You must follow safety protocols and make an advance reservation to use the computers. Respondus Lockdown Browser is available on the Undergraduate Library computers. I need to take an exam with Respondus Browser and my device cannot use Respondus. The instructor can choose to enable access on iPads. Respondus Lockdown Browser is not supported on Android devices. You can find information about using Lockdown Browser with a chromebook at .Ĭan I use Respondus Browser on my phone or tablet? Respondus Lockdown Browser is compatible with the following devices:Ī recent update allows some exams to be taken with a Chromebook. What type of computer do I need to install Respondus Lockdown Browser? If enabled for an exam, students must use the Lockdown Browser to access and submit the exam. Your teacher determines if the Lockdown Browser is required. It is no longer available at WSU and will not be required in any WSU courses.Īm I required to use the Lockdown Browser for all online exams?
Respondus Monitor is an online proctoring extension of Lockdown Browser that was used at WSU before Fall 2021. Students download the LockDown Browser software, launch it and then login to access Canvas and take the exam. The test taker cannot open a new tab, print, or search while taking an exam using Respondus LockDown Browser. has us in the mood to step back and really look at what we are doing, it might be worth reconsidering what we want education to be and if what we’re doing comports with that vision.Software that students use to securely take an exam or quiz.
Have you ever taken a high-stakes test using one of these programs? Lastly: What does it mean for the student-instructor relationship to assume antagonism, to assume malevolence from your tired students who are weathering this pandemic-recession no better than you are? What is a university for? and is this part of it?Īnd if you are a student concerned about this issue, I would urge you to contact your professors and ask them to grapple with these things too. Second, I would ask you to think about the implications of pressuring students, whom you have a degree of power over and many of whom are really struggling right now, to download invasive, widely controversial surveilling technologies on their personal computers. If you are a teacher, I would urge you to consider three things: First, please consider asking your students if they would prefer an alternative to online proctored exams. This is to say nothing of the other inequities embedded in this testing model (such as the assumption that students will have a quiet, independent space to take the test), ambiguities around the collection of personal data (not to mention a security breach this past summer), and the emotional toll this is taking on students. A recent Washington Post article reported on students’ experiences with these programs, from one student who literally peed in a pot on camera because they were not allowed to leave the room to others whose darker skin tones the software did not recognize. And in some classes, you are told that if you have any tech issues to contact–not your professors–but the third-party service itself.Īll of these services, but Proctorio in particular, have been facing a wave of backlashes recently from students and faculty who are concerned about forcing students to download and use these programs-which techies and administrators themselves have called spyware. During the test, as your computer fan hums with discontent in response to the demanding size of the software, you are alerted whenever your face turns away from the screen or perhaps booted from the program entirely. After the program warns you that your eye and mouth movements will be monitored, you are required to scan your surroundings. If you’ve never taken a test with one of these programs, the best way I can think to describe it is all of the stress of MacGyver without any of the coolness. If you go to the University of Iowa, you probably are familiar with two of them: Proctorio and Respondus Lockdown Browser. Now, instead of TAs pacing the aisles, we may have finally gotten the Big Brother we were promised. Gone are the days of the typical turn-your-caps-backward, phones-in-the-tub in-person testing.