Proctorly

We got tired of watching great teachers drown in bad software.

Proctorly exists because individual teachers shouldn't need an IT department, a five-figure contract, or a 45-minute setup call to proctor a Tuesday quiz.

The story behind the tool.

01
The problem

Enterprise proctoring tools exist, but they require IT procurement, a browser extension that IT has to push, live human proctors billed by the session, or all three. A teacher who wants to proctor a Tuesday quiz has none of those things.

02
The insight

Teachers already have Google Forms. They know how to use them. They don't need a new quiz platform — they need a monitored wrapper around the quiz they already built.

03
The constraint

We decided early that Proctorly would never make automatic cheating accusations, never store audio recordings, never require a student install, and never be priced for IT procurement. These are not features — they are commitments.

04
Today

Proctorly is part of the SchoolToolz suite — a set of focused tools built for the teacher who doesn't have time to read a manual. Each tool does one thing. This one makes proctoring accessible to individual classrooms.

Four commitments we don't negotiate on.

These aren't marketing claims. They are constraints we set on the product before we wrote the first line of code.

Teacher in charge, always

Every flag in Proctorly is a signal — not a verdict. No algorithm decides whether a student cheated. You see the evidence, you make the call. That's not a disclaimer; it's the design.

Honest about what we can detect

Browser-based monitoring has real limits. A second device, a friend in the room, a virtual machine — none of these are catchable in the browser. We say so clearly, because overselling this is how students get wrongly accused.

Narrow signals, not surveillance

We collect six signal types. We do not track eye movement, record continuous audio, log keystrokes, or build behavioral profiles. What we collect is what we tell you upfront — no hidden data gathering.

Fair to students

Students are told exactly what is being monitored before the exam starts. Every student sees a consent screen. Monitoring conditions are the same for every student unless their teacher configures an accommodation.

Proctorly is one tool in the SchoolToolz suite.

SchoolToolz is a collection of focused tools built around the workflows teachers actually have — not the workflows enterprise vendors wish they had. Each tool does one job. None of them require IT involvement, a new platform account for students, or a procurement budget.

Proctorly handles the proctoring side. Other tools in the suite handle attendance, engagement, and classroom focus. They all share the same design philosophy: works with Google Forms and Google Classroom out of the box, ready in under five minutes, and student data never sold.

Explore the full SchoolToolz suite
Proctorly — this tool

Simple proctoring for Google Forms

Wraps your existing quiz in a monitored browser session. Six honest signals. Plain-English report. No student install.

Attentivly — also in the suite

Engagement signals for live class

Tracks attention and participation patterns during live sessions so teachers can intervene early — not after a student is already disengaged.

Learn more
More tools coming

The SchoolToolz roadmap includes tools for assignment feedback, grade analysis, and classroom communication — all built around the same principles: one job, works on day one, teacher in control.

See what's next at SchoolToolz.com

What we collect. What we don't.

What we store
  • Flag event metadata — type, timestamp, confidence score
  • ID verification snapshots — stored securely, teacher-viewable only
  • Session status and timing
  • Teacher account information
What we never store
  • Audio recordings of any kind
  • Continuous video streams
  • Keystroke logs or clipboard contents
  • Eye movement or gaze data
  • Student identity beyond ID snapshot
  • Behavioral profiles across sessions

Three free proctored tests. No card required.

Paste your Google Form link. Get a proctored session. Review the report. That's the whole thing.