Bishop Rawstorne was founded in the early 1960s. Pupils are drawn from a wide area, and the school is over-subscribed every year. The school was awarded a DfESTeacher Training rating in late 2000 by the then Secretary of State for Education, David Blunkett MP. The school caters to ages 11 to 16, ranging from year 7 to 11. After the final year, pupils can pursue further education or get a modern apprenticeship or employment. In January 2008 there were 933 pupils. The school is a small campus containing a main block, a science block, technology block, administrative block and English block. A recent extension of the music department allowed the opening of a music school and a new road was constructed to ease congestion.
Performance
According to a 2007 OFSTED report, the school's' performance was rated as outstanding. In 2008 the school had 29% A* to A grades earning a rank of 35, down on the previous year of 34% with a rank of 11. However, 2009 saw an increase to 42.5% A*/A grades, improving rank to 8. Scores are usually above average in the country and in local league tables. The school has increasingly high GCSE grades, where in 2007 the school attained 84% A*-C grades, compared to 58% in 2001, making it within the top 10% of UK schools. The school's performance continued upwards and by 2010, it attained 90.1% A*-C grades. In 2018 the school achieved a 91% standard pass in English Language and Maths, an improvement of 4.5% on the scores from 2017. In addition 72% of students achieved a strong pass in both subjects. Furthermore in English Language and Maths respectively, 47.5% and 30.7% of students achieved a 7-9 grade, equivalent to an A* or A grade previously.
Religious ethos
The school, which is in the Diocese of Blackburn, has a strong Church of England religious emphasis. In 2007 the school was rated highly in a denominational report. The school has a chaplaincy team made up of priests from the Church of England. It is a Christian school with Christian values.
In March 2012 the Academy was selected for a new role. At that time, Bishop Rawstorne was one of only about 100 schools in England to be granted Teaching School status in the second cohort of applications.
As of 2011 the high school was changed from a Language College to an Academy which has given the school more freedom of curriculum choice.
Controversies
In July 2020 the head teacher, Paul Cowley, sent a circular letter to parents accusing their child of not engaging or working hard enough during the lockdown imposed in the UK as the result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Parents complained to the press that the school had failed to provide adequate online teaching over the same period. In one case, the letter was sent to parents of an autistic child.