In 1983, when three separate Sleaford schools began coordinating their sixth form timetables to broaden curriculum choice, they created something uncommon: a genuine collaboration that has endured for over four decades. The Sleaford Joint Sixth Form today operates across three sites, Carre's Grammar School, Kesteven and Sleaford High School, and St George's Academy, forming the largest school sixth form offering in Lincolnshire. Nearly 900 students aged 16–19 can access approximately 60 A-level and vocational courses simultaneously, making almost any subject combination possible. With no entrance testing required and minimum GCSE entry thresholds (grade 5 in five subjects plus grade 4 in Maths and English), the sixth form welcomes students from across the region. The average A-level grade in 2023 aligned with the England average, while one in four leavers progressed to Russell Group universities, a testament to comprehensive pathways that span both academic and applied qualifications.
The Joint Sixth Form's defining characteristic is diversity of purpose. Students are formally registered at one of the three partner schools, each retaining distinct character and identity, yet can attend lessons, access facilities, and engage in activities across all three sites. For many, this creates a genuine sense of belonging within a smaller house community while accessing resources normally available only to much larger schools.
Carre's Grammar School, founded in 1604, anchors the collaboration with its selective entry tradition and emphasis on academic excellence. The school counts among its facilities the Northgate Sports Hall, hosting community sports from taekwondo to basketball, alongside its fitness suite. Kesteven and Sleaford High School, an academically selective girls' school (coeducational in sixth form) since 1902, brings historic distinction and was rated Outstanding by Ofsted following its November 2024 inspection, with inspectors noting that pupils "thrive in the extremely positive culture that the school has established." St George's Academy, the mixed comprehensive element, operates across two campuses: a 32-acre Sleaford site featuring two sports halls, a fitness centre, construction workshops, and a motor vehicles garage, plus a specialist Ruskington campus with a full-size running track and outdoor gym.
This three-school model creates operational complexity managed through a coordinated timetable, but students report the freedom to construct personalised programmes. The practical result: Year 12 biology students might travel between sites to access specialist science labs, while those pursuing drama can audition for productions staged across venues at all three schools. The collaborative structure also means costs are shared, facilities have been modernised in phases, creating a contemporary learning environment without the singular institutional feel of standalone sixth form colleges. Students benefit from highly qualified staff embedded in traditional secondary schools, where main-school resources (libraries, IT suites, sports facilities) operate at full capacity rather than being scaled for post-16 only.
A-level outcomes in 2023 produced an average grade of B–, which matches the England average precisely. At first glance this signals neither weakness nor distinction, yet context matters. The sixth form operates an open-access model without selective entry testing, meaning the cohort is genuinely mixed-ability despite strong preparation at feeder schools. The breadth of curriculum, approximately 60 courses across three sites, creates natural distribution: some students pursue rigorous academic tracks targeting Russell Group universities, while others blend A-levels with applied qualifications or study full-time vocational pathways.
reveals that 53% of A-level entries achieved grades A*-B, compared to the England average of 47%, positioning the sixth form above national norms. In 2023, 19% of pupils achieved at least three A-levels at grades AAB or above, including at least two facilitating subjects (sciences, maths, history, languages), a metric particularly relevant for competitive university entry. The sixth form ranks 914th in England for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in the typical performance band at the 34.5th percentile.
Progression data from 2021 leavers shows exceptional onward momentum: 91% of students entering employment, further education, or continued education within two terms of leaving, well above the national figure of 82%. Among those pursuing higher education, 75% progressed to university with 26% securing places at Russell Group institutions. A single Cambridge place was achieved in the measurement period from three applications, reflecting the competitive nature of elite university entry.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
53.28%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
The curriculum spans traditional A-level subjects (Biology, Chemistry, Physics, English Literature, History, Geography, Mathematics, Further Mathematics, Modern Languages including French, German, Spanish), applied options (Science Applied BTEC, Sport and Fitness CTEC), and Level 3 vocational pathways (Hospitality, Childcare and Education, Uniformed Protective Services, Engineering, Construction trades). This intentional breadth addresses differing aspirations: students uncertain about university can complete vocational qualifications with embedded work experience; those targeting specific degree subjects can stack A-levels strategically; and those balancing multiple interests can mix and match.
