I finally got around to experiencing the new room scan for the Duolingo English Test. The room scan is mostly painless. It resembles that of the British Council’s EnglishScore test: the test taker just has to slowly spin around their room while holding the secondary camera (their phone). There is also a second scan, which hasn’t been discussed much in this space. To complete it, the test taker first points the phone at their keyboard, and slowly moves it towards the space behind their computer. It is a little clunkier than the main room scan, and the test taker might attempt it a couple times before doing it properly.
Some have argued that requiring test takers to have a compatible smartphone is burdensome. This is true, to a certain extent. That said, many test takers will find that it alleviates the burden of completing room scans by carrying a laptop around their apartment. Remember that most test takers don’t have a cool-guy Macbook like the people who design and market tests. Instead, they have a barbell of a Windows machine with a bunch of peripherals connected via USB and a battery that has to be plugged in all the time because it maxes out at a 5% charge. Doing a room scan with such a machine really sucks. Ask me how I know.