A large 11 to 18 academy serving Sleaford, Ruskington, and a wide rural hinterland, St George’s Academy is built for scale. The Sleaford site sits on a 32-acre footprint and anchors the sixth form, while Ruskington caters for Years 7 to 11 and has its own specialist spaces. The most recent Ofsted inspection (18 and 19 June 2024) rated the academy Good across all key judgements, including sixth form provision.
Parents tend to notice two things early. First, this is a school with serious infrastructure for practical and technical learning, including construction areas, a motor vehicles garage, and a purpose-built computing and ICT base with specialist equipment. Second, post-16 options are widened by the Sleaford Joint Sixth Form partnership, which means some sixth-form students travel between sites in town for particular subjects.
Leadership has also shifted recently. The current Principal is Amanda Money, appointed in September 2024, following Laranya King’s departure in August 2024.
This is a large, mixed comprehensive with an explicit emphasis on conduct, routines, and consistency. One visible example is the Conduct Card Scheme, issued termly and designed to keep everyday expectations clear, from punctuality to corridor behaviour. The approach is structured rather than performative, and it signals a school that would rather prevent low-level disruption than spend time debating it.
Day-to-day culture is also shaped by the two-campus model. Sleaford houses Years 7 to 13 and the main sixth-form spaces, while Ruskington is Years 7 to 11 with its own specialist facilities. For some families, that split is a practical advantage, particularly if the Ruskington site is closer to home; for others, it is simply a fact to plan around, especially once students begin to access wider sixth-form provision across the Sleaford Joint Sixth Form partnership.
The published mission statement sets the tone: Aiming High to Achieve Excellence for All, alongside values framed around respect, tolerance, and teamwork. The language is ambitious and deliberately broad, which fits a school serving a wide intake with very different starting points.
Safeguarding is treated as a baseline expectation rather than a slogan. The June 2024 report confirmed that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
For a school of this size, the most useful way to read outcomes is in two layers: attainment and progress at GCSE, then the post-16 picture.
Attainment 8 score: 40.8
EBACC average point score: 3.8
Percentage achieving grades 5 or above in the EBACC: 13.7%
Progress 8 score: -0.29
Taken together, this points to a GCSE profile that has faced some headwinds. A Progress 8 score of -0.29 indicates students, on average, made below-average progress compared with other students nationally who had similar prior attainment at the end of primary. The EBACC average point score of 3.8 sits below the England average of 4.08.
In the FindMySchool rankings (based on official outcomes data), the school is ranked 2,560th in England for GCSE outcomes, and 3rd locally in Sleaford. That places performance broadly in line with the middle 35% of schools in England (25th to 60th percentile), a “solid mid-pack” position rather than a high-flying outlier.
A-level results are similarly positioned in the middle of the England distribution, with a profile that looks more “steady” than “spiky”:
A* grades: 1.96%
A grades: 9.15%
B grades: 35.95%
A* to B grades: 47.06%
The A* to B rate is essentially in line with the England benchmark provided (England average 47.2%). The combined A* and A proportion is about 11.11% (1.96% plus 9.15%), which is below the England average for A* and A combined (23.6%).
In FindMySchool’s A-level rankings, the sixth form is ranked 1,584th in England, and 3rd locally in Sleaford, which again corresponds to performance in line with the middle 35% of A-level providers in England (25th to 60th percentile).
The implication is not that ambition is absent, but that outcomes are not uniformly strong across all subjects and groups, and progress at GCSE is a key watchpoint. For families with a child who needs very tight academic stretch, you would want to interrogate subject-level strength, sets, and enrichment. For families prioritising breadth, facilities, practical pathways, and a wide post-16 menu through the town-wide sixth-form partnership, the overall offer may align well.
(Parents comparing nearby secondaries can use the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools to view these GCSE and A-level indicators side-by-side.)
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
47.06%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
The curriculum design described in official reporting and school materials emphasises breadth, sequencing, and clarity about what students need to know at each stage. There is a strong vocational dimension alongside traditional academic routes, and this is reflected in the physical layout and specialist spaces.
A defining feature is the technical estate. On the Sleaford campus, facilities explicitly include two sports halls, a fitness centre, two construction areas, and a motor vehicles garage. The computing and ICT base is unusually developed, with six specialist suites and equipment such as a full-size car simulator, 3D cinema, TV studio, and radio station.