The three partner schools provide subject specialism without forcing choice based on school location. Drama students access theatre performance spaces across multiple sites. Scientists work in modern laboratory facilities upgraded in recent years. Art students access photography studios, while those pursuing music recording have access to studios equipped for contemporary production. Computing facilities include a driving simulator at St George's, a practical tool for vehicle and transport courses, alongside the 3D cinema and TV studio used for media, film, and digital design work. These facilities, modernised through incremental investment across the three schools, avoid the institutional sameness of purpose-built sixth form centres while providing professional-standard equipment.
Teaching is embedded within established secondary schools with long-standing departments. This creates both advantages and constraints: staff are accustomed to mentoring younger pupils and bringing structured pedagogical approaches developed in GCSE teaching; conversely, sixth form specialists sometimes juggle main-school responsibilities. The written prospectus and student testimonials emphasise approachable staff and active pastoral support, with "a pastoral team who will work together to monitor academic progress, provide support and guidance."
Beyond university, the sixth form documents strong progression into employment and apprenticeships. Work experience is embedded for Year 12 students, typically delivered toward the end of the summer term, providing practical exposure to workplaces across the region. Applied A-level and vocational students gain occupational familiarity through their courses, hospitality students participate in commercial kitchen environments, uniformed protective services students engage with emergency services, and construction students work in real-world building contexts.
Career guidance is described as extensive, with visits to Cambridge, Nottingham, and Lincoln universities arranged as part of enrichment, alongside external speakers and career talks. The destination data showing above-average progression suggests these structures work: the majority of leavers transition successfully rather than facing employment gaps or NEET status.
Total Offers
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Offer Success Rate: 33.3%
Cambridge
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Oxford
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Students across the sixth form access competitive and recreational sports through school-specific programmes maintained at each site. Northgate Sports Hall at Carre's hosts community clubs in taekwondo, karate, netball, basketball, and archery, with casual use available for fifth-a-side football, badminton, and table tennis. St George's campus features two sports halls plus a dedicated fitness centre; the Ruskington campus includes an outdoor gym and full-size running track. Girls' football is explicitly mentioned as available, reflecting modern coeducational sixth form practice. Sixth formers can compete for house or school teams in traditional sports (rugby, hockey, cricket, netball) or join County-representative teams through ongoing participation in the County bands, orchestras, and sports squads.
The three schools collectively maintain music provision including orchestras, smaller ensembles, and County representation opportunities mentioned in prospectuses. Music recording studios are available for students pursuing Music A-level or those exploring audio production within vocational media qualifications. A-level Music draws 2% of entries (low but viable), and BTEC Performing Arts (single and double awards) caters to those seeking performance-focused study without full A-level rigor. Theatre productions are coordinated across sites, with students from each school participating in castings and technical roles.
Drama is offered as an A-level with performance opportunities throughout the year. The collaboration creates scale for ambitious productions: a musical or major theatrical work can draw cast and crew from 900 sixth formers across three campuses. These performances historically take place in established school theatres or hired venues, with students gaining real stagecraft experience and, in some cases, the opportunity to participate in ABRSM performance examinations.
Computing A-level is available alongside IT Digital Media CTEC qualifications. The driving simulator at St George's serves vehicle inspection, engineering, and transport-focused learners. The 3D cinema and TV studio at St George's support media studies and creative technology courses. Computer Science is offered through all three schools, accessed through the shared timetable system. Science Applied BTEC and Forensic and Criminal Investigation Level 3 Diploma provide applied pathways for those interested in science without full A-level commitment. Specialist equipment in science labs across the three sites supports practicals for A-level Biology, Chemistry, and Physics.
All sixth formers can undertake the Duke of Edinburgh's Award scheme. The prospectus explicitly mentions this as an available opportunity, with many students pursuing Gold level during Years 12 and 13. This provides structured personal development, outdoor skills training, and a recognised qualification valued by universities and employers.
The prospectus mentions volunteering as available within sixth form provision, reflecting the broader emphasis on personal character development alongside academic study. Community Inclusive Trust (CIT), the umbrella organisation for Carre's and KSHS, emphasises community engagement and values-based leadership across its schools.
Outside speakers are brought to campus as part of the Enrichment Programme, covering topics from career pathways to subject-specific expertise. Field trips complement classroom learning across humanities, sciences, and applied subjects. The breadth here is intentional: visiting Cambridge, Nottingham, and Lincoln universities normalises the idea of progression to higher education, particularly valuable for first-generation university applicants or those uncertain about university suitability.
