| Literature DB >> 20414377 |
Sean P Kelly1, Scott G Weiner, Philip D Anderson, Julie Irish, Greg Ciottone, Riccardo Pini, Stefano Grifoni, Peter Rosen, Kevin M Ban.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are an increasing number of training programs in emergency medicine involving different countries or cultures. Many examination types, both oral and written, have been validated as useful assessment tools around the world; but learner perception of their use in the setting of cross-cultural training programs has not been described. AIMS: The goal of this study was to evaluate learner perception of four common examination methods in an international educational curriculum in emergency medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Assessment tools; Curriculum development; Graduate medical education; International medical education; Oral case simulations
Year: 2010 PMID: 20414377 PMCID: PMC2850976 DOI: 10.1007/s12245-009-0147-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Learner perception of examination usefulness
| Oral examinations | Written examinations | |
|---|---|---|
| Should this examination type be used in training programs in the future? | 96% yes | 96% yes |
| Should this examination type be used for accreditation in EM? | 100% yes | 92% yes |
| Useful in measuring fund of knowledge? | 100% yes | 96% yes |
| Useful in measuring clinical abilities?a | 83% yesb | 67% yes |
aStatistically significant difference between oral and written testing methods in measuring clinical abilities (chi-square = 11.07, p < 0.01). No other statistically significant differences noted between oral and written testing methods
bMissing data: 1 of the 24 respondents did not respond to this question
Rank preferences by type of examination: usefulness in assessing fund of knowledge and clinical ability (1 = most useful and 4 = least useful)
| Structured oral exam | Multiple-choice exam | Semi-structured oral exam | Essay exam | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fund of knowledgea | 1.55b | 2.68 | 2.77 | 3.00 | |
| Clinical abilityc | 1.61b | 2.73 | 2.57 | 3.00 |
aMissing data: 2 of the 24 respondents did not respond to this question
bOral pre-test ranked significantly higher than the other three exams on both measures: fund of knowledge and clinical abilities. No other significant pairwise comparisons found
cMissing data: 1 of the 24 respondents did not respond to this question