Let’s remove ‘extra’ exam stress. Here is what students need from digital assessment
By design, exams are stressful. Mastering the subject will always matter most. But there’s a second kind of stress we can reduce: the friction created by unfamiliar, inconsistent, or unreliable exam technology. When institutions and vendors remove this “extraneous” stress, students spend their scarce cognitive bandwidth on demonstrating learning.
Continental and UK evidence on why this matters now
Across Europe, EUROSTUDENT reports highlight a broad, postpandemic wellbeing challenge in higher education and urge improvements to the study environment so students can thrive (notably including exam contexts). In the UK, the HEPI / Advance HE Student Academic Experience Survey 2024 similarly finds continued pressures on mental health and workload even as some aspects of teaching and assessment improve.
What the evidence says – and what students need
Familiarity lowers anxiety and boosts performance – practise in the real environment
Students do better, and feel calmer, when they can practise in the same environment they’ll face in the exam. In stationbased practicals, even 10 minutes of active familiarisation raised pass rates and effect sizes a study from Austria has shown. More broadly, a metaanalysis shows lowstakes practice tests reduce test anxiety to a meaningful degree, especially at accessible difficulty levels.
WISEflow in practice: Institutions can run likeforlike formative flows so students rehearse with the identical tools they’ll meet in summatives, or take some of the in-built demo-exams, which then can reduce anxiety and builds confidence.
Consistency reduces cognitive load. Predictable UX frees up working memory
Under stress, “interface surprises” consume working memory. Cognitive Load Theory is clear: consistent, predictable interactions cut extraneous load, leaving more capacity for the task itself.
WISEflow in practice: Structured workflows and rolebased help deliver repeatable patterns across flows and roles, and the consistant usability design across different exam and assessment types help make WISEflow familiar.
Accessibility is equity – build it in, don’t bolt it on
Good usability benefits everyone; accessibility is essential for many. WCAG 2.2 (AA) and UDL principles reduce barriers by design (e.g., visible focus, adequate target sizes, robust keyboard paths, predictable help).
WISEflow in practice: One platform for all candidates and adjustments, with consistent UI and institutionconfigured policies across the assessment lifecycle, and fully WCAG 2.2 compliant.
One platform for many formats – less fragmentation, less worry
Stress spikes when students must learn new tools for each exam. A single, coherent platform for essays, advanced MCQs (incl. STEM), oral/practical exams and portfolios removes that fragmentation and the “newtool” anxiety.
WISEflow in practice: Core flow types (FLOWassign, FLOWmulti, FLOWoral, etc.) cover open/closedbook, portfolio and oral/practical assessments in the same environment.
Reliability at scale – stability is a wellbeing feature
Outages and instability magnify examday stress. Institutions should demand transparent uptime, load handling and proactive monitoring from vendors.
WISEflow in practice: Widely used across Europe with design for availability and scale. This also include many fall back mecanism to counter internet interuptions or power faiilure, securing that students can start again where they lefet without loosing their work.
A student-centered digital exam checklist to remove “extraneous” stress
Make the unfamiliar familiar: campuswide mock flows and short preexam tutorials in the actual platform. Expect lower anxiety and better performance.
Standardise the interaction model: same navigation, tools and submission mechanics across modules and formats.
Design for accessibility and predictable help: adopt WCAG 2.2 AA and align with UDL; keep help in a consistent location.
Consolidate assessment types: essays, MCQ, oral, practical, portfolio and STEM all in one place.
Verify reliability: insist on clear SSO, monitoring, support and failover patterns.
Where WISEflow fits: confidence through consistency
WISEflow is an endtoend digital assessment platform used widely across Europe, supporting everything from essays and portfolios to advanced MCQs and oral/practical exams with consistent workflows for students, academics, invigilators and markers. Practising in the same environment students will face at finals reduces anxiety and builds confidence; structured flows and in app guidance make behaviors predictable on exam day.
References - selected sources
EUROSTUDENT 8 topical module on wellbeing and mental health (2024):
https://www.eurostudent.eu/download_files/documents/TM_wellbeing_mentalhealth.pdf
HEPI / Advance HE Student Academic Experience Survey 2024: https://www.hepi.ac.uk/reports/student-academic-experience-survey-2024/