ExamGiant’s Student and Teacher Trial Workflows Are Ready for Testing
ExamGiant has reached an important stage in its account workflow development. The latest round of updates has focused on making the student experience stronger, while also creating a better path for educators who want to evaluate the platform before their school or district officially adopts it.
On the student side, the platform now has a more complete and practical experience. Students can view progress, manage assigned exams, review class connections, and move through practice and reporting with much more clarity than before. In addition to that, a new student-only account deletion flow has been added. This gives student accounts a safer, cleaner way to be removed from active use while still protecting historical academic records from being broken behind the scenes.
That improvement became especially important because some educators may want to test the student side of ExamGiant before making a purchasing decision. Instead of opening up automatic free access that could easily be abused, the system now includes a manual teacher evaluation request process. An educator can submit a request with school information, including a school email address, school or district website, job title, and the number of days they are requesting. From there, the request goes into an admin review flow where access can be approved or denied manually.
This creates a much more controlled evaluation process. It allows real educators to test the student experience without turning the platform into an open free-trial loophole for anyone claiming to be a teacher. It also gives the admin flexibility to approve different evaluation windows, whether that means three days, seven days, or another limited period based on the situation.
These account workflow improvements mean ExamGiant is now in a strong testing-ready state for student and educator evaluation paths. At the same time, this is not the finish line. More games will continue to be added, reporting and workflow details will continue to be polished, and the overall experience will keep getting better over time.
The important thing now is that the foundation is becoming solid. Student access is more mature, educator testing is more manageable, and the platform is increasingly ready for real-world feedback as development continues.
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