ARK schools are celebrating another improved set of GCSE results with the publication of secondary school league tables today. GCSE results at our established schools rose from 56% to 61% in one year (5 grades A*-C including English and Maths). For those schools open for more than a year when pupils took their GCSEs, on average there has been a rise of 34 percentage points since becoming an ARK school. Overall across the ARK network, including our new schools, 57% of students achieved 5 grades A*-C including English and maths.
Closing the gap
This is despite the fact that ARK鈥檚 schools are located in areas where schools have historically not performed strongly. ARK鈥檚 secondary schools had a lower attaining intake 鈥 pupils starting further behind than their peers than any local authority in England.
In other schools, many of these students would fall behind. But at ARK, students who are behind when they start secondary school are nearly three times more likely to get 5 A*-Cs at GCSE compared to the national average, and those from disadvantaged backgrounds outperform national attainment in GCSEs including English and maths.
Mathematics was a particular success this year. In our established schools 77% of pupils achieved a C grade or above in Maths, compared with 71% nationally. ARK鈥檚 St Alban鈥檚 Academy was the top performing school in the whole country in terms of Value Added Maths (a measure of how pupils progress in maths) with a score of 1009.3.
鈥淭hese results show that we can achieve our mission of providing an exceptional education to all children, wherever they come from,鈥 said Lucy Heller, ARK Chief Executive. 鈥淲ith high expectations and a culture of no excuses, our staff and students have proved that it is hard work and not luck that is the recipe for future success.鈥
Stunning Turnarounds
A number of schools have seen a real turnaround in terms of standards since becoming ARK academies:
- in Portsmouth, has had a 47 percentage point rise in students getting 5 good GCSEs including English and maths since becoming an ARK school in 2009, making it now the best school in the city and the second most improved school in the whole of England.
- in West London, which was in special measures before it became an academy, has seen a 46 percentage point improvement in its GCSE results since becoming an ARK school in 2006, with the school recently rated outstanding by Ofsted.
- n Southwark has seen a 26 percentage point rise in the numbers of students getting 5 or more GCSEs at A*-C including English and maths, since becoming an ARK school in 2008.
- in Birmingham has seen a 25 percentage point rise in GCSE passes at 5 A*-C including English and maths since becoming an ARK school in 2009.
High expectations
We expect all pupils to study subjects that will prepare them well for applying to university or the career of their choice. In 2012, ARK pupils were entered for fewer of the lower value GCSE 鈥榚quivalents鈥 than any other academy chain. The number of students gaining 5 good GSCEs (A*-C) in the EBacc subjects increased by 7 percentage points in 2013 compared to 2012.
You can
Percentage of pupils passing five GCSEs at A*-C including English and mathematics (established schools open for more than 1 year in August 2013):
| School | Year opened | predecessor school (%) | 2012 result (%) | 2013 result (%) | Change from predecessor school (percentage points) |
| Burlington Danes Academy |
2006 |
31 |
66 |
77 |
+46 |
| Walworth Academy |
2007 |
27 |
60 |
57 |
+30 |
| Charter Academy |
2009 |
21 |
48 |
68 |
+47 |
| ARK Globe Academy |
2008 |
26 |
45 |
52 |
+26 |
| St Albans Academy |
2009 |
31 |
51 |
56 |
+25 |
| Evelyn Grace Academy |
2008 |
new school |
n/a |
58 |
n/a |
| Network average (weighted by pupil numbers) |
|
56 |
61 |
+34 |
Those who start secondary school behind the expected level are almost three times as likely to get 5 GCSEs A*-C including English and Maths at ARK (20%) as the national average (7%).
|
|
%5A*-C incl En&Ma Low att |
%5A*-C incl En&Ma disadv. | |
| ARK network |
20% |
53% | |
| National |
7% |
41% | |