| Literature DB >> 27737661 |
Amir H Sam1,2, Saira Hameed1, Joanne Harris2, Karim Meeran3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Single Best Answer (SBA) questions are widely used in undergraduate and postgraduate medical examinations. Selection of the correct answer in SBA questions may be subject to cueing and therefore might not test the student's knowledge. In contrast to this artificial construct, doctors are ultimately required to perform in a real-life setting that does not offer a list of choices. This professional competence can be tested using Short Answer Questions (SAQs), where the student writes the correct answer without prompting from the question. However, SAQs cannot easily be machine marked and are therefore not feasible as an instrument for testing a representative sample of the curriculum for a large number of candidates. We hypothesised that a novel assessment instrument consisting of very short answer (VSA) questions is a superior test of knowledge than assessment by SBA.Entities:
Keywords: Assessment; Reliability; Single best answer; Testing; Validity; Very short answer
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27737661 PMCID: PMC5064885 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0793-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Blueprint of the questions asked in both very short answer (VSA) and single best answer (SBA) formats
| Question | Specialty & Topic |
|---|---|
| 1 | Cardiology: diagnosis of left ventricular hypertrophy by voltage criteria on ECG |
| 2 | Cardiology: diagnosis of pericarditis |
| 3 | Respiratory Medicine: treatment of pneumonia |
| 4 | Gastroenterology: investigation of iron deficiency anaemia |
| 5 | Gastroenterology: clinical presentation of portal hypertension |
| 6 | Gastroenterology: diagnosis of hereditary haemorrhagic telangiecstasia |
| 7 | Endocrinology: investigation of hyponatraemia |
| 8 | Endocrinology: clinical presentation of thyrotoxicosis |
| 9 | Endocrinology: investigation of diabetic ketoacidosis |
| 10 | Haematology: diagnosis of haemolytic uraemic syndrome |
| 11 | Haematology: diagnosis of multiple myeloma |
| 12 | Nephrology: investigation of nephrotic syndrome |
| 13 | General surgery: small bowel obstruction on abdominal radiograph |
| 14 | Urology: investigation of suspected renal calculi |
| 15 | Breast Surgery: diagnosis of a breast mass |
Fig. 1Marking method using Microsoft Excel and filter. In this example, candidates were given a clinical vignette and then asked to interpret the patient’s 12 lead electrocardiogram (ECG). There were 19 answers given by the students and seven variants of the correct answer (‘pericarditis’) were deemed acceptable as shown by the ticks in the filter
Fig. 2Number of correct responses given for questions asked in two formats: single best answer (SBA) and very short answer (VSA). Medical students were given a clinical vignette and asked about clinical presentations, investigations and treatment of the patient. In the VSA format, students were asked to type the answer (one to three words). In the SBA format, students chose the correct answer from a list. In all questions, more students got the correct answer when given a list to choose from in the SBA format than when asked to type the answer in the VSA assessment (* p < 0.01)