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Accessing
Test Pilot Assessments
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Test Pilot can be used for practice quizzes, with unlimited
access for any users who want to take the assessments. Students
will still see the
Test Pilot login screen asking for a user ID, but students
many enter any user ID or may leave the login ID space blank and still
access the assignment. However, if instructors plan to use
Test Pilot to deliver graded assessments to students or want
to track how well students do on the assessments, instructors will
need to use some of the security features of the
Test Pilot program.
If you
use some of the security features that Test Pilot allows,
including password protection, time limits, and access and
submission limits, you may have some students who complain about
problems accessing
Test Pilot assessments. In some cases, students may be
complaining because the security features are working, preventing
students from accessing a
Test Pilot assessment after the due date, for instance. In
other cases, though, there may be legitimate technical problems
with
Test Pilot. This page is designed to help instructors understand the process of logging in to
Test Pilot assessments and to help instructors understand some
of the error messages that may arise as students try to access
assessments.
Accessing
and Completing
Test Pilot
Assessments
Test Pilot
is easy for students to use. After clicking on a link to a
Test Pilot
assessment on an instructor's web pages, students will see a
screen including the login box, illustrated below. Students should
enter a login ID established by the instructor. The login ID will
be whatever ID the instructor entered for that student in the
Test Pilot program, everything in front of the comma for that
student in the "User List" for the assessment.
Instructors may find that the student's social
security number (with no spaces and no hyphens) is the most
convenient login ID.
Important
information about the assessment may appear under the login box.
The message in the illustration above, for example, indicates that
the answers to the assessment may be submitted only once. However,
in the example above, there is no message indicating how many
times students may access the assessment, meaning that there is no
limit to the number of times students may access and read the
assessment. For each assessment, the instructor sets the access
and submission limits in the
Test Pilot program.
After
typing the login ID and clicking "Request," students
should see the
Test Pilot assessment. After marking or filling in the
answers, students click "Submit your Responses" at the
bottom of the page. Students should then see the results. The
results that students see will depend on the settings the
instructor has marked for the assessment. Students may see only a
"Thank you," or they may see their scores. Instructors
can also set
Test Pilot to show students all of their responses, the
correct responses, and their scores.
Important:
After students click "Submit your Responses," they
should be patient if the assessment takes a while to be submitted.
If, after clicking "Submit your Responses" and waiting a
while for the responses to be sent, a student clicks the
"Stop" button of the web browser and clicks "Submit
your Responses" again, the student is likely to receive the
error message that "You have exceeded the number of times
that a user is permitted to submit responses to this
document." (If the assessment is set to allow only one
submission per student.) However, the student's results may be
recorded accurately by
Test Pilot even if this occurs.
Reviewing
Responses
The instructor can set
Test Pilot so students can view the results of an assessment
immediately after submitting responses, but
Test Pilot can also be set up so that students can return to
the assessment after the due date and review their responses, the
correct answers, and the score. If the instructor has set up the
assessment to allow students to review the results after the due
date, students clicking on a link to the
Test Pilot assessment after the date will see the information
below on the login screen.
If a
student enters his or her
Test Pilot login ID and clicks "Review Your Score"
(instead of "Request"), the student will be able to see
the results of the assessment.
Trying
to Submit Late Responses
If a due date and time is set for a
Test Pilot assessment, the program will not allow students to
access the assessment after the due date has passed. If students
try to access an assessment after the due date, they will see the
message below after entering the login ID.
If the
instructor sets a due date for an assessment, there is no way that
students can access the assessment after the due date. Therefore,
it is especially important that students complete
Test Pilot assessments by the due dates.
Avoiding
Problems
While the
login procedure for Test Pilot
is simple, there are a few important things that instructors
should be aware of.
Incorrect
Login ID
If a student types an incorrect login ID, the student will see the
kind of login screen illustrated below, with two boxes, one for
the Test ID and one for the student user ID.
Important:
The Test ID is whatever file name the instructor gave the
assessment, whatever appears after "tests/"
in the URL for the assessment, which will appear in the Location
or Address bar of the web browser, but the Test ID can be long,
and students have no way of knowing the Test ID unless the
instructor tells them what it is. Because it is not easy for
students to figure out what to type in the box for the "Test
ID," the best thing for a student to do if this happens is to
click the "Back" button of the web browser, re-enter the
login ID correctly, and then click "Request"
again.
Attempts
to Resubmit Responses
If a Test Pilot assessment is set by the instructor to allow
only one submission per student, once a student has submitted his
or her responses to the assessment, the student will receive the
error message below if attempting to resubmit responses.
As noted
above, students are also likely to see this error message if,
after clicking "Submit your Responses," they click the
"Stop" button of the web browser and click "Submit
your Responses" again. The submission process may be slow at
times, but students should be reminded to allow the program to try
to register their submission the first time they click
"Submit your Responses."
Technical
Problems
Test Pilot is not free from technical problems. If the URL for
the assessment is correct, but the error message below appears,
there may be a technical problem with
Test Pilot that needs to be fixed by the college web master.
The error message below may also indicate that the assessment was
not saved in the "tests" folder of FrontPage.
If
students receive an error message indicating technical problems,
the instructor should seek assistance in figuring out the problem.
Attempts
to Access Assessments Too Early
Instructors can also set a Test Pilot assessment to allow
student access only during specified times. For example, an exam
delivered in
Test Pilot could be accessible only during a scheduled class,
with the instructor setting both the start time and end time in
the
Test Pilot program.
Important:
Notice the login screen below. One of the messages under the login
box states that "You may only request to see this assessment
once." This message indicates not that students may access
the assessment just once but that they may request to see it only
once. If there is a specific start time, and a student requests to
see the assessment before the start time, the student will receive
the error message that "This document is not available at
this time" (illustrated above), and the student will have
used his or her one time to request the document, meaning that the
student will not be able to request to access the assessment after
the start time. This security feature of
Test Pilot is convenient for instructors, allowing instructors
to post quizzes, tests, and other assessments prior to when
students will take the assessments without having to worry about
students accessing the assessments before the specified times.
However, if
Test Pilot is set to allow each student to request the
assessment only once, students should be warned of the
consequences of trying to access the assessment early.
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