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- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Proctoring (UND Proctoring System)
Honorlock is UND's primary online proctoring solution. Honorlock provides a hybrid approach that allows students to start a proctoring session at any time (without scheduling) while being monitored by a combination of AI and live proctors.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
An overview the the process that instructors must follow to use Respondus Exam Authoring tool with Blackboard Ultra course sites.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
- Instructors
Learn how to export exams from Respondus to Word for editing.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
The content editor is a platform-independent WYSIWYG editor based on TinyMCE and licensed as Open Source under LGPL from Moxiecode Systems AB. The content editor has a large number of new and enhanced features and serves as a replacement for the old text editor.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
Please contact your instructor. UND Tech Support is not able to reopen exams or quizzes.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
- Instructors
You can change the possible points awarded for answering questions correctly in two ways. For both ways, new grades are recalculated for all previously submitted tests.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
- Instructors
A question pool is a collection of questions that is stored for repeated use.
You can use pools to create tests and surveys. You can also export and import pools for use in tests in other courses.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Proctoring (UND Proctoring System)
This article lays out the steps that instructors can follow to configure Honorlock in their class and enable it for any Blackboard-based exam.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Proctoring (UND Proctoring System)
Honorlock is UND's primary online proctoring solution. There are various options for contacting Honorlock for support.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Proctoring (UND Proctoring System)
Written PDF exams within the College of Engineering & Mines may use ProctorU for proctoring. Please verify with your instructor to find out if your course will use proctored exams in PDF format. Students need to have the equipment listed here in order to take an online exam in PDF format with ProctorU, and must have this equipment ready and tested prior to taking the exam.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Proctoring (UND Proctoring System)
Honorlock is a leading remote proctoring solution that uses 'Live Pop-in' technology, combining AI (Artificial Intelligence) with live remote proctors. Students can start an exam at any time without the need to schedule time with a proctor. When the student begins their exam, the Honorlock/Blackboard integration will automatically input the exam password (hidden from the student). Honorlock actively monitors the live proctoring session and creates a recording that instructors may review later.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Creating Digital Presentations
- YuJa
Exam Proctoring ensures the security of student exams taken from remote locations. Exam Proctoring also allows the instructor to provide tools to record video. The Proctor Recorder also ensures that the recording is only securely allocated to a centralized instructor folder which will avoid distribution of the exam recording by the student.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Creating Digital Presentations
- YuJa
How to use Respondus LockDown Browser and YuJa Proctoring simultaneously to administer or take a Blackboard exam. Use of both tools concurrently helps to ensure the integrity of the exam.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Creating Digital Presentations
- YuJa
This guide explains how to set up a YuJa Proctoring session, with step-by-step instructions for recording your exam.
- Knowledge Base
- Teaching and Learning
- Blackboard
- Instructors
By default, Bb exam questions and answers appear to students in the same order that they were created or added to a test. This article explains how instructors can set questions/answers to appear in a different, random order for each student or attempt -or- pull a set number of random questions from a Pool.