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Amid Objections to Automated Proctoring, One Company Abandons the Practice

Edsurge

This week one large provider of proctoring services, ProctorU, took the unusual step of announcing that it would no longer sell an AI-only proctoring product. The provost sent a letter last month first noting the change, though some engineering courses that were already using ProctorU kept doing so through the end of the semester.

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A Proctoring Company Tried to Sue an Edtech Critic. He’s Fighting Back in Court.

Edsurge

In 2020, the digital proctoring company Proctorio brought a lawsuit against Ian Linkletter, who was then a learning technology specialist at the University of British Columbia. At least one proctoring service, ProctorU, even said it’d stop using AI-only proctoring services last year.

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Online Cheating Isn’t Going Away. Use It as a Teachable Moment for Students and Educators

Edsurge

Maintaining academic integrity is important, but eradicating cheating is near impossible with how quickly technology moves, said Tricia Bertram Gallant, academic integrity director at the University of California, San Diego, and board emeritus at the International Center for Academic Integrity.

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As Online Learning Grows, So Will Proctors. Case in Point: Examity’s $90M Deal

Edsurge

Examity’s identity verification technologies include facial recognition analysis that checks whether a test-taker’s face resembles that of the picture on their ID card. It can also use biometric keystroke technology to track patterns in how people type, which the company claims can be unique to each individual. billion in the U.S.

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Automated Proctoring Swept In During Pandemic. It’s Likely to Stick Around, Despite Concerns

Edsurge

They used a feature of the Blackboard learning-management system to randomize questions for an exam in an introductory chemistry course. “We Despite all that opposition, and the fact that colleges are returning to in-person teaching, sales of proctoring software have been robust.

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From admissions to teaching to grading, AI is infiltrating higher education

The Hechinger Report

As the presence of this technology on campus grows, so do concerns about it. ElevateU, for example, uses AI to analyze student data and deliver individualized learning content to students based on how they answered questions. Related: Coronavirus accelerates higher education’s trend toward distance learning.

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?Online Courses Shouldn’t Use Remote Proctoring Tools. Here’s Why.

Edsurge

In response, education technology companies have been quick to create products that attempt to replicate in-person teaching. Some examples include learning management systems, lecture capture tools, and early online meeting systems. What they aren’t good at is demonstrating student learning or mastery of a topic.

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