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Best secondary schools in Bishop’s Stortford
Best secondary schools in Harpenden
Best secondary schools in Radlett
Best secondary schools in Rickmansworth
Best secondary schools in St Albans
Best secondary schools in Welwyn Garden City
There are five highly rated secondary schools in Bishop’s Stortford. Parents like boys-only Bishop’s Stortford High School for its emphasis on respect and working hard, as well as the extracurricular. And despite the reputation that it has for serving the more naturally academic, we found the less able are also encouraged to shine. The Herts and Essex High School and Science College is the girls-only option which manages to feel laid-back and fun, while at the same time focused and resolute in striving for the best. Both are semi-selective, with five per cent of (highly sought after) places allocated to pupils with a proven aptitude in music, and ditto for sport. On the non-selective co-ed front, Hockerill Anglo-European College is one of the most successful comprehensives in the country, offering the IB in sixth form, while Birchwood High School has a bigger catchment. St Marys Catholic School is a high performing faith school.
As for the wider county’s semi-selective schools, it all depends on how far you want your child to commute. The nearest is Leventhorpe School, where priority is given to eight feeder schools in surrounding villages, and their siblings, with 18 places for anyone with exceptional musical aptitude.
Best primary schools in Bishop’s Stortford
Best private schools in Bishop’s Stortford
Best nurseries in Bishop’s Stortford
There are three main contenders – all non-selective academically - and yes, parents do get the rulers out when they’re choosing which house to buy or on appeals day. The most oversubscribed – and riding high as one of the top non-selective state schools in the country - is St George’s School Harpenden, which combines a Christian community with top-notch results. Coupled with its heritage feel, posh surroundings, herringbone blazers and lacrosse, you could be forgiven for mistaking it for a private school. But take note, priority is given to regular church-goers. Sir John Lawes School and Roundwood Park School are both known for placing equal emphasis on academics, pastoral care and extracurricular – it really depends which you live closer to.
Katherine Warington School is Harpenden’s newest secondary and already oversubscribed. Parents are wowed by its impressive facilities and aspirational approach, although Ofsted hasn’t rated it quite as highly as the other schools in town.
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Parmiter’s School is phenomenally oversubscribed with a long list of semi-selective criteria. In a sea of strong academic schools, it stands out for being dynamic and friendly, with an inclusive vibe and impressive extracurricular.
Watford Grammar School for Boys and Watford Grammar School for Girls are, despite their names, semi-selective. If you have a daughter with a desire to succeed, she’ll flourish, and not just academically. A favourite at sixth form too. The boys’ school is less academic, but still gets results well above the national average and, according to parents, also ticks sporting and musical boxes, as well as ‘turns out real gentlemen’.
Dame Alice Owen’s School soars ahead of the lot academically and this semi-selective school is also known for its music. ‘If you manage to get a place, congratulations, you have won the lottery,’ says our reviewer. Among other popular semi-selective schools is Queen’s School in Bushey, while among faith schools, St Michael’s High School is a big hitter.
Best primary schools in Radlett
Best private schools in Radlett
‘Sighs of relief are audible across the valley for those securing their place on National Offers Day by parents who have paid a hefty premium on their house to live in catchment,’ says our reviewer of semi-selective St Clement Danes School, which produces excellent results year after year, as well as excelling in extracurricular. But you’ll need to be on the Chorleywood side of town to get one of the non-selective places.
Grammar school enthusiasts close to the Bucks border in Chorleywood may have a very small chance of Dr Challoner’s High School or Dr Challoner’s Grammar School, while Chesham Grammar School takes more youngsters from the neighbouring (and out of catchment) Herts local authority - but for all of them, it really depends on the year group. These schools are also popular at sixth form, though you’ll likely need a sweep of 9s at GCSE.
In Rickmansworth itself, Rickmansworth School is a popular semi-selective school whose overhaul in languages teaching and pastoral care have reaped benefits in recent years, while Saint Joan of Arc Catholic School is a good faith school.
