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Wayne Au

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  51
Citations -  3756

Wayne Au is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Curriculum & Standardized test. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 43 publications receiving 3413 citations. Previous affiliations of Wayne Au include Universidade de Santa Cruz do Sul & California State University, Fullerton.

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High-Stakes Testing and Curricular Control: A Qualitative Metasynthesis

TL;DR: The authors analyzed 49 qualitative studies to examine how high-stakes testing affects curriculum, defined here as embodying content, knowledge form, and pedagogy, finding that curricular content is narrowed to tested subjects, subject area knowledge is fragmented into test-related pieces, and teachers increase the use of teacher-centered pedagogies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching under the new Taylorism: high‐stakes testing and the standardization of the 21st century curriculum

TL;DR: The authors argue that public school teachers in the US are teaching under what might be considered the New Taylorism, where their labour is controlled vis-a-vis high-stakes testing and pre-packaged, corporate curricula aimed specifically at teaching to the tests.
Book

Unequal by Design: High-Stakes Testing and the Standardization of Inequality

TL;DR: Unequal By Design as discussed by the authors examines high-stakes standardized testing in order to illuminate what is really at stake for students, teachers, and communities negatively affected by such testing, and demonstrates that these tests are not only premised on the creation of inequality, but their structures are inextricably intertwined with social inequalities that exist outside of schools.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meritocracy 2.0: High-Stakes, Standardized Testing as a Racial Project of Neoliberal Multiculturalism.

TL;DR: This paper argued that not only does high-stakes, standardized testing serve to further racial inequality in education, it does so under the guise of forms of anti-racism that have been reconstituted as part of a larger neoliberal project for education reform.