
Get in touch with the school directly
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