Aspire AP School 2 is built for a very specific moment in a young person’s education: when mainstream has broken down and the priority becomes re-engagement, routines, and safe relationships that allow learning to restart. It is an independent day school in Smethwick for pupils aged 11 to 16, registered for up to 15 pupils, with very small numbers currently on roll.
This is not a conventional Year 7 to Year 11 journey. Students arrive at different points in the year, often after significant time out of education, and placements can vary in length. The model is intentionally small, with an emphasis on literacy and numeracy catch-up, structured behaviour support, and careful rebuilding of attendance habits.
The defining feature here is scale. With a registered capacity of 15 and a small cohort, the day can be organised around calm routines, predictable adult support, and rapid response when a pupil is struggling.
The school’s leadership structure is clear on its own materials. James Lawlor is listed as Head Teacher, with the school stating he became headteacher in August 2022. Viviene Royal is presented as Executive Head Teacher and SENCO, with the school noting she became Executive Headteacher in January 2020.
This is a setting designed for pupils who need adults to notice the small signs: early dysregulation, rising anxiety, or avoidance that can lead to absence. The school describes its work as both educational and therapeutic support to help pupils re-engage, and places repeated emphasis on emotional regulation, communication, and self-management, rather than purely academic acceleration.
Faith is present in the background. While the school is recorded with no formal religious character, the school’s own information describes a Christian ethos. For families, the practical implication is usually values-led language and expectations around respect and relationships, rather than faith-based admissions.
This is not a school where published exam statistics tell the full story, and in the available results there are no GCSE performance metrics or rankings reported for Aspire AP School 2. The more meaningful “results” are typically attendance recovery, successful reintegration to mainstream, or stable progression into post-16 pathways, but the school does not publish a quantified outcomes dashboard on its site.
What can be stated with confidence is the curriculum intent described in official material and inspection evidence: the school expects many pupils to arrive with substantial gaps, especially in literacy and mathematics, and it prioritises addressing those first.
If you are assessing academic impact here, the most productive approach is to ask for the pupil’s baseline information and the school’s review cycle for progress, including reading age movement, functional skills, and the plan for reintegration or accreditation where appropriate.
Teaching is structured around rebuilding the habits that make learning possible. The curriculum description on the school’s website highlights a focus on English and maths, daily reading activity, and a “Thinking Skills” programme with stated strands including problem-solving and decision-making, information management, effective inquiry, and creative thinking.
The most recent inspection (covering 3 to 5 December 2024) judged Aspire AP School 2 as Good overall, with Good grades across quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management, and confirmed the independent school standards were met.
Inspection evidence also points to a familiar AP pattern that matters to parents: consistency is the hard work. In most subjects, sequencing is clear, but it is not consistent across the whole curriculum, and the school was asked to tighten subject progression in a few areas so that pupils build knowledge steadily rather than touching lots of new concepts quickly.
Reading is treated as a priority. Daily reading sessions are part of the model, and the English curriculum is described as supporting foundational knowledge. A specific improvement point raised was the absence of a systematic phonics approach for the small number of pupils who need early reading support, which is relevant if your child’s profile includes significant literacy delay.
For an alternative provision placement, “next steps” usually means one of three routes: reintegration into mainstream, progression to another specialist setting, or moving into post-16 education, training, or employment preparation. Aspire AP School 2 explicitly frames its purpose around reintegration to mainstream or onward progression to further education or employment.
Because pupils can join at different times and for different lengths of placement, families should expect planning for transition to start early, with clear milestones and ownership shared between the commissioner (typically the local authority or referring school), the setting, and the family.
This is not a parent-led admissions process. Aspire AP School 2 states that referrals are typically made by a child’s current school, the local authority, or another statutory agency, usually when additional intervention is needed beyond what mainstream can sustain.
Pupils are described as being at risk of, or having experienced, permanent exclusion, and/or experiencing social, emotional and mental health needs. Placements can begin throughout the school year, which is common for alternative provision and is one reason why open days and fixed application deadlines are often not central to the model.
For families trying to understand suitability, the key questions tend to be practical:
What is the entry assessment and induction plan?
What does a reduced or phased timetable look like at the start, if used?
