(11-29-2018, 04:51 PM)MNomadic Wrote: Unfortunately, no. Maybe a course here and there, but I can't think of a way to finish an entire degree without once doing a proctored test. As davewill said before, if you have a diagnosed medical condition, they are required to make reasonable accommodations for you per the Americans with disabilities Act.
My daughter took ASU/GFA courses and was accepted to ASU as well - through the program. However, costs are too high at ASU, so she just transferred her credits to TESU. The credits do show up on the ASU transcript as regular ASU courses (no different than in person ASU courses). Thus, they transfer as regular RA credits to any university that accepts RA credits. Also, most courses use online proctoring. However, English 101 and 102 are writing and project based courses that do not have tests. Therefore there is no proctoring. That said, now that it is a new platform, that might change