Literature DB >> 29240456

Trainees' Perceptions of Feedback: Validity Evidence for Two FEEDME (Feedback in Medical Education) Instruments.

Robert Bing-You1, Saradha Ramesh2, Victoria Hayes1, Kalli Varaklis1, Denham Ward1, Maria Blanco2.   

Abstract

Construct: Medical educators consider feedback a core component of the educational process. Effective feedback allows learners to acquire new skills, knowledge, and attitudes. Learners' perceptions of feedback are an important aspect to assess with valid methods in order to improve the feedback skills of educators and the feedback culture.
BACKGROUND: Although guidelines for delivering effective feedback have existed for several decades, medical students and residents often indicate that they receive little feedback. A recent scoping review on feedback in medical education did not reveal any validity evidence on instruments to assess learner's perceptions of feedback. The purpose of our study was to gather validity evidence on two novel FEEDME (Feedback in Medical Education) instruments to assess medical students' and residents' perceptions of the feedback that they receive. APPROACH: After the authors developed an initial instrument with 54 items, cognitive interviews with medical students and residents suggested that 2 separate instruments were needed, one focused on the feedback culture (FEEDME-Culture) and the other on the provider of feedback (FEEDME-Provider). A Delphi study with 17 medical education experts and faculty members assessed content validity. The response process was explored involving 31 medical students and residents at 2 academic institutions. Exploratory factor analysis and reliability analyses were performed on completed instruments.
RESULTS: Two Delphi consultation rounds refined the wording of items and eliminated several items. Learners found both instruments easy and quick to answer; it took them less than 5 minutes to complete. Learners preferred an electronic format of the instruments over paper. Factor analysis revealed a two- and three-factor solution for the FEEDME-Culture and FEEDME-Provider instruments, respectively. Cronbach's alpha was greater than 0.80 for all factors. Items on both instruments were moderately to highly correlated (range, r = .3-.7).
CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide preliminary validity evidence of 2 novel feedback instruments. After further validation of both FEEDME instruments, sharing the results of the FEEDME-Culture instrument with educational leaders and faculty may improve the culture of feedback on specific educational rotations and at the institutional level. The FEEDME-Provider instrument could be useful for faculty development targeting feedback skills. Additional research studies could assess whether both instruments may be used to help learners receive feedback and prompt reflective learning.

Keywords:  Feedback; culture; medical student; resident; validation

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29240456     DOI: 10.1080/10401334.2017.1392863

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Teach Learn Med        ISSN: 1040-1334            Impact factor:   2.414


  2 in total

1.  Novel tool for assessing the quality of feedback in the emergency room (FEED-ER).

Authors:  Sreeja Natesan; Brett Todd; Robert S Hsu; Ronnie Kuo Ren; Ryan Clark; Geoff Jara-Almonta; Joao Ricardo Nickenig Vissoci; Khuansiri Narajeenron
Journal:  AEM Educ Train       Date:  2021-08-01

2.  The use of factor analysis and abductive inference to explore students' and practitioners' perspectives of feedback: divergent or congruent understanding?

Authors:  Christine Ossenberg; Amanda Henderson; Marion Mitchell
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2020-11-25       Impact factor: 2.463

  2 in total

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