Sixth form students help lead the school, sitting on school councils, representing peers, and chairing formal events. At Carre's Grammar School, the Heads of School Council structure involves senior students in school decision-making, developing leadership credentials that prospectuses highlight for university or workplace applications.
An annual formal social event marks the end of Year 13, providing a ceremonial closure and memorable peer experience common to all three sites.
The sixth form operates an open-admission policy with no entrance testing. Students from any secondary school in England (and beyond) can apply provided they meet GCSE thresholds: a minimum of five GCSE full courses at grade 5 or above, with grade 4 in both Mathematics and English Language/Literature as compulsory minimums. For A-level study, most subjects require grade 6 in that subject at GCSE, typically grade 5 in facilitating subjects (sciences, maths, languages, history), and grade 7 for highly competitive subjects like medicine-pathway Sciences.
Vocational pathways operate on slightly lower thresholds: BTEC and CTEC qualifications require equivalent attainment of five subjects at grade 4 or above, including English or Literature at grade 4. This creates genuine flexibility for students whose GCSE performance suggests vocational or applied routes rather than traditional A-levels.
The three schools process applications through separate Sixth Form Administrators but coordinate admissions decisions, meaning a Year 11 student nominates one school as their registered base whilst remaining eligible for any course at any site. This is communicated transparently in prospectuses and application information, reducing confusion about choice and location.
Students enrolled in the Sleaford Joint Sixth Form may receive means-tested bursaries dependent on household income and at the discretion of the individual school. This represents genuine financial support and warrants investigation during the application process.
Each of the three schools is rated "Good" by Ofsted at sixth form, with Kesteven and Sleaford High School most recently rated Outstanding (November 2024) across all five inspection categories. Inspectors observed that pupils "engage eagerly with the high-quality learning opportunities" and that "pupils are proud to attend" the school. This suggests engaged teaching and positive culture at least at one key site.
Pastoral support is organised through form tutors and a dedicated pastoral team across the three schools. Staff are described in student-facing materials as "very approachable and keen to assist students outside lesson times." Academic progress is tracked through regular target-setting and monitoring, helping identify both problems and talents early. The system is designed to catch struggling students and challenge those performing above expectations.
The sixth form operates across three physical locations, each with established school facilities. There is no single unified sixth form building; instead, students move between sites according to their timetable. The coordinated timetable system allows this to work practically, most common subjects (Mathematics, English, Sciences) are offered at all three schools, minimising travel between sites for core subjects. Less popular subjects (e.g., Classical Greek, Russian if offered; specialist arts) may be timetabled at one location, requiring students to travel.
Travel between sites is the responsibility of individual students. Most live within Sleaford or surrounding towns where public transport or parental drop-off is feasible. The Sleaford area is served by Sleaford railway station (on the Peterborough-Lincoln line) and local bus routes, though specifics for sixth formers should be verified with individual school admissions teams.
School hours are structured as traditional 8:30am–3:00pm patterns (or similar) at each site, with study periods built into sixth form timetables. Independent study facilities at all three schools provide flexible learning spaces during non-contact time.
Multi-site operation requires coordination. Unlike a unified sixth form college, the Sleaford Joint Sixth Form depends on timetable synchronisation across three schools. Most students manage this well, but those with inflexible subject combinations or additional needs may find the system logistically challenging. Before applying, verify that your intended subject combination is timetable-viable by consulting the SJSF prospectus or contacting individual school administrators.
Exam performance matches rather than exceeds England average. With 53% achieving A*-B at A-level against the England average of 47%, results are above norm but not exceptional. The sixth form's strength lies in access, breadth, and progression rather than ultra-competitive academic rankings. Students targeting highly selective universities should aim for top grades across three or more subjects; students with lower GCSE attainment will find this sixth form welcoming but must manage realistic expectations.
No entrance testing means mixed-ability cohorts. This is both a strength and a reality check. The sixth form genuinely welcomes students across ability ranges and aspiration levels. Your peers will include some targeting Oxbridge and others pursuing Level 2/3 vocational qualifications. This diversity enriches the community but means you are not in a selected cohort and competition may be less intense than at selective sixth form colleges.
Facilities are good but shared. The three schools' facilities are modern and well-maintained, but you do not have a dedicated sixth form building. Libraries, IT suites, sports centres, and music rooms are shared with main-school pupils. This creates vibrant, integrated communities but less sixth form exclusivity than some independent or centralized institutions offer.
