Online Safety on ExamGiant
ExamGiant was created by educators to help students learn through practice, speed,
accuracy, and fun competitions. Because many of our users are children and teens,
online safety is a top priority.
What ExamGiant Does
- No open student-to-student chat or public message boards.
- Accounts are created and controlled by adults (parents, teachers, or schools)
or by older students with adult oversight.
- Scores and competition results are visible only to the student, their
linked teacher/school, and ExamGiant staff.
- We log activity and unusual patterns to protect against cheating and abuse.
How Parents and Guardians Can Help
- Keep younger children’s login information where you can access it.
- Review their activity and scores with them regularly.
- Set clear rules for when and how long they may play or compete.
- Remind them not to share personal information (address, phone, passwords)
with anyone online.
- Encourage them to tell you if something online makes them uncomfortable.
How Teachers and Schools Can Help
- Use school email addresses or approved IDs when creating student accounts.
- Follow your district’s acceptable-use and privacy policies.
- Supervise students while they are online in class or labs.
- Use classroom monitoring tools where appropriate and allowed.
- Share safety expectations with students, just as you would for any online tool.
Tips for Students
- Never share your password, even with friends.
- Use your real name only where your parent, teacher, or school has told you to.
- Stop and ask an adult if a competition, message, or request for information
doesn’t feel right.
- Be honest about your scores. Cheating might look like a high score now, but it
hurts your learning and can result in disqualification.
Reporting Concerns
If you believe an ExamGiant account is being misused, or if you see something that
appears unsafe or inappropriate, please contact us at
support@examgiant.com. For serious or
immediate safety concerns, contact local authorities first.
ExamGiant does not replace the supervision and judgment of parents, guardians,
and educators. Online safety works best when adults and students work together.