|
|
|
|
|
by michael_mroczka
872 days ago
|
|
Your thought is a good one, and I think it is a valid approach. The barrier that comes up when doing this is still going to be cheating. How do you separate the people who are cheating on these at-home tests? Salesforce had a good interview practice a few years back where they invited you to a meeting. Started a recording, then asked you to keep your microphone and camera on and do several simple programming tasks. It was an "open book," and you could use whatever you wanted, but you just had to show how you got to where you were (and you could only use one monitor so that it was clear what you were looking at at all times). The engineer who met you on the call left after just a couple of minutes, and you could work in peace without having to worry about "entertaining them." |
|