On Glenburn Road in Skelmersdale, Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Engineering College sits firmly in the everyday rhythms of West Lancashire: a local, state secondary school for boys and girls aged 11 to 16, with a published capacity of 1047.
Catholic identity matters here, and so does the school’s practical, work-facing tilt implied by its Engineering College name. The most recent Ofsted rating is Inadequate. For families, that single word changes the decision from simple preference to careful due diligence, because it raises the stakes on consistency, culture, and confidence in improvement.
The first thing to understand is the tension the school is holding. On one side sits its mission: a Catholic secondary for local families, with a clear sense that education should connect to real skills and real futures. On the other sits a set of outcomes that, at present, point to a school still working to stabilise routines and lift day-to-day academic experience for all students, not just the ones who find school straightforward.
That does not make it joyless. A school can be serious without being grim. It can also be in recovery without being chaotic. The question is whether expectations feel clear to students across lessons, and whether the adults in the building are aligned enough that boundaries are predictable. When families visit, this is the detail to focus on: not the nicest display board, but the quiet machinery of behaviour, punctuality, and classrooms that start quickly.
As a Catholic school, faith is not a decorative label. Families should expect Gospel values to show up in the language of community and service, and in the way the school talks about dignity, responsibility, and repairing relationships when things go wrong. The fit point is straightforward: some households want that frame around adolescence, others do not.
Ranked 3119th in England and 2nd in West Lancashire for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), results sit below England average, within the bottom 40% of schools in England. This is where the FindMySchool Comparison Tool helps, because it lets you put local narratives to one side and line up the same measures across nearby secondaries.
An Attainment 8 score of 39.3 gives the headline attainment picture. Progress 8 at -0.73 is the sharper signal: it indicates students, on average, make less progress than pupils with similar starting points nationally. That is the metric that tends to show up in the lived experience of school: how consistently gaps are spotted early, how reliably work is revisited until it sticks, and whether students who wobble are quickly brought back on track.
EBacc measures add another layer. The EBacc average point score is 3.36, compared with an England average of 4.08, and 7.4% of pupils achieved grade 5 or above across EBacc subjects. For families, the practical implication is that the academic pathway through a full suite of EBacc subjects is not yet translating into strong outcomes at scale, so it is worth asking how the school is strengthening teaching sequence, revision habits, and attendance so that progress becomes repeatable.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
—
% of students achieving grades 9-7
An engineering identity can be a real strength for 11 to 16, because it legitimises applied thinking. Designing, testing, improving, then explaining the choices you made is a powerful learning loop. The risk, in any school where outcomes are under pressure, is unevenness: students get a great run in some classrooms, then lose momentum in others.
Families should pay attention to the basics that drive progress at GCSE: clear explanations, regular checks for understanding, and tight routines around writing, practice, and retrieval. Ask how misconceptions are caught, how often students revisit key knowledge, and what happens when homework is not done. Good teaching is not a slogan; it is a set of behaviours that repeat, day after day, across departments.
If your child needs structure, you are looking for consistency, not charisma. If your child is independent and academically secure, you are looking for stretch and sharp feedback. Either way, the test is the same: does the school describe teaching in concrete, repeatable terms, or as general aspiration.
Quality of Education
Inadequate
Behaviour & Attitudes
Requires Improvement
Personal Development
Requires Improvement
Leadership & Management
Inadequate
With no sixth form, Year 11 is a clear exit point. That forces earlier clarity. Students need to understand the difference between staying academic at 16, switching to a more technical course, or aiming for an apprenticeship route that combines earning with training.
A school with an engineering orientation should, at its best, make post 16 options feel practical rather than abstract: what you would study, where you would travel, what kind of day it would involve, and what doors it opens at 18. For parents, the key question is how early those conversations start, and how well the school supports students whose progress has been uneven, because those are the students most at risk of drifting after GCSEs without a plan.
The admissions story is clearer than many people expect for a school with this profile. Recent demand data shows 224 applications for 131 offers, which is about 1.71 applications per place, and the school is described as oversubscribed. That is not headline level competition, but it does mean criteria and priority groups matter, especially for families who are not very close.