The Sleaford Joint Sixth Form represents a pragmatic and inclusive sixth form experience. The collaboration has endured for over 40 years because it works: three distinct school communities, one selective boys' grammar, one selective girls' grammar, one mixed comprehensive, retain identity and character whilst pooling resources to offer curriculum breadth impossible individually. This generates genuine choice (approximately 60 courses across qualifications ranging from A-levels to Level 2 vocational), open access (no entrance testing), and practical support (pastoral teams, enrichment speakers, work experience). Results position the sixth form solidly in the middle of England's sixth form landscape: above average but not elite, with strong progression to universities, apprenticeships, and employment.
Best suited to students who: value choice and flexibility over selectivity; want a sixth form embedded within established school communities rather than purpose-built; are ready to navigate a multi-site operation; and seek balanced pathways addressing academic, vocational, and personal development. The main limitation is that this is not an academic hothouse, students must bring internal motivation and realistic expectations. For families in Sleaford, surrounding villages, and broader East Midlands, this sixth form deserves serious consideration for its inclusive ethos, practical facilities, and demonstrated progression outcomes.
Yes. The sixth form was rated Good by Ofsted at all three partner schools, with Kesteven and Sleaford High School most recently rated Outstanding in November 2024. A-level results place the sixth form above England average: 53% achieved A*-B in 2023, compared to 47% in England. Nearly 75% of 2021 leavers progressed to university, with 26% securing Russell Group places. The sixth form's greatest strength is breadth: approximately 60 courses across academic, applied, and vocational pathways ensure virtually any subject combination is achievable. This is found on the FindMySchool platform as ranking 914th in England for A-level outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), placing it in the typical performance band.
There is no entrance examination. The minimum GCSE entry requirements are five GCSEs at grade 5 or above, including grade 4 (or above) in both Mathematics and English Language or Literature. For A-level study specifically, most subjects require grade 6 in that subject at GCSE. Vocational pathways (BTEC, CTEC, Level 2 qualifications) operate on slightly lower thresholds, requiring equivalent attainment of five subjects at grade 4 or above, including English or Literature. Full subject-specific entry requirements are detailed in the annual SJSF prospectus.
Students are formally registered at one of the three schools (Carre's, KSHS, or St George's) where they receive form tutor support and pastoral care. However, the sixth form operates a coordinated timetable allowing students to attend lessons at any of the three sites depending on their subject choices. Most subjects are taught at multiple sites, minimising travel. Some specialised subjects may be offered at only one location. Students are responsible for their own travel between sites; public transport and parental drop-off are the typical arrangements. Before applying, check the prospectus to confirm your intended subject combination is timetable-viable.
All three schools have recently upgraded facilities. Carre's Grammar School features the Northgate Sports Hall (shared with community users), a fitness suite, science labs, and traditional school facilities. Kesteven and Sleaford High School, recently rated Outstanding, has invested in modern learning spaces, specialist facilities, and performance venues. St George's operates the largest campus (32 acres of parkland) with two sports halls, a fitness centre, motor vehicle garage, construction workshops, two sports courts, and a satellite Ruskington campus featuring a full-size running track and outdoor gym. Across all three sites, students access music recording studios, a 3D cinema, TV studio, and specialist science, art, and design technology facilities.
The sixth form offers extensive opportunities including Duke of Edinburgh's Award (available up to Gold level), work experience placements in Year 12, enrichment speakers, visits to universities, County sports teams, school-based sports and music ensembles, drama productions, clubs and societies (site-specific at each school), and student leadership roles on school councils. Annual social activities include a Leavers' Prom. The breadth varies slightly by site; prospectuses detail school-specific offers.
In 2023, the average A-level grade was B–, matching the England average. 53% of A-level entries achieved A*-B, above the England average of 47%. Eighteen point 9% achieved at least three A-levels at AAB or above (with facilitating subjects), a strong metric for competitive university entry. Among 2021 leavers, 75% progressed to higher education; 26% secured Russell Group university places. One Cambridge place was achieved in the measurement period from three applications. Students pursuing vocational pathways achieve strong employment and apprenticeship outcomes, with 91% of all Key Stage 5 completers in further education, employment, or apprenticeships within two terms of leaving, above the England average of 82%.
Yes. Students enrolled in the Sleaford Joint Sixth Form may be eligible for means-tested 16–19 bursaries dependent on household income and at the discretion of the individual school. Bursaries are intended to support eligible students' education. Details are available from each school's sixth form administrator; applicants are encouraged to enquire during the application process if financial support might be required.
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