This matters because it changes what “options” can realistically look like. Practical subjects are not run as marginal add-ons; they are supported by dedicated spaces that allow for industry-relevant learning experiences.
Literacy support is positioned as a whole-school priority, with systems aimed at identifying gaps and putting personalised support in place for those who need it. The better version of that approach is that weak reading does not become the hidden barrier across subjects like history, science, and geography. The weaker version, which the school itself is working to avoid, is inconsistency between classrooms. The June 2024 report made clear that delivery is not yet equally precise in all lessons, and that this is an improvement priority.
For students with SEND, the published picture is mixed and realistic. Most access the same curriculum as peers, with adaptations where needed, but the consistency of information-sharing and classroom application is a key development area.
Because the school does not publish a full set of Russell Group or Oxbridge counts on its own site, the most reliable “numbers” view comes from the destination measures available and the school’s own published participation figures.
For the 2023 to 2024 leavers cohort (cohort size 187):
39% progressed to university
9% started apprenticeships
33% entered employment
5% progressed to further education
This suggests a destinations profile with a significant “earn and learn” component, and a sizeable direct-to-work pathway alongside higher education progression.
The school’s own published participation figures for 2024 add context about internal progression:
56.9% of Year 11 students stayed on into sixth form
75% of Year 13 students went on to further or higher education, with 25% entering employment or apprenticeships
These figures matter because they imply two things. First, a large minority choose alternatives at 16, which is common in areas where apprenticeships, employment, and college routes are visible and valued. Second, sixth form is not treated as the only “successful” route, which tends to suit students who are motivated by practical end goals rather than academic prestige alone.
St George’s is a major contributor to the Sleaford Joint Sixth Form, working alongside Carre’s Grammar School and Kesteven and Sleaford High School. Practically, that expands subject combinations and reduces the risk that a course disappears due to small class sizes. It can also mean travel between sites for particular lessons.
Quality of Education
Good
Behaviour & Attitudes
Good
Personal Development
Good
Leadership & Management
Good
This is a state-funded academy with admissions coordinated through Lincolnshire’s normal secondary transfer process for Year 7, and additional pathways for sixth form.
Lincolnshire’s published timeline for secondary applications is clear:
Applications open: 8 September 2025
National closing date: 31 October 2025
Lincolnshire final closing date for late applications and changes: 12 December 2025
National Offer Day: 2 March 2026
Reopened period for late applications and changes: 2 March 2026 to 23 March 2026 (then allocations continue on a rolling basis after early April)
Given today’s date (25 January 2026), families applying for September 2026 entry may be in the late application window, depending on whether an application was already lodged by the autumn deadlines.
Demand indicators show the school as oversubscribed, with 469 applications for 361 offers and a subscription proportion of 1.3 in the recorded entry route. That level of demand usually means distance and criteria order matter, rather than casual preference.
Lincolnshire’s published oversubscription criteria for the academy prioritise looked-after children, siblings, and in some cases children of staff, followed by straight line distance to the closest school site. If distance is not sufficient to separate applicants for the last place, a lottery is used as a tie-break.
If you are relying on distance, families should use the FindMySchool Map Search to check their measurement against recent local patterns. Even small changes in applicant distribution can shift cut-offs year to year.
The school publicises open evenings, with dates shown in its events listings for late June and early July 2026 (including an event listed for 1 July 2026 at the Sleaford campus, and one listed for 30 June 2026 at the Ruskington campus). Dates and booking arrangements can change, so treat the website as the final point of confirmation.
The academy’s published admission numbers include a sixth form published admission number of 50, and post-16 study sits within the wider Sleaford Joint Sixth Form partnership. In practice, entry requirements depend on the programme and subjects chosen.
Applications
469
Total received
Places Offered
361
Subscription Rate
1.3x
Apps per place
Pastoral provision is framed as a key part of the school’s model, both through formal structures and through visible day-to-day systems. Behaviour expectations are reinforced by routines such as the Conduct Card Scheme, which translates “standards” into concrete, trackable actions. For many students, clarity is calming, particularly in a large school.
Wellbeing support also includes signposting and access routes to external and digital services. The Student Wellbeing pages highlight resources and structured wellbeing activity, including access to Kooth, which is positioned as a confidential support platform for young people.
For older students, there is an explicit tutorial model. Sixth-formers are expected to meet regularly with a tutor who acts as the first contact for academic and pastoral concerns, alongside monitoring attendance and progress.