This is a state school, so the main route is the local authority’s coordinated process for secondary places. As a Catholic school, faith can be part of how places are prioritised when the school is oversubscribed, while still serving a wider local community. Families who want a place should treat paperwork as part of the process, not an afterthought, and be realistic about how quickly oversubscription can turn a good plan into a long wait.
If distance becomes part of the tie break in a given year, use FindMySchool Map Search to check your home-to-school distance precisely and compare it to recent patterns, rather than relying on what feels “near”.
Applications
224
Total received
Places Offered
131
Subscription Rate
1.7x
Apps per place
A Catholic school’s pastoral language usually leans towards dignity, forgiveness, and belonging. Those can be powerful anchors for teenagers. The more practical measure, though, is how well the school handles the daily frictions of secondary life: friendships that fracture, low level disruption that drains learning time, and the quiet anxieties that sit behind non-attendance.
Families should ask how the school supports students whose confidence has been knocked, and how staff communicate when concerns appear. With a school working to lift outcomes, the pastoral question is not only “Is there support?”. It is “Does support connect back to learning, attendance, and routines, so that wellbeing and achievement move together?”.
A school’s wider offer matters most when it gives students a second way to belong. For some, that is music. For others, it is responsibility, service, or making something tangible that earns respect.
Performing arts can be a quiet engine of confidence. When students commit to rehearsal, learn lines, or practise an instrument, they experience progress in a way that is immediate and personal. If your child needs a reason to show up and stay engaged, this strand can be as important as any GCSE option choice.
Student leadership opportunities such as a school council can help shift the tone for those who want to be taken seriously. Peer support roles like reading buddies can do something similar, because they turn older students into contributors, not just recipients. The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award is another form of structured challenge, particularly for students who respond well to clear milestones and adult trust.
Skelmersdale is not served by a railway station, so rail journeys usually mean using nearby stations such as Upholland or Ormskirk, then completing the final stretch by bus or lift. On-site parking at drop-off is typically limited at schools of this size, so families who drive should expect a busy, time-sensitive window and plan for safe, predictable pick-up points on surrounding roads.
The Inadequate rating This is the headline reality. It does not automatically mean your child will have a poor experience, but it does mean you should look closely at behaviour consistency, attendance expectations, and how leaders are measuring improvement across classrooms.
Progress measures Progress 8 at -0.73 suggests many students are not yet making the progress they could from their starting points. Ask what targeted support looks like for students who fall behind early, and how the school prevents small gaps becoming GCSE sized problems.
Curriculum breadth and EBacc outcomes EBacc outcomes are low (7.4% achieving grade 5 or above across EBacc subjects), and the EBacc average point score (3.36) sits below the England average (4.08). If EBacc breadth matters to you, ask how subjects are staffed, how students are guided into options, and how revision is structured across Year 10 and Year 11.
Oversubscription With 224 applications for 131 offers, the school is oversubscribed. Families who are outside priority criteria should plan early and keep alternative options warm, rather than assuming a place will come through.
Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Engineering College is a local, faith-led 11 to 16 secondary with a practical identity and real demand for places. The limiting factor is confidence in consistency and academic trajectory, given the Inadequate rating and below-average progress measures. Best suited to families who want a Catholic setting in Skelmersdale and are prepared to ask direct questions about routines, teaching consistency, and support, then judge the school on clear, observable answers rather than reassurance.
It is a Catholic 11 to 16 secondary in Skelmersdale with a published capacity of 1047. The most recent Ofsted rating is Inadequate, and GCSE performance measures include Attainment 8 of 39.3 and Progress 8 of -0.73, so families should look closely at consistency and improvement plans before deciding.
Yes. Recent demand data shows 224 applications for 131 offers, which is about 1.71 applications per place.
The key headline measures include Attainment 8 of 39.3 and Progress 8 of -0.73. EBacc measures include an EBacc average point score of 3.36 and 7.4% achieving grade 5 or above across EBacc subjects.
No. The school serves students aged 11 to 16, so post 16 study happens elsewhere.
Families should expect the school’s values, assemblies, and approach to community life to be shaped by Catholic teaching, while still serving a wider local intake. If faith matters to your family, this can be a positive anchor; if it does not, it is worth checking how inclusive the school feels for students of other faiths or none.
Get in touch with the school directly
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