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The school ranks in the top 10 state primary schools in the UK by the Sunday Times Schools Guide [6] and the BBC's Primary School League Tables where it ranked joint first in 2014 by attainment scores. [7] Its latest The Sunday Times Schools Guide ranking in 2022 was 4th. [8]
4 Sheikh Russel: 20 8 9 3 23 13 +10 33 5 Brothers Union: 20 8 5 7 32 19 +13 29 6 Arambagh Krira Sangha: 20 8 3 9 22 23 −1 27 7 Chittagong Mohammedan Sporting Club: 20 7 5 8 20 26 −6 26 8 Farashganj SC: 20 5 7 8 17 22 −5 22 9 Khulna Abahani SC: 20 4 4 12 21 43 −22 16 10 Chittagong Abahani: 20 4 3 13 18 39 −21 15 11 Rahmatganj MFS: 20 3 ...
Primary school league tables were abolished in Wales in 2001; a Bristol University study indicated that this had caused a fall in standards in about 75% of schools. [7] Statutory testing for children finishing Key Stage 1 and 2 was introduced across England and Wales in 1989. [8] It was abolished in 2002 and 2005 respectively.
In 2013, the school came seventh in the Primary League Tables in Brent for its percentage of high-achieving pupils. [11] In 2013: The percentage of pupils attaining Level 4 or above in the Key Stage 2 Grammar, punctuation and spelling test was 87% which positioned it in the top 20% of all schools nationwide. [12]
It has frequently featured in the top ten of national league tables. [3] Since 2010/11, Gryffe High School has consistently received the most placing requests in Renfrewshire from prospective pupils outside of its catchment area. [4] At November 2019, its first year intake was capped at 165 pupils and its total roll was 943. [5]
From the formation of the Swindon LEA in 1997 until the school's closure in 2006, Headlands was consistently 2nd from bottom (1998 and 1999) or bottom (2000 onwards) of the Swindon schools league table when based on Level 2 results (5+ GCSEs at grades A*-C). [7] On at least one occasion, it was also bottom of the National league table. [8]
The previous year it was 22,000. These were students that had been there the year before and now were not. It is estimated that as many as 9,000 disadvantaged 16-year-olds were not taking exams or recorded in school league tables because they cannot be located on school records. [1]
However the Academy didn't make the progress expected [9] and by 2007 was languishing at the bottom of the School League tables for Bexley. In 2008 GCSE results and value added placed it ahead of a number of other non-selective schools in Bexley. In 2010 the school had a deficit of £500,000, largely for repairs to the "incredibly expensive to ...