Abstract
Using detailed information from the certificate records of 5,825 Year 10 students in Tasmania,
this study found that the level of mathematics students access -- advanced, intermediate, or low
-- is strongly related to socioeconomic background and school attended. Differences across
schools, measured using multilevel modelling techniques, are related to the type of school
(government, Catholic or independent), enrolment size and social composition. Residential
segregation, the uneven distribution of selective schools, and school-level policies are the
mechanisms discussed in explaining the origins of social area and school differences.