Extracurricular life matters most when it is specific and sustained, not just a long list. St George’s publishes a mix of general clubs plus several defined strands that tell you something about the school’s identity.
The clearest example is Greenpower Racing, run on the Ruskington campus, where students have the opportunity to build and race cars. This aligns with the school’s wider emphasis on applied learning and the facilities it has invested in. The implication for students is straightforward: practical engineering becomes something you do, not just something you read about.
The technical estate reinforces that direction. Purpose-built ICT suites, including a car simulator and media facilities such as a TV studio and radio station, make it more plausible for students to develop skills in computing, digital production, and applied design.
The Combined Cadet Force (Royal Air Force) is a second distinctive strand. Students can join in Year 8, with taster sessions offered earlier, and the programme is explicitly framed around leadership, teamwork, and adventurous activities. For the right student, it can provide a structured “belonging” mechanism and a different route to confidence than purely classroom success.
The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is also well-established, with clear sign-up windows and published registration arrangements. In a large school, having a nationally recognised framework for volunteering, skills, and expedition activity helps turn good intentions into a sustained commitment.
Not all enrichment is flashy. The libraries on both campuses open from 8.30am, include free-to-use IT and printing facilities, and host a Homework Club (Monday to Thursday 3.30pm to 4.30pm, plus a shorter Friday session). That kind of structured, supervised study time can be a quiet difference-maker for students who benefit from routine, or who do not have a calm workspace at home.
Registration runs 08.45 to 09.05 and the day finishes at 15.30.
Homework Club operates in the libraries after school on most weekdays, and the libraries open from 8.30am.
Sleaford is a market town with rail links and bus routes serving both the town and surrounding villages. Many families plan travel around which campus their child is based on, particularly for younger year groups on the Ruskington site.
This is a state school with no tuition fees. Families should still budget for the usual secondary costs, including uniform, equipment, optional trips, and activity fees where applicable.
GCSE progress is a key watchpoint. A Progress 8 score of -0.29 indicates below-average progress from primary starting points. For academically able students who need consistent stretch, it is worth exploring subject-level support and how the school is tightening classroom consistency.
A genuinely large-school experience. Scale brings facilities and option breadth, but it also requires students to manage transitions, multiple staff, and a busier social environment. Some children thrive on that; others prefer smaller settings.
Two-campus logistics. The split-site model can be an advantage geographically, but it also means families should understand where their child will be based by year group, and what transition into sixth form looks like operationally.
Oversubscription can make distance decisive. The academy uses straight-line distance to the nearest site once priority criteria are met, with a lottery tie-break if distances cannot separate the final applicants. It is sensible to verify your position carefully rather than assume.
St George’s Academy is a broad, well-resourced comprehensive with technical and digital facilities that many schools cannot match, and a post-16 partnership that widens subject choice in a meaningful way. Outcomes sit around the middle of England distributions, with GCSE progress the area that parents should probe most carefully.
Best suited to students who want breadth, practical pathways alongside academic routes, and a structured culture with clear routines, particularly those who will use the school’s facilities and enrichment strands such as Greenpower Racing, CCF, and strong post-16 guidance.
The school was rated Good by Ofsted at its most recent inspection (18 and 19 June 2024), including sixth form provision, and safeguarding was confirmed as effective. Academic outcomes are mixed, with mid-range GCSE and A-level positioning in England and GCSE progress below average, so “good” here looks like strong breadth and facilities paired with an improvement focus on consistency and progress.
Demand indicators in the available admissions dataset show the school as oversubscribed, with 469 applications recorded against 361 offers and a subscription proportion of 1.3. In practice, that tends to mean that criteria order and distance matter for Year 7 allocation.
For Lincolnshire secondary transfer, applications for September 2026 entry opened on 8 September 2025 and the national closing date was 31 October 2025. Lincolnshire also publishes a later date for late applications and changes (12 December 2025), with the process reopening from 2 March 2026 for late changes.
At GCSE, the school’s Attainment 8 score is 40.8 and Progress 8 is -0.29, which indicates below-average progress from primary starting points. At A-level, 47.06% of grades are A* to B, broadly in line with the England benchmark though top grades (A* and A combined) are lower than the England benchmark provided.
The school runs a Greenpower Racing club at the Ruskington campus, giving students the chance to build and race cars, and it also offers a Combined Cadet Force (RAF section) which focuses on leadership and teamwork. Homework Club and library provision are also clearly structured for day-to-day academic support.
Get in touch with the school directly
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