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Assessment, like all other aspects of teaching, needs to be adapted to work in a virtual course environment. If you traditionally rely on closed-book, in-class exams in your courses, you may want to think about proctoring software like Proctorio—or, given concerns about student privacy and bandwidth demands raised by this kind of software, you might want to consider alternatives to traditional testing approaches. We outline some options below and also in our Designing for Academic Integrity page, which is focused on ways of ensuring academic integrity without the use of proctoring software.

Online tests/exams

If you are conducting online Tests/Exams, consider rewriting exams with questions that are more “ungoogleable” and explicitly make exams open book/open source.

Tips for crafting questions:

  1. Ask students to cross-reference information. For example, how does what we learned in unit A interact with or inform unit B?
  2. Students have to defend a previous position they’ve taken in the course (i.e. refer back to previous assignments they’ve submitted).

Considerations

Alternatives to test/exams

Consider assigning a project such as:

In Canvas, consider using the following for student submissions:

Other resources

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