Literature DB >> 16908612

Utilization of a formative evaluation card in a psychiatry clerkship.

Aurora J Bennett1, Linda M Goldenhar, Kevin Stanford.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This article discusses how formative feedback to medical students during their clinical rotations facilitates their successfully meeting the rotation's educational objectives. To help students initiate mid-rotation feedback and to help preceptors structure that feedback, the authors designed the Instant Feedback Card (IFc). The goal of this study was to examine the degree to which the IFc facilitated the formative feedback process from the perspectives of both students and faculty.
METHOD: The IFc contains a checklist of the 13 clinical competencies that are also used to provide summative evaluations to students. One hundred and sixty-five medical students completing a 6-week psychiatry clerkship between January and December 2004 were given an IFc to present to their inpatient preceptor at one of their two inpatient sites. At the end of each 3-week inpatient rotation, all students were e-mailed a brief questionnaire about the formative feedback received during the preceding rotation. At the end of the 12-month study period, faculty were e-mailed a brief questionnaire about how useful the IFc was in helping to facilitate the feedback process.
RESULTS: One hundred thirty-eight students (80%) participated in the study and returned 267 questionnaires (1.9/student, 97% response rate). Two hundred five students indicated on 77% of the questionnaires returned that they received mid-rotation feedback and of those, 84% revealed that feedback was helpful. Eighty-five percent of the students received mid-rotation feedback when they used the IFc and only 69% received mid-rotation feedback without the IFc. A majority of the 14 faculty serving as inpatient preceptors during the study period found the cards useful for stimulating feedback discussions, for reducing the stress of providing feedback, and for getting students to request feedback.
CONCLUSIONS: The results of this pilot study are not definitive, but they do indicate that the Instant Feedback card (IFc) did facilitate the process and structure of providing and receiving formative feedback as indicated by a significantly greater number of students receiving formative feedback when they used the IFc. Copyright (C) 2006 Academic Psychiatry.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16908612     DOI: 10.1176/appi.ap.30.4.319

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Psychiatry        ISSN: 1042-9670


  4 in total

1.  Effect of field notes on confidence and perceived competence: survey of faculty and residents.

Authors:  Tom Laughlin; Amy Brennan; Carlos Brailovsky
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 3.275

2.  Using field notes to evaluate competencies in family medicine training: a study of predictors of intention.

Authors:  Miriam Lacasse; Frédéric Douville; Émilie Desrosiers; Luc Côté; Stéphane Turcotte; France Légaré
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2013-03-31

3.  Effects of structured written feedback by cards on medical students' performance at Mini Clinical Evaluation Exercise (Mini-CEX) in an outpatient clinic.

Authors:  Fariba Haghani; Mohammad Hatef Khorami; Mohammad Fakhari
Journal:  J Adv Med Educ Prof       Date:  2016-07

4.  Increasing Completion Rate of an M4 Emergency Medicine Student End-of-Shift Evaluation Using a Mobile Electronic Platform and Real-Time Completion.

Authors:  Matthew C Tews; Robert W Treat; Maxwell Nanes
Journal:  West J Emerg Med       Date:  2016-06-16
  4 in total

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