Who is responsible for transport and commissioning arrangements?
What is the intended destination at the end of the placement, and how will it be measured?
Pastoral work is not a bolt-on here, it is part of the operating model. The school’s own description centres on helping pupils manage emotions and communicate effectively, supported by small groups and high adult presence.
Relationships and routine are used as the main behaviour architecture. Students are expected to attend sessions morning and afternoon unless the school or the referring school authorises otherwise, and the school positions attendance as a core condition for success.
Safeguarding is a headline consideration in any AP placement. The inspection report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
In a micro-setting, enrichment tends to be tightly linked to engagement rather than a large club timetable. Aspire AP School 2 highlights “Creating Opportunity” as a value strand and explicitly references games, cooking, outdoor activities, and day trips, with some mention of wider experiences as part of broadening horizons.
Two named elements stand out in the school’s own language:
The Thinking Skills programme, presented as a structured way to develop decision-making and inquiry habits alongside academic learning.
The Aspire Positive Pathways programme, described as tailored support aimed at pupils facing emotionally based school avoidance.
For parents, the useful test is not the size of the enrichment menu, but whether the child can tolerate and then enjoy structured activity again, especially where anxiety and avoidance have been dominant.
As an independent school, Aspire AP School 2 has published annual fees for day pupils in the most recent standard inspection report. The figure stated is a range of £19,344 to £39,000 per year.
In practice, alternative provision placements are usually funded through commissioning arrangements with local authorities or schools rather than billed directly to parents, but the fee range matters because it frames the scale of provision being bought: small cohort teaching, intensive staffing, and the wraparound support needed for re-engagement.
The school does not publish bursary or scholarship information in the sources used for this review. If a placement is being considered privately, ask the school to explain what is included in fees, what is charged as an extra, and whether any reductions exist for part-time timetables.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
Aspire AP School 2 publishes term dates for the 2025/2026 academic year (Autumn Term 2025, Spring Term 2026, Summer Term 2026), which helps families align expectations for attendance planning.
Transport arrangements in alternative provision are often commissioner-dependent. Expect the referring body to clarify responsibility early, including funding, escorts if required, and any risk-assessed travel plan.
Very small setting. Capacity is 15 and current numbers have been low, which can be excellent for attention and stability, but it also means fewer peer options.
Curriculum consistency is still a development area. The latest inspection highlights that sequencing is not equally clear across all subjects, which can matter for pupils who need predictability to stay engaged.
Reading intervention detail. Daily reading is embedded, but the inspection identifies the need for a systematic phonics approach for pupils at the earliest stages of learning to read, relevant for significant literacy delay.
Referral-led admissions. This is not a conventional admissions calendar. Families may need to coordinate closely with the referring school or local authority to avoid delays in placement start, transport, and reintegration planning.
Aspire AP School 2 is a tightly focused alternative provision model: very small numbers, strong emphasis on relationships and attendance recovery, and a curriculum designed to close gaps in literacy and maths while rebuilding learning habits. Best suited to pupils aged 11 to 16 who have reached a genuine crisis point in mainstream education, particularly where anxiety, behaviour, or prolonged absence has disrupted schooling, and where a referral-led placement with intensive adult support is the most realistic route back into education.
Aspire AP School 2 was judged Good at its most recent standard inspection, with Good grades across key areas, and it met the independent school standards. It is designed for pupils who need re-engagement support after mainstream has broken down, rather than a conventional large-school experience.
The most recent published standard inspection report lists annual fees for day pupils as a range of £19,344 to £39,000 per year. In many cases, placements are commissioned by local authorities or schools rather than paid directly by parents.
Places are typically arranged via referral from a local authority, a pupil’s current school, or another statutory agency. Families usually work with the referrer rather than applying through a standard admissions round.
It is aimed at pupils aged 11 to 16 who are at risk of, or have experienced, permanent exclusion and/or who have social, emotional and mental health needs, including those who have been out of education for extended periods.
The school prioritises rebuilding literacy and numeracy, alongside daily reading and a Thinking Skills programme that targets decision-making and inquiry habits. It also includes broader areas such as PSHE, humanities, sport, cooking, and creative arts within its stated curriculum offer.
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