Literature DB >> 2355864

Reliability and learning from the objective structured clinical examination.

J Roberts1, G Norman.   

Abstract

The difficulties in measurement of the clinical performance of students in the health professions are well known by educators. One innovative measure incorporated in several of the educational programmes, including the BSc in Nursing programme, in the Faculty of Health Sciences, at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada is the objective structured clinical examination (OSCE). The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability of this evaluation method, both within and between stations. One problem that has been noted by users of the OSCE method is that performance on individual OSCE stations is poorly correlated across stations, apparently regardless of the particular content of the station. A number of hypotheses have been advanced to attempt to explain this phenomenon: performance of any skill is sufficiently variable that the correlation is poor; different skills have little common basis, so that there is no generalizability from one to another, or reliability of assessment in any one station is low. To test these hypotheses, a study was designed for test-retest and interrater reliability. Students undergoing a 10-station OSCE also repeated their starting OSCE station at the end of the examination circuit. In addition, several stations were rated by more than one observer (interrater). This study of 71 first-year BScN students showed that the interrater reliability was high (ICC = 0.80 to 0.99), and test-retest reliability on the same station was good (ICC = 0.66 to 0.86); however, correlation across stations was low (alpha = 0.198). Thus it is apparent that there is high consistency of repeated performance of a skill but little consistency of performance on different skills.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2355864     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.1990.tb00004.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Educ        ISSN: 0308-0110            Impact factor:   6.251


  14 in total

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Authors:  William H Shrank; Virginia A Reed; G Christian Jernstedt
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 5.128

Review 2.  Recent developments in assessing medical students.

Authors:  S L Fowell; J G Bligh
Journal:  Postgrad Med J       Date:  1998-01       Impact factor: 2.401

3.  Assessment of competence.

Authors:  L M Campbell; T S Murray
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 5.386

4.  Team-Based Decision-Making in an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE): Are Pre-Licensure Healthcare Students "Collaborative Practice-Ready"?

Authors:  Renee Dagenais; Shane Ashley Pawluk; Daniel Rainkie; Kyle John Wilby
Journal:  Innov Pharm       Date:  2018-11-02

5.  Specialist training in rheumatology--the need for a curriculum and assessment.

Authors:  M Doherty
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  1994-04       Impact factor: 19.103

Review 6.  Canadian experience with structured clinical examinations.

Authors:  P Grand'Maison; J Lescop; C A Brailovsky
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1993-05-01       Impact factor: 8.262

7.  Assessment of students.

Authors:  S Lowry
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1993-01-02

8.  The Objective Structured Clinical Examination. The new gold standard for evaluating postgraduate clinical performance.

Authors:  D A Sloan; M B Donnelly; R W Schwartz; W E Strodel
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1995-12       Impact factor: 12.969

9.  Association of the pre-internship objective structured clinical examination in final year medical students with comprehensive written examinations.

Authors:  Hasan Eftekhar; Ali Labaf; Pasha Anvari; Arsia Jamali; Farshad Sheybaee-Moghaddam
Journal:  Med Educ Online       Date:  2012-04-24

10.  Power of the policy: how the announcement of high-stakes clinical examination altered OSCE implementation at institutional level.

Authors:  Chi-Wei Lin; Tsuen-Chiuan Tsai; Cheuk-Kwan Sun; Der-Fang Chen; Keh-Min Liu
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2013-01-24       Impact factor: 2.463

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