Most schools don’t decide to go digital in one clean step. It usually starts small — a single class trying an online quiz, one teacher tired of carrying home a stack of answer sheets — and grows from there, often without a real plan behind it. That gradual, half-planned start is exactly why so many schools run into the same handful of problems on the way to digital assessments. None of these problems are unusual, and none of them mean digital assessment was the wrong call. They’re just the predictable friction of changing a habit that’s been in place for decades.
Teachers Are Being Asked to Change More Than a Tool
The most common resistance to digital assessment isn’t really about technology — it’s about workload and trust. A teacher who has spent years perfecting a rhythm of setting papers, marking them by hand, and writing comments in the margin is being asked to trust a screen to do part of that job instead. That’s a bigger ask than it sounds. Schools that get this right tend to start small: one subject, one class, one term, before rolling anything out wider. Teachers who see the actual time saved on marking a single test are far more convinced than teachers who are simply told it will save time.
Device and Connectivity Gaps Don’t Disappear Just Because a Policy Says So
Not every student has equally reliable access to a device or a stable internet connection, and this gap tends to be widest in exactly the schools that could benefit most from reducing paper and administrative overhead. A digital assessment plan that assumes uniform access usually ends up quietly excluding a portion of students, or forcing the school to run a parallel paper process anyway — which defeats the purpose. The schools handling this well are the ones being honest about their actual infrastructure before committing to a fully digital model, rather than assuming the technology will smooth over gaps that are really about hardware and bandwidth.
Academic Integrity Concerns Are Usually Louder Than the Actual Risk
Ask any group of teachers about online exams and cheating comes up almost immediately — often before anyone has actually tried running one. Some of that concern is fair; an unsupervised test at home is genuinely different from one supervised in a classroom. But a lot of it is also assumption rather than experience. Simple measures — randomising question order, setting sensible time limits, running assessments during school hours in a supervised lab rather than unsupervised at home — resolve a large share of the concern without needing invasive monitoring. The schools that talk about this openly with staff, rather than treating it as solved by a vendor’s marketing claim, tend to build more trust in the process than the ones that don’t.
Student Data Protection Needs a Real Answer, Not an Assumption
Digital assessment means collecting and storing information about minors — names, scores, sometimes performance history across years. That’s a genuine responsibility, and it deserves more than a one-line assumption that ‘the software handles it.’ Schools evaluating any digital assessment approach should be able to answer some basic questions clearly: where is student data stored, who can access it, and what happens to it if the school ever stops using a particular tool. If those answers aren’t clear before adoption, they’re unlikely to become clear after.
More Tools Can Mean More Work, Not Less
This is the quieter problem, and often the most exhausting one in practice. A school adopts a tool for building tests, a separate one for collecting responses, a spreadsheet for results, and a messaging app for communicating scores to parents — and ends up with more total effort than the paper process it replaced, just distributed across more screens. The actual efficiency gain from digital assessment doesn’t come from adding a tool. It comes from reducing the number of separate systems a teacher or administrator has to move information between by hand.
None of This Means Schools Should Slow Down — It Means They Should Go in With Eyes Open
Every one of these challenges is solvable, and none of them are reasons to avoid digital assessment altogether. They’re simply the realistic terrain schools are working with, and naming them clearly tends to produce a smoother transition than pretending the shift will be frictionless. The schools that do this well aren’t the ones with the most advanced technology — they’re the ones that were honest about their starting point, moved a step at a time, and kept asking teachers what was actually working before assuming it was.