Fairness in Exams: Rethinking Accessibility and Universal Design

November 25, 2025 by Dryden Gentil Foxwell
Student sitting at a desk in classroom, representing exam accessibility.

For decades, schools, universities, and testing organizations have offered accommodations — such as extended time or text-to-speech tools — only to students with documented needs. But as digital tools become part of daily learning for everyone, many educators are beginning to question whether restricting these supports in exams actually creates inequities instead of solving them.

This post explores the heart of that debate: Should voice, audio, and other accessibility tools be reserved solely for students with accommodations, or should they be part of a universal design approach to assessment for all?

What We Mean by “Fairness”

On the surface, fairness in exams sounds straightforward: give every student the same conditions, and you’ll get a fair comparison of ability. But fairness isn’t always about sameness. For many learners, identical conditions create unequal opportunities.

Take a student with dyslexia. Reading dense exam passages in silence without support doesn’t measure their knowledge of history or science—it measures how quickly they can decode written words. Text-to-speech (TTS) technology, on the other hand, removes the barrier of decoding while keeping the core challenge of the exam intact. That’s why accommodations exist.

But here’s the tension: if TTS tools are increasingly used by all students in daily learning — why should they suddenly be taken away during assessments?

The Case for Accommodations-Only Use

Many institutions stick with the traditional accommodations model for three main reasons:

  1. Preserving the Level Playing Field – The argument goes: if only some students use assistive technology, it could create an advantage. Accommodations are carefully documented and approved to ensure they’re used only when truly necessary.
  2. Maintaining Assessment Integrity – Testing bodies fear that universal use of assistive tools could “inflate” performance, making it hard to measure true ability in reading, comprehension, or writing.
  3. Administrative Practicality – Managing accommodations for specific students feels more controlled than opening tools to everyone. It’s easier to monitor and justify to accrediting bodies.

Yet, each of these reasons has its counterpoints.

The Case for Universal Design in Exams

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) emphasizes that learning environments should be designed to support all learners from the start – not retrofitted with accommodations later. When applied to exams, that philosophy suggests voice and audio tools should be available to everyone.

Arguments for universal access include:

  • Authenticity of Assessment – In the real world, professionals routinely use speech-to-text, screen readers, and audio tools. If exams are meant to prepare students for real tasks, why prohibit the very tools they’ll use in their careers?
  • Reducing Stigma – When only some students use accommodations, they may feel singled out. Universal access normalizes the use of supportive technology, reducing social barriers.
  • Eliminating Gatekeeping – Not every student who could benefit from accommodations has a documented need, especially those who fall through diagnostic cracks or lack resources. Universal access ensures these students aren’t left behind.
  • Fairness Reframed – Fairness doesn’t always mean treating everyone the same. It can mean giving all students access to the tools that let them demonstrate knowledge, not just decoding or transcription skills.

The Paradox of Leveling the Field

Here’s where things get tricky. If everyone uses assistive technology, do students with disabilities lose the “leveling effect” that accommodations provide?

Imagine two students: one with a diagnosed reading disability, another without. If both use TTS on an exam, does the non-disabled student gain an advantage, or are they simply learning the same way most people will work in the real world?

Group of people standing in a circle with their hands joining in the middle, representing equity and success.

Some argue that universal access could actually make exams more equitable — because both students are now measured on comprehension, reasoning, or problem-solving, rather than decoding speed. Others worry that universal access blurs the line between skill measurement and support, complicating score interpretation.

Lessons from Daily Learning

A key point often overlooked: students don’t live in a test-only world. In their coursework, many already use audio-enabled tools every day. They draft essays with dictation, study readings with TTS, or review notes through audio summaries. For these learners, taking away these tools during exams isn’t a neutral act — it’s a disruption. It forces them into a mode of learning and demonstrating knowledge that doesn’t reflect their real skills.

That raises an important question: Shouldn’t exams reflect how students actually learn and work?

Beyond TTS: Broader Questions of Design

While this debate often centers on text-to-speech, the larger issue is about how we design assessments. If we agree that exams should measure knowledge and reasoning, not decoding speed or handwriting endurance, then universal design may point the way forward.

Consider other supports:

  • Calculator use in math exams, once controversial, is now normalized.
  • Spellcheck tools are ubiquitous in writing, but not always allowed in exams.
  • Closed captions benefit everyone in multimedia assessments, not just students with hearing impairments.

These examples suggest a pattern: tools that once seemed like unfair advantages often become baseline expectations once we recognize their role in authentic performance.

Possible Paths Forward

Educational leaders don’t have to choose between two extremes. Some potential middle-ground solutions include:

  • Differentiating by Skill Assessed – Allow universal TTS for exams measuring content knowledge, but restrict it in exams specifically assessing decoding or reading fluency.
  • Clearer Assessment Design – Instead of banning tools, design assessments that focus on higher-order skills – critical thinking, synthesis, application – that can’t be answered by technology alone.
  • Pilot Programs – Run controlled pilots where TTS and other supports are made universal in certain assessments, then compare outcomes. Research-backed evidence can guide long-term policy.
  • Student Choice Models – Allow every student to choose whether or not to use tools. This supports autonomy without stigmatizing accommodations.

A Call to Rethink Fairness

Fairness in exams is not about rigid sameness. It’s about ensuring that each student has the chance to show what they truly know and can do. Restricting supportive tools may seem like protecting integrity, but it can also create invisible barriers.

Universal design challenges us to shift the question from “Who gets accommodations?” to “How do we design assessments that reflect real ability for all?”

For some institutions, that might mean opening up TTS and other voice tools to everyone. For others, it may mean rethinking what exams are supposed to measure in the first place.

Either way, the conversation is overdue. Technology has changed how we learn and work – and it should change how we assess.

Final Thought

If we allow students to use voice-enabled tools in their daily studies and in the workplace after graduation, shouldn’t they also be able to use them in assessments?

The challenge is not whether to include these tools, but how to redefine fairness so that it aligns with both inclusion and authenticity. That is the next frontier in educational assessment.

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Dryden Gentil Foxwell
Dryden Gentil Foxwell

Dryden Gentil Foxwell is an honours student at Leiden University College, where she studies Global Challenges with a focus on peace, justice, sustainability, and diversity.

With an interdisciplinary perspective, Dryden is particularly interested in how diverse communities can collaborate to build more just and resilient societies.

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