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.
Last reviewed: January 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 If you spot anything outdated or inaccurate, please let us know.
Over a century of history is embedded in these buildings. The original Slough Secondary School opened its doors in 1912, making the school a foundational institution in selective education for Berkshire. What began as a single site in William Street has evolved dramatically, most recently in 2013 when the school embraced its current identity as Upton Court Grammar School, replacing the chained swan symbol with a phoenix rising from the flames. Today, under the leadership of Mr Oliver King, this selective grammar school of 1,166 students ranks 91st out of 3,895 schools in England for GCSE academic performance (FindMySchool ranking). The school occupies Lascelles Road in Upton, with pupils aged 11 to 18, and operates as a fully mixed academy with a strong reputation for selection-based entry.
At the gates, you encounter a busy, purposeful community. Students move between lessons with direction and pace. The atmosphere combines the formality traditional to grammar schools with a genuine, multicultural warmth. This is not a place of pretence; staff speak warmly of their pupils, and pupils visibly respect the expectations placed on them.
The school's four core values, Unity, Curiosity, Growth, and Service, are not merely decorative. These principles inform decisions and guide behaviour across the campus. The institution holds fast to its historical roots while embracing internationalism and diversity. With 98% of pupils from ethnic minority backgrounds, the school has achieved what many schools struggle to do: create a genuinely inclusive meritocratic environment where academic selection is the sole criterion, and students from all backgrounds thrive alongside one another.
Under Mr King's leadership, there is palpable momentum. The school continues to invest in its facilities and its people. Teachers speak with expertise and passion. Sixth Form students describe a supportive community where intellectual challenge coexists with genuine pastoral care. The ethos is neither austere nor slack. It is serious about education without being serious about itself.
In the 2024-25 / 2025 dataset, GCSE results reinforced the school's position as one of England's strongest selective secondary schools. Attainment 8 stood at 79.9, and Progress 8 was +0.85. A remarkable 82.2% of published GCSE grades were 9-7 (A*-A equivalent). The school ranks 91st out of 3,895 schools in England for GCSE academic outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), with an overall GCSE rank of 66th out of 3,688.
Locally, the school ranks 1st among Slough secondary schools. Some 99.4% of pupils achieved grades 9-4 in both English and Mathematics, and the English Baccalaureate was entered by 98.2% of students. EBacc outcomes are very strong, with 86.1% achieving Grade 5 or above across the EBacc suite and 92.2% at Grade 4 or above. This is comprehensive evidence of an ambitious, academically rigorous curriculum delivered consistently.
The sixth form has strengthened considerably in recent years. In 2025 A-level results, 80% of grades awarded were A*-B across 518 exam entries, including 50% at A* or A. The school ranks 217th out of 2,549 schools in England for A-level academic performance (FindMySchool ranking), with an overall sixth-form rank of 166th and a 1st-place local sixth-form rank in Slough.
The current A-level dataset records 518 exam entries, with 80% of grades at A*-B and 50% at A* or A. Families interested in university, medicine, dentistry or Russell Group progression should check the school's latest destinations information directly, because those outcomes can move sharply by cohort. The Sixth Form Centre, completed in 2013, provides dedicated study facilities and has contributed to a marked improvement in sixth form outcomes since its opening.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
A-Level A*-B
76.45%
% of students achieving grades A*-B
GCSE 9–7
82.2%
% of students achieving grades 9-7
Teaching at Upton Court is rigorous and well-structured. Subject specialists deliver ambitious content within carefully sequenced units. The school emphasises "quality first teaching," meaning differentiation and support for learners occur within mainstream lessons rather than through pullout programmes.
The curriculum reflects the school's specialisms in languages and science. Languages are taught from Year 7, with pupils often progressing to advanced proficiency. Science is taught as three separate disciplines, allowing deeper investigation and specialist expertise. Computing features prominently, and pupils engage with research-based pedagogies linked to prior learning and regular retrieval practice.
Character education runs throughout. The school believes that intellectual development and personal growth are entwined. Students are expected to engage with community, understand British values, and develop independence. The Ad Astra curriculum ("To the Stars") operates for all students and provides a framework for enrichment, leadership, and personal development beyond the academic timetable.
Quality of Education
Outstanding
Behaviour & Attitudes
Outstanding
Personal Development
Outstanding
Leadership & Management
Outstanding
FMS Inspection Score calculated by FindMySchool based on official inspection data.
Destination percentages can move sharply by cohort, so older leavers figures should be treated as historic context rather than a current forecast. The current measurable post-16 anchor is the 2025 A-level dataset: 518 exam entries, 80% of grades at A*-B and 50% at A* or A. Families should check the school's latest destinations information for current Russell Group and university progression figures.
