The teacher workflow end to end — build a test, configure monitoring, schedule and share it, watch live, and review results.
As a teacher, you create a test, decide what Proctorly watches for, share one link with your class, optionally watch sessions live, and review each student’s report afterward. Students never create an account — they reach the exam through the link you share.The work falls into a few stages. Start at the top and work down.
Building a test
Pick a content source — a Google Form, PDF, or Word document — and set a name, duration, and color.
Configuring monitoring
Turn on exactly what Proctorly should watch for during the test.
Scheduling & sharing
Set open/close times, share the student link, and control what students see after they submit.
Live monitoring
Watch active sessions, pause or lock, message students, and admit from the waiting room.
Reviewing reports
Read integrity scores, confirm or dismiss flags, and review snapshots.
Verdicts & actions
Mark sessions Clear or Escalate, individually or in bulk.
Setting different conditions for an individual student? See Accommodations.
Building a test
Create a proctored test by choosing a content source — a Google Form, PDF, or Word document — and setting a name, duration, and color.
Configuring monitoring
Every monitoring option a test can turn on or off — what each one catches, when to use it, and how it shapes the student experience.
Scheduling & sharing
Set open and close times, understand a test's status, share the student link, control what students see after they submit, and archive or delete a test.
Running an exam live
Watch active sessions in real time, understand each session state, and use pause, lock, messaging, snapshots, mass actions, and the waiting room.
Reviewing results
Read the per-session integrity score, confirm or dismiss flags, set a session verdict, review snapshots, export to CSV, and use AI summaries.
Verdicts & actions
Confirm or dismiss individual flags, set a session verdict of Clear or Escalate, and clear sessions in bulk.
Accommodations
Per-student overrides — like camera exemption and adjusted sensitivity — for students who need different proctoring conditions. Currently in beta.