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Parents move heaven and earth (not to mention house) to get into STAGS (St Albans Girls’ School). Results are outstanding, particularly for a non-selective intake, with everyone seeming to get swept along by the culture of learning.
Other well-regarded (all non-selective) schools include Beaumont School (particularly good sixth form) and Sandringham School (great on independent learning and relationships between staff and students). Loreto College is a Catholic secondary girls’ school where teachers know the children well and teach them with creativity.
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There are three secondaries in the city, none of which locals feel set the world on fire, but Monk’s Walk School is considered the best of the bunch.
For girls only, there’s lots of choice slightly further afield including Bishops Hatfield Girls’ School, a highly regarded non-selective comp that lists Welwyn Garden City as a priority area, and Presdales School in Ware, known for its academics and have-a-go ethos. There’s also Loreto College, a Catholic secondary school and sixth form near St Albans.
A small contingent from Welwyn Garden City regularly heads off to semi-selective Dame Alice Owen’s School in Potters Bar. This purposeful school dazzles especially in academics and music, but it’s always hugely oversubscribed and you’ll only get in via entrance exams.
Twenty minutes up the road are Hitchin Girls’ School and Hitchin Boys’ School – both considered worth moving for their friendly, values-driven ethos, academic outcomes and exceptional co-curricular.
Best primary schools in Welwyn Garden City
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The Herts County Council website outlines SEND education options and admissions. Garston Manor is a special secondary school for children with learning difficulties and/or speech, language and communication needs. Most of the children from Colnbrook School in Watford move on to this school. The Valley School, for autistic children aged 11-16, is a warm and welcoming environment, and the school’s investment in young people extends to their life outside school.
The rest of the secondary provision we rate forms part of all-through schools mentioned in the primary school section: Heathlands School and St Luke’s School, both in St Albans, The Collett School in Hemel Hempstead, Amwell View School in Ware and Lonsdale School in Stevenage.
Among the better mainstream schools is St Michael Catholic High School, a mainstream school with resourced SEN provision. Ditto for Loreto College whose services include a transition programme for those with additional needs, literacy intervention, mentoring, assistive technology and a personal development programme for autistic students. At Bishops Stortford High School, parents and pupils praise the subject clinics aimed at pupils who struggle in specific subjects. With students arriving from around 40 primary schools to The Herts and Essex High School and Science College, the number of students requiring some level of support is often quite large, and parents say they manage it well. Hockerill Anglo-European College gets good SEN reviews too - ‘The transition in year 7 was faultless, with the school knowing all about our daughter and her needs before she’d even started,’ one parent told us.
Need help? Perhaps you suspect your child has some learning difficulty and you would like advice on what you should do. Or perhaps it is becoming clear that your child's current school is not working for him or her, and you need help to find a mainstream school which has better SEN provision, or to find a special school which will best cater for your child's area of need. Our SEN consultancy team advises on both special schools, and the mainstream schools with good SEN support, from reception through to the specialist colleges for 19+. Special Educational Needs Index
Find top international, British, IB and American schools in over 40 countries. The Good Schools Guide International publishes impartial and forthright reviews of international schools across the world.
Grammar schools are state-funded, academically selective senior schools. The education a child receives at grammar school is paid for by the state unlike at private schools which provide education for a fee. There are currently around 163 located in 36 English local authorities, with around 167,000 pupils between them. Northern Ireland has a further 67 grammar schools, but there are none in Wales or Scotland. A word of caution: there are private schools that have the word 'grammar' in their name but this is purely for historical reasons.
We examined the value-added from KS2 to GCSE for 2022 to see which state selective grammar schools added the most value to their offspring. A note of caution - the more highly selective a grammar school, the less scope there will be to add value.
At specialist music, dance or performing arts schools, the arts aren't optional extras. They’re intrinsic to the school curriculum. Students are expected to fit in high level training and hours of practice alongside a full academic provision.