Beyond raw percentages, destinations reveal the calibre of achievement, but named university outcomes and Oxbridge counts should be checked against the school's latest destinations information. The current academic anchor is strong: in the 2025 A-level dataset, 80% of entries achieved A*-B, 50% reached A* or A, and the school ranked 217th out of 2,549 for A-level academic outcomes. Competitive-course outcomes should be read as cohort-specific evidence rather than a fixed annual expectation.
A remarkable 90% of Year 11 pupils progress to the school's own sixth form. This demonstrates both the quality of the school's lower school and the perception among families that sixth form entry is achievable and desirable.
Total Offers
1
Offer Success Rate: 3.4%
Cambridge
1
Offers
Oxford
0
Offers
The extracurricular programme is extensive and deliberately structured around meaningful engagement rather than sheer activity count. The school offers clubs and societies that genuinely reflect student interests and enable deep involvement.
Sporting facilities are substantial. The school operates a new 4-court Sports Hall with two Multi-Use Games Areas (MUGAs), completed in 2019. This purpose-built facility enables excellent provision in basketball, badminton, handball, and five-a-side football. Students represent the school in traditional competitive sports: rugby, football, cricket, athletics, and netball. Badminton has produced representatives for England. Individual sporting talent is considerable; past students have included 800m county champions.
The Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme is popular, with groups working through Bronze and Silver levels. Year 9 and Year 10 pupils participate in structured outdoor learning and personal development. Students qualify in rock-climbing, kayaking, and expedition skills.
The Student Leadership Team operates as a genuine leadership structure, not a ceremonial role. Leaders are selected through a rigorous process each December and hold real responsibility for school operations, fundraising, and pastoral support. Competition for places is fierce.
Specialist societies span Law, Debating, Medical Ethics, and Economics. These meet regularly and prepare students for university interviews, case studies, and intellectual exploration. The Debating Society engages in competitive formats; the Law Society facilitates visits to Crown Courts and engagement with the judicial system.
Drama is particularly strong. The school operates a roomy drama studio and mounts whole-school productions that showcase both on-stage and technical talent. A recent school musical involved elaborate sound and lighting design, orchestral accompaniment, and cast sizes exceeding 100. Drama is popular at GCSE and again at A‑level, and outcomes are described as impressive.
Philosophy Club, Reading and Explore Club, Art Club, Photography Society, and Manga Club provide outlets for intellectual curiosity and creative expression. The Sixth Form Scholars team meets weekly to host guest speakers, facilitate master classes, and organise trips to London museums and galleries. Partnerships with Royal Holloway, University of London, bring biologists, psychologists, and geographers to school for masterclasses.
Computing Club, Chess Club, and various STEM initiatives engage pupils in logical thinking, coding, and problem-solving. The school participates in CREST awards, with students achieving Silver and Gold certifications for independent research projects. The number of students gaining CREST accreditation demonstrates depth of engagement with scientific enquiry.
Charity challenges and community fundraising occur throughout the year, with the Pioneer Parliament connecting sixth formers across the trust. The school takes its community responsibility seriously, embedding service into the ethos rather than treating it as an add-on.
Admission is entirely selective, based on performance in the 11+ entrance examination. Year 7 entry should be planned around Slough's current secondary-transfer timetable and the school's latest admissions policy, including registration, test arrangements, application deadlines, offer-day arrangements and oversubscription criteria.
The examination is coordinated through the Slough Consortium, which includes multiple selective schools. The test comprises two papers developed by GL Assessment: one testing verbal reasoning and the other English comprehension. Children sit the test once; results are ranked, and allocations follow consortium procedures.
Priority after able candidates is given to pupils residing closest to the school, although there is no formal catchment boundary. Families apply through the Local Authority's common application form.
To enter sixth form, the minimum is six GCSE passes, typically including at least four grade 6s (old grade B equivalent) and two grade 5s. Students must also meet subject-specific requirements. The vast majority of sixth form places are filled by internal progression; external places are highly competitive.
Applications
1,382
Total received
Places Offered
163
Subscription Rate
8.5x
Applications per place
Form tutors play a central role. Pupils are grouped into tutor groups of approximately 28-30 in lower school, reducing at A-level. Tutors see their pupils daily, monitor wellbeing, and coordinate communication with parents.
The school employs a specialist teacher for specific learning difficulties, a school counsellor, and receives regular visits from an educational psychologist. The SENCO coordinates support for pupils with identified needs. The school states that SEND will not be considered a reason to refuse a place, though admission is contingent on passing the entrance examination.
The school benefits from substantial capital investment. The original 1936 building on Lascelles Road still forms the core, but recent improvements include a new English Department (2012), a state-of-the-art Restaurant and Sixth Form Centre (2013), newly refurbished science laboratories (2017), and modern performing arts facilities. The 4-Court Sports Hall and MUGAs (2019) represent the latest phase.
The Sixth Form Centre provides dedicated study areas, common rooms, and spaces designed for independent and collaborative learning. A recently renovated library supports research and independent study. The school describes its facilities as "some of the best educational facilities in the south-east."
Selection pressure is real. Entry is intensely competitive, and children frequently require preparation for the 11+ entrance examination. Families should be realistic about the odds and check Slough's current secondary-transfer timetable alongside the school's latest admissions policy before applying.
Peer adjustment. Grammar school entry means your child joins cohorts of similarly able peers for the first time. Children who were "top of primary" must recalibrate their self-perception. This is ultimately healthy, but the transition can be humbling.
Strong academic culture. The school is uncompromising about academic standards. Pupils are expected to complete homework consistently, revise thoroughly, and engage seriously with their studies. For families seeking a more relaxed atmosphere, this may feel intense.
Limited SEN provision. While the school does support students with autism and dyslexia, the need to pass entrance examinations means the population with SEN is proportionally small. Families with children who have significant SEND may find greater support elsewhere.
Upton Court Grammar School delivers academic excellence that is genuinely competitive at a national level. GCSE and A-level results, combined with the calibre of university destinations, demonstrate consistent, rigorous teaching. The school has invested substantially in facilities and maintains a modern, forward-thinking educational philosophy while honouring traditions associated with grammar schools.
The selection process is demanding, and entry should not be taken for granted. Once admitted, however, pupils benefit from rigorous teaching, clear expectations, and a community that values both intellectual achievement and personal development. The school is best suited to academically able children whose families can support exam preparation, and for whom a selective, academically ambitious environment aligns with their values. The principal barrier is securing a place; the educational experience that follows is exceptional.
Yes. Upton Court Grammar School was rated Outstanding by Ofsted in November 2022, with inspectors finding excellence across all areas. The school ranks 91st out of 3,895 in England for GCSE academic outcomes (FindMySchool ranking), with an overall GCSE rank of 66th out of 3,688. In the 2024-25 / 2025 GCSE dataset, 99.4% of pupils achieved grades 9-4 in English and Mathematics, 82.2% of published GCSE grades reached 9-7, and Attainment 8 stands at 79.9. At A-level, 80% of grades were A*-B across 518 entries, and the sixth form ranks 217th out of 2,549 for academic outcomes.
Entry is extremely competitive, but older application and place ratios should be treated as historic context rather than a current forecast. Year 7 admission is selective through the 11+ entrance examination, with arrangements coordinated through the Slough Consortium and the Local Authority process. Families should check Slough's current secondary-transfer timetable and the school's latest admissions policy for the relevant entry year, including deadlines, offer-day arrangements and oversubscription criteria.
The school operates a 4-court Sports Hall and two Multi-Use Games Areas (MUGAs), completed in 2019. These facilities support basketball, badminton, handball, five-a-side football, and regular fixtures in rugby, football, cricket, athletics, and netball. The Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme is offered to Year 9 and Year 10 pupils, with qualifications in rock-climbing, kayaking, and expeditions available. Individual students have represented England in badminton; the school has produced county-level athletes in distance running. Sports are compulsory, ensuring all students participate.
The school operates an Ad Astra ("To the Stars") enrichment curriculum that runs alongside academics. Pupils engage in student leadership roles, specialist societies (Law, Debating, Medical Ethics, Economics), Duke of Edinburgh, creative pursuits through drama and art, and academic clubs including Computing Club, Chess Club, and Philosophy Club. The Sixth Form Scholars programme brings in university researchers and facilitates master classes. Sixth formers participate in the Pioneer Parliament across the multi-academy trust. The school believes that intellectual, physical, and emotional development are interconnected.
Yes. The school operates a roomy drama studio and mounts whole-school productions featuring cast sizes exceeding 100, orchestral accompaniment, and professional technical design. Creative pursuits extend to Art Club and Photography Society. The school hosts masterclasses with visiting specialists. Sixth formers organise the technical aspects of school productions, providing real leadership experience.
Post-18 destinations should be checked against the school's latest confirmed destinations information because university and competitive-course outcomes are cohort-sensitive. The current A-level anchor is strong: in 2025, 80% of grades were A*-B across 518 exam entries, with 50% at A* or A. The school employs a rigorous careers programme and supports students through university interview preparation and UCAS applications.
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