Campus Bookstores To Sell Exam Proctoring Next to Hoodies, Candy Bars and Textbooks

The Barnes & Noble store at Oakland University

The Barnes & Noble store at Oakland University

Barnes & Noble is bringing digital proctoring into its college bookstores. The retail bookseller has teamed up with ProctorFree to allow students to use financial aid disbursement to purchase test-proctoring sessions.

ProctorFree provides proctoring services for students who take online exams. The service uses a computer's webcam and microphone to authenticate a student's identity and maintain identify verification throughout the test. It maintains a secure browser that can be customized by the instructor or the institution to grant or deny the student access to other resources online. When a student finishes the exam, it's sent to the test administrator for review. If "cheating-like behaviors" occurred during the test-taking, the service highlights those to allow the instructor or administrator to make a determination about possible fraud.

In a blog entry, the company explained that the new agreement "alleviates the departmental budget constraints while simultaneously relieving further burden on the students. All your students have to do is include the test-proctoring sessions when they purchase their books and supplies."

B&N is one of the largest contract operators of bookstores on college and university campuses. As of January, the company's College division ran 717 stores.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • abstract graph showing growth

    Where Are You on the Ed Tech Maturity Curve?

    Ed tech maturity models can help institutions map progress and make smarter tech decisions.

  • abstract coding

    Anthropic's New AI Model Targets Coding, Enterprise Work

    Anthropic has released Claude Opus 4.6, introducing a million-token context window and automated agent coordination features as the AI company seeks to expand beyond software development into broader enterprise applications.

  • Abstract digital cloudscape of glowing interconnected clouds and radiant lines

    Cloud Complexity Outpacing Human Defenses, Report Warns

    According to the 2026 Cloud Security Report from Fortinet, while cloud security budgets are rising, 66% of organizations lack confidence in real-time threat detection across increasingly complex multi-cloud environments, with identity risks, tool sprawl, and fragmented visibility creating persistent operational gaps despite significant investment increases.

  • AI word on microchip and colorful light spread

    Microsoft Unveils Maia 200 Inference Chip to Cut AI Serving Costs

    Microsoft recently introduced Maia 200, a custom-built accelerator aimed at lowering the cost of running artificial intelligence workloads at cloud scale, as major providers look to curb soaring inference expenses and lessen dependence on Nvidia graphics processors.