Final published version
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Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Online exam proctoring technologies
T2 - educational innovation or deterioration?
AU - Lee, Kyungmee
AU - Fanguy II, Mik
PY - 2022/5/31
Y1 - 2022/5/31
N2 - During the Covid-19 pandemic, many universities have adopted online exam proctoring technologies to monitor and control an increasing number of student cheating incidents. Although it looks like a natural and effective solution for a fair assessment of student online learning performance, the authors argue that proctoring technologies are rooted in problematic assumptions about educational fairness and authoritarian pedagogical approaches. The authors have conducted a qualitative case study in a large-sized, top-tier university in South Korea to investigate the negative impacts of adopting proctoring technologies on student subjectivities, pedagogical relationships, and educational outcomes, which have not been fully discussed in previous studies. By utilising Foucault’s theorisation of disciplinary governmentality, the authors effectively demonstrate that the binary subjectification of students as cheaters and the cheated has degraded the value of student engagement in university education while creating more competitive and distrusting relationships among students and between students and teachers. Nevertheless, without challenging the unethical consequences of online proctoring technologies or fundamentally unfair social and educational systems, students willingly accept and adopt them as docile bodies, which has led to educational deterioration rather than innovation.
AB - During the Covid-19 pandemic, many universities have adopted online exam proctoring technologies to monitor and control an increasing number of student cheating incidents. Although it looks like a natural and effective solution for a fair assessment of student online learning performance, the authors argue that proctoring technologies are rooted in problematic assumptions about educational fairness and authoritarian pedagogical approaches. The authors have conducted a qualitative case study in a large-sized, top-tier university in South Korea to investigate the negative impacts of adopting proctoring technologies on student subjectivities, pedagogical relationships, and educational outcomes, which have not been fully discussed in previous studies. By utilising Foucault’s theorisation of disciplinary governmentality, the authors effectively demonstrate that the binary subjectification of students as cheaters and the cheated has degraded the value of student engagement in university education while creating more competitive and distrusting relationships among students and between students and teachers. Nevertheless, without challenging the unethical consequences of online proctoring technologies or fundamentally unfair social and educational systems, students willingly accept and adopt them as docile bodies, which has led to educational deterioration rather than innovation.
KW - cheating
KW - Covid-19
KW - exam proctoring technology
KW - Foucault
KW - governmentality
KW - online exam
KW - South Korea
U2 - 10.1111/bjet.13182
DO - 10.1111/bjet.13182
M3 - Journal article
VL - 53
SP - 475
EP - 490
JO - British Journal of Educational Technology
JF - British Journal of Educational Technology
SN - 1467-8535
IS - 3
ER -