This new edition of Unequal By Design: High-Stakes Testing and the Standardization of Inequality critically examines the deep and enduring problems within systems of education in the U.S., in order to illuminate what is really at stake for students, teachers, and communities negatively affected by such testing.
Updates to the new edition include new chapters that focus on: the role of schools and standardized testing in reproducing social, cultural, and economic inequalities; the way high-stakes testing is used to advance neoliberal, market-based educational schemes that ultimately concentrate wealth and power among elites; how standardized testing became the dominant tool within our educational systems; the numerous technical and ideological problems with using standardized tests to evaluate students, teachers, and schools; the role that high-stakes testing plays in the maintenance of white supremacy; and how school communities have resisted high-stakes testing and used better assessments of student learning.
Parents, teachers, university students, and scholars will find Unequal By Design useful for gaining a broad, critical understanding of the issues surrounding our over-reliance on high-stakes, standardized testing in the U.S. through up-to-date research on testing, historical and contemporary examples of the struggles over such tests, and information about how testing has fostered the privatization of public education in the U.S.
Author(s): Wayne Au
Series: Critical Social Thought Series
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 159
City: New York
Cover
Endorsements
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
Series Editor Introduction
Preface to the Second Edition
1 Enduring Educational Inequality in the United States
2 Testing and the Neoliberal Educational Enterprise
3 Standardized Testing and the Production of Capitalist Schooling
4 The Troubles With Testing
5 High-Stakes Testing and White Supremacy
6 Reclaiming Assessment for Justice
Index