Every gate on the Tasmanian path. One place.
From strong foundations to the TCE and ATAR, SmartPrep maps your child's Tasmanian journey and surfaces the decisions that decide it.
Built for TASC and Tasmania's path to the ATAR.
The Tasmania journey
Build the Foundation · Primary (K–6)
Core skills, NAPLAN (Years 3 & 5), and genuine extension for able students.
Early Streaming · Years 7–9
Maths streaming decides whether the advanced senior maths (Methods/Specialist) stays open. NAPLAN (Years 7 & 9).
University Placement & Selection · Years 10–12
The TCE — often completed at a dedicated senior secondary college — and the ATAR.
The gates
- 1
Foundations & Extension · Primary → Year 9
Tasmania doesn't run a statewide selective test, so the edge here is a genuinely strong foundation and school-based extension — readiness for advanced senior study.
- 2
The Streaming Gate — the silent one · Years 9–10
The maths stream that keeps Methods/Specialist and competitive sciences open.
- 3
Senior College & Subject Selection · Year 10
Sets the ATAR ceiling and prerequisites.
- 4
TCE & ATAR · Years 11–12
The certificate and the rank.
Tasmania by the numbers
~3,560
students attain the TCE each year
of ~4,470 Year 12 students. TASC doesn't publish per-subject science enrolments, so we don't show them.
Source: TASC Qualifications & Certificate Attainment 2020–2024
Your Tasmania system, in plain terms
Certificate = TCE, set by TASC; rank = ATAR; national checkpoint = NAPLAN; gifted provision = school-based extension (no statewide selective test).
NAPLAN growth from Year 7 to Year 9 is the strongest measured predictor of a top ATAR — and the Year 9–10 maths stream sets the ceiling.
Understanding the Tasmania curriculum
Your school told you to "check the TASC website." We'll just explain it — in plain English, with the actual subjects your child is choosing, and how it all fits together.
How senior works, in plain terms
The TCE ranks courses by level — Level 3 and Level 4 are the pre-tertiary courses that build an ATAR (Level 4 is the highest). Senior study is often done at a dedicated senior secondary college.
The maths your child picks
- Mathematics Methods (Level 4) — The calculus course; the STEM gateway.
- Mathematics Specialised (Level 4) — Most advanced (with Methods).
- General Mathematics (Level 3) · Mathematics Methods – Foundation (Level 3) — The Level 4 courses depend on the Year 9–10 advanced stream.
The sciences
- Biology (Level 3) — Biology is the study of living things — from a single cell to whole ecosystems, then heredity, genetics, disease and the immune system. It's content- and writing-rich rather than maths-heavy, and it's the natural science for medicine, nursing, veterinary, allied health and environmental science — usually paired with Chemistry for health pathways. In Tasmania, Biology sits at Level 3, while Chemistry and Physics are Level 4 — worth knowing when balancing an ATAR load.
- Chemistry (Level 4) — The medicine prerequisite.
- Physics (Level 4) — The most maths-heavy science; for engineering.
English options
English (Level 3) · English Literature · English as an Additional Language or Dialect · English Studio · English Inquiry.
How it all links together
Level 4 Methods/Specialised → STEM · Biology + Chemistry → medicine/health · Physics + Chemistry + Specialised → engineering. Your Level 3–4 results build the ATAR.
Sources (TASC · TCE · ATAR via the ATAR): TASC — Mathematics · TASC — Science
Tasmania questions, answered
The state system — curriculum, exams, gates and timing. How the engine, MyRa and pricing work is in our main FAQ.
Which curriculum does SmartPrep follow in Tasmania?
The Australian Curriculum as delivered in Tasmania, through to TASC-accredited senior courses. Our calibrated practice engine leads with the shared Australian-Curriculum foundations (Years 7–10) and our NSW senior core; state-specific senior tagging is expanding.
Which exams and certificate does it prepare my child for?
The TCE and the ATAR, plus NAPLAN.
How does it help with selective / gifted entry?
Tasmania doesn't run a statewide academically-selective test — so the edge here is a genuinely strong foundation and school-based extension, which SmartPrep builds directly.
What are the key decision gates, and when?
Foundations & Extension (Primary–Yr9) · the streaming gate in Years 9–10 that keeps advanced Methods/Specialist open · senior-college & subject selection (Yr10) · TCE & ATAR.
How does SmartPrep make sure my child is best positioned?
We diagnose where your child stands, build the foundation and extension, track the streaming and subject-selection gates, then guide senior (college) subject choice and TCE/ATAR prep.
Which senior subjects and scaling matter most?
The advanced senior maths (Methods/Specialist) and the sciences — gated by the Year 9–10 stream.
When should we start?
The Year 8–9 maths stream is the decisive moment; build the foundation before it.
The one thing Tasmanian parents get wrong?
"There's a selective test to prep for." There isn't, statewide — in Tasmania the advantage comes from foundation and extension, and from getting the senior-college subject choice right.