• underscores@lemmy.zip
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    5 hours ago

    They can force you to use Windows.

    What you can do is ask if using a virtual machine is fine. or don’t ask at all and have a virtual machine image of windows ready.

    • pogmommy@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      As someone who’s worked for several years in higher ed IT and used Linux during my studies, this’ll only get you most of the way there. Unfortunately some proctoring software (Respondus Lockdown Browser comes to mind) can be incredibly invasive, and to my knowledge will refuses to run in a VM.

      Instructors also have a tendency of not disclosing during registration whether or not they use these proctoring softwares.

      I’m lucky enough that by the time I was all-in on Linux, I wasn’t taking courses that used that exam model, but it’s why I make sure that the helpdesk at my current institution offers loaner devices to students who either have computers incapable of running the proctoring software, or who simply don’t want that kind of software on their own machine. It’s a pain in the ass to work with, but apparently it’s enshrined in our faculty’s union contract.