Take a Test Demo Instructions
Getting your device ready to demo:
Important notes:
The Take a Test app cannot be “projected to a large screen” due to its lock down capabilities it is enforcing to meet the demands of high-stakes assessments. To present to a larger audience, use the Office Mix on the topic here, or set up a virtual machine on your device.
Step 1: Be sure your device is running Windows 10 Education edition with Anniversary Update.
Step 2: Create a OneNote for the formative assessment demo, utilize an existing demo OneNote.
Step 3: Create a Microsoft Forms link for the formative assessment and high-stakes assessment demo.
Step 4: Create a Take a Test account and provide an assessment URL (use the Microsoft Forms link you created in Step 3.)
- Click Start
- Select Settings
- Select Accounts
- Select Family and other people; Add someone else to this PC; create a local account name Test Account
- Note: you will need to go through a first user run experience briefly for this account, so set it up.
- To get out of Test Account, ctrl+alt+del (you can then select a different account)
- Select Work access
- Select Set up an account for taking tests
- Select Choose Account; select the local account you set up “Test Account”
Step 4: Start demo
Brief intro and initial talking points with the demo: The new Take a Test app helps teachers and schools deliver high-stakes digital assessments, as well as lower-stakes formative assessments, more quickly and easily.
And Take a Test is easy to set up, with options that both teachers and IT staff will find familiar and efficient.
• When in use, the Take a Test app creates a locked-down environment just for testing that only points to your online assessment page.
• While the Take a Test is running, students are prevented from doing things that might compromise the assessment
• opening other web pages
• taking screenshots
• running other applications
• connecting additional external displays
• using copy and paste, and so on
• During a test, Take a Test prevents the OS from generating distractions, like pop-up toasts and notifications, and updates.
• Now let’s take a look at how this works for a high-stakes assessment. <begin demo steps below>
<To view an Office Mix presentation including demo for Take a Test click here. In lieu of a live demo, this Office Mix may be shared with customers and shown during presentations>
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- For school wide assessments, schools can easily set up an account for every student to take a test prior to testing week
- For schools needing to deploy assessments broadly, IT pros can use Intune, SCCM, or group policy to configure Take a Test with an active directory or azure active directory account, allowing all students to log into the account and take their assessment.
- Once set up, all a student needs to do is select the test taking account.
- <show sign in to test from sign in screen> Once they sign into the account, Take a Test accesses the assessment website and the student can take their assessment.
- <show “test” sign in screen> Notice how the Take a Test app immediately launches after signing in. It ensures that the device is in a clean state before taking the test.
- Note that there is no address bar or navigation tools, just the web content. When on this page, the student is considered to be in a locked down mode where there are no hotkey shortcuts, no ability to take a screenshot, and no ability to switch to other applications.
- In order to meet testing criteria, Take a Test is now running above the lock, and prevents the student from running other apps, attaching an external display, using copy and paste, or even taking screen captures.
- And remember, Take a Test keeps pop ups and other notifications from distracting the student during assessment times as well, allowing them to focus on what matters, giving their full attention to the exam.
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- As a teacher, when I want to set up a device for Take a Test all I need to do is…<walk-through of settings UI>
- <Click Start> To get to the setting I’ll select Start.
- <Click PC Settings> Then PC Settings
- <Accounts> Then Accounts
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- <Click Other users> Now, other users.
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- <Click choose an account> Here is where I choose the account for Take a Test
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- <Select the local account you previously set up for this demo>
- Now I need to select the account that will be set up for the assessment.
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- <add the assessment UR>
- Here I will add the assessment URL for my students’ to take their test.
- Finally, I’ll click Save and the account is ready to go with the URL set up.
- <Ctrl+atl+del>
- <switch accounts>
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- <Select test account>
- When I select the test account, it works just like if my IT department had set Take a Test up through their management systems.
- My students click sign in <click sign in>
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- And Take a Test opens to the URL I included in the set up steps.
- Both demos I’ve shown you so far are focused on locking down student devices for high stakes assessments.
- However, we know as teachers you also have a variety of digital formative assessments you use on an ongoing basis.
- You can use Take a Test to help deliver those online assessments as well. Here is an example using Microsoft Forms.
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- With this features, I can deploy formative assessments easily with no configuration required from my IT department
- I love this capability of Take a Test because it is using two great products I already use in the Classroom, OneNote and Microsoft Forms
- My Class Notebook includes a weekly quiz tab for students to take a brief Microsoft Forms assessment on what we’ve been covering in class. This can be done because Take a Test can be extended to anything that can host a URL such as a class website or email.
- Here I direct the class to the following page in the notebook. Within the URL contains the schema: ms-edu-secureassessment:<URL>!enforceLockdown. Notice that there is a URL attached to it, so this can be extended to rolling your own assessments on any website.
- The !enforceLockdown field enforces automatically locking down when the URL is clicked.
- Now when I click the link <click link>
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- The application automatically launches after user consent and automatically navigates to the embedded URL.
- Note that there is no address bar or navigation tools, just the web content. When on this page, the student is considered to be in a locked down mode where there are no hotkey shortcuts, no ability to take a screenshot, and no ability to switch to other applications.
- To exit the test, I simply click ctrl+alt+del, select my user account to log into.
Brief summary and wrap-up: The new Take a Test app helps teachers and schools deliver high-stakes digital assessments, as well as lower-stakes formative assessments, more quickly and easily.
And Take a Test is easy to set up, with options that both teachers and IT staff will find familiar and efficient.
• When in use, the Take a Test app creates a locked-down environment just for testing that only points to your online assessment page.
• While the Take a Test is running, students are prevented from doing things that might compromise the assessment
• opening other web pages
• taking screenshots
• running other applications
• connecting additional external displays
• using copy and paste, and so on
• During a test, Take a Test prevents the OS from generating distractions, like pop-up toasts and notifications, and updates.