| Sure, the practice is ubiquitous Example software and policies are things like: http://www.exam4.com/ (used by Harvard, George Washington, etc) http://www.law.wisc.edu/help/for_students/securexam/ http://www.law.columbia.edu/academics/registrar/Laptop_Exams https://www.law.umich.edu/currentstudents/registration/exams... Most (all?) schools offer students the ability to take their exams on paper, but doing so is a substantial competitive disadvantage because examinations are usually timed and writing on paper is much slower, students are marked down for legibility and copy-editing noise, etc. I don't have a citation studying it— but by all appearances it's only a small minority of students that opt out of using their laptops. ("Most Stanford Law School students take their examinations on laptops") IIRC the California bar exam now also uses one of these spyware exam packages. I'm mostly amused that we have a whole information-security critical profession who is nearly required to behave negligently wrt information security from day one. :P |
1. https://www.examsoft.com/dotnet/Default.aspx?f=mtlaw