Pricing & pilots
Pilot first. Scale by course, department, or institution.
Start with a selected Python exam pilot, then scale pricing by active learners, course sections, or institution-wide usage. Examination Center is in early access — pilots and institutional plans can be arranged directly, and eligible signed-in workspace owners can manage hosted billing when enabled.
Figures below are indicative for planning and not an offer.
Selected Pilot
For one instructor, one course, or one training cohort.
Reviewed pilot · arranged with our team
- Python exam workspace
- Section access codes
- Roster-supported setup
- Live monitoring
- Autosave and recovery
- Post-exam export
- Pilot onboarding support
Instructor / Course
For individual instructors running controlled coding exams.
Per active learner per term · multiple sections
- Per active learner / term
- Multiple sections
- Exam templates
- Exportable records
- Standard support
Department / Institution
For departments, universities, and training teams.
$22 first 200 learners, then $15 · ~$500 / term minimum · annual quote
- Multiple instructors, courses & cohorts
- Department / workspace management
- Role-based access
- SSO / LMS roadmap
- Audit logs & exports
- Priority exam-day support
- Retention controls
An active learner is a distinct learner who sits an exam during the term. Instructor / course is $22 per active learner per term; department / institution is $22 for the first 200 learners, then $15, with an approximate $500 per-term minimum, by annual quote. Figures are indicative — request a pilot and we'll scope it to your enrolment.
Already have an approved workspace? Sign in to the client billing panel to start checkout or manage Stripe billing when hosted billing is configured for your organization.
Getting started
From pilot request to first exam.
Request a pilot
Tell us about your course and we set up a pilot workspace, then you pick the URL your students will use (e.g. /your-university).
Create an exam
In the instructor dashboard, create an exam and sections, set access codes, and import your roster.
Run & monitor
Students join with the section code and work in the secure interpreter; you monitor live and export records afterwards.
How a university creates an exam
In the instructor dashboard.
Instructors and university admins sign in to the dashboard and create the exam, add Section A / B with access codes, mark a section roster-required, and import the student roster. Students then open your URL and join with the section's access code.
How an instructor gets access
Start with a pilot.
We're in early access. An instructor or department requests a pilot, gets a workspace and URL, and can run real exams during the pilot. Paid plans are arranged directly with our team afterwards.
Hosted billing is available for eligible signed-in workspace owners when configured; invoice / PO remains the default path for institutional plans.
FAQ
Pilot & pricing questions.
What counts as an active learner?
A distinct learner who sits at least one exam during the term.
Can we run one pilot first?
Yes. We recommend starting with a selected pilot for one course, department, or training cohort, then scaling.
Do you support Canvas or Moodle?
Today via secure launch links; LTI 1.3 / deeper integration is planned. See Canvas and Moodle.
Do you support corporate LMSs?
Docebo, TalentLMS, and Absorb via secure launch links today; SSO, export, and xAPI-style reporting are planned. See corporate LMS.
Is this an LMS?
No. Examination Center runs and monitors coding exams; it is not a learning management system.
Is this an autograder?
No. It surfaces integrity evidence for human review and does not auto-grade or score submissions.
What languages are supported today?
Python today. Additional coding languages are planned but not yet available.
What happens after the pilot?
We scope a plan (instructor / course or department / institution). Eligible signed-in workspace owners can manage hosted billing when configured; institutional plans can also use invoice / PO.
Ready to run a fair Python exam?
Request an early-access pilot — no installs for students, and their work is never lost.