| Literature DB >> 31641942 |
Katrin Schüttpelz-Brauns1,2, Martin Hecht3, Katinka Hardt3, Yassin Karay4, Michaela Zupanic5, Juliane E Kämmer6,7.
Abstract
Low stakes assessment without grading the performance of students in educational systems has received increasing attention in recent years. It is used in formative assessments to guide the learning process as well as in large-scales assessments to monitor educational programs. Yet, such assessments suffer from high variation in students' test-taking effort. We aimed to identify institutional strategies related to serious test-taking behavior in low stakes assessment to provide medical schools with practical recommendations on how test-taking effort might be increased. First, we identified strategies that were already used by medical schools to increase the serious test-taking behavior on the low stakes Berlin Progress Test (BPT). Strategies which could be assigned to self-determination theory of Ryan and Deci were chosen for analysis. We conducted the study at nine medical schools in Germany and Austria with a total of 108,140 observations in an established low stakes assessment. A generalized linear-mixed effects model was used to assess the association between institutional strategies and the odds that students will take the BPT seriously. Overall, two institutional strategies were found to be positively related to more serious test-taking behavior: discussing low test performance with the mentor and consequences for not participating. Giving choice was negatively related to more serious test-taking behavior. At medical schools that presented the BPT as evaluation, this effect was larger in comparison to medical schools that presented the BPT as assessment.Entities:
Keywords: Curriculum development; Low stakes assessment; Progress testing; Self-determination theory; Test-taking effort
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31641942 PMCID: PMC7210238 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-019-09928-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
Operationalization of medical schools’ strategies related to the indicator of taking the low stakes Berlin Progress Test (BPT) seriously
| Strategy (with characteristics) | Code |
|---|---|
| Consequences for not participating | |
| No consequences | 0 |
| No admission to further courses when not taking part | 1 |
| No admission to assessment when not taking part | 1 |
| Presentation type | |
| Supervision of BPT on test date by assessment coordinator | 1 |
| Communication by assessment coordinator | 1 |
| Information about progress testing via email from assessment coordinator | 1 |
| Information about progress testing in lecture about assessment | 1 |
| Information about BPT being in accordance with examination regulations | 1 |
| Communication by head of quality management or by coordinator of quality management/evaluation | 0 |
| Supervision of BPT on test date by quality management/evaluation coordinator | 0 |
| Information about progress testing via email from quality management/evaluation coordinator | 0 |
| Individuality of discussed results | |
| No individuality | 0 |
| Low individuality | 1 |
| Moderate individuality | 1 |
| High individuality | 1 |
| Discussing results with the mentor | |
| No | 0 |
| Yes