posted on 2023-05-24, 05:17authored byFluck, A, Hillier, M
This study examined the growing number of emerging eExam systems that allow students to demonstrate academic achievement using computers in schools and universities. Using a mixed-methods case study approach, the research gathered data from a desk audit, followed by field observations and interviews in selected countries. Thematic investigation of the data revealed commonalities and differences in the eExam systems. The findings show the main systems under development are divided into two groups. The first are alternative booting systems that make an entire, identical operating system and application suite available to each candidate. The second comprises a variety of secure web-browser solutions. Both approaches permit the use of software applications, but it is not yet clear whether this affordance can transform curricula. It is clear there is tension between administrative convenience that saves staff time, and the transformational potential of computers in education that would alter what students learn as well as how they learn. This tension is epitomised by the different proportions of undergraduate examinations conducted using computers, ranging from 1% to 40% in some institutions. What was also clear from the data were the intentions of some countries and institutions to raise this to 100% in a five year span.
Funding
Office for Learning & Teaching
History
Publication title
Tomorrow’s Learning: Involving Everyone
Editors
A Tatnall, M Webb
Pagination
409-417
ISBN
978-3-319-74309-7
Department/School
Faculty of Education
Publisher
Springer Nature
Place of publication
Switzerland
Extent
68
Rights statement
Copyright 2017 IFIP International Federation for Information Processing