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King Edward VI Lordswood Girls

Girls CEM-style Lordswood Founded 1957 Intake ~180

King Edward VI Lordswood Girls is a girls grammar school in Lordswood, Birmingham, founded in 1957 with an annual Year 7 intake of around 180 places. Entry is via the CEM-style route used across the wider Birmingham area, with admissions then ranked by cohort top 25% then catchment.

Single-sex / co-ed character

King Edward VI Lordswood Girls is a single-sex girls' grammar. Girls' grammar places in selective areas are routinely the most contested in the system; many local girls' grammars receive two to three times the registrations of their boys' counterparts, which pushes catchment areas tighter even where the official qualifying score is the same.

Test format

The school selects via a CEM-style consortium test. CEM-style papers mix subjects within a single sitting and reward broad vocabulary and reading fluency more than rote technique. Daily reading from Year 4 is the single highest-leverage preparation; format-specific practice papers are limited in supply but worth seeking.

Catchment & oversubscription

After the qualifying score is met, distance from the school is the practical tiebreaker. Postcode-by-postcode, the effective catchment can be substantially smaller than the published radius — talk to current parents about real distances achieved in recent years.

What sets it apart

Notable strength of King Edward VI Lordswood Girls: Long-established girls' grammar. This is the kind of factor worth weighing alongside raw academic results when deciding how to rank the school on your preference list — two schools with identical qualifying scores can offer very different day-to-day experiences.

Preparation specifics

The most reliable preparation pattern for King Edward VI Lordswood Girls families: establish a baseline using a CEM-style familiarisation paper at the start of Year 5; address the two weakest topic areas through topic-by-topic workbooks across the spring and summer; sit a full timed paper every fortnight from the summer holidays; and deliberately wind down practice in the final fortnight before the test. Last-minute drilling reduces confidence more often than it raises scores.

Common pitfalls

Common pitfall to avoid: Inner-Birmingham distance is tight. Families who plan around this from the start typically find the application process much smoother than families who only discover the issue in the autumn of Year 6.

How King Edward VI Lordswood Girls fits into the wider Birmingham picture

Most Birmingham families do not apply to a single school in isolation. The Birmingham 11+ parent guide on this site sets out the full county-level admissions calendar, registration windows and qualifying score history; the Birmingham regional papers page catalogues every practice paper we hold for the relevant test format. A typical preference list for this area will rank three to five schools deliberately — distance, single-sex/co-ed character, sixth-form pathway and journey time all matter alongside raw academic results.