Abstract
Strengthening lower secondary students’ attitudes toward mathematics is key to addressing declining enrolments in higher-level courses. This mixed-methods study examined the alignment between students’ perceived mathematics capability and study intentions, as well as demographic and attitudinal differences. Results suggest that students with aligned intentions had more adaptive attitudes than those with an intentions-capability gap. Many who intended to study below their perceived capability cited low utility value, suggesting that enhancing mathematics’ perceived utility could increase higher-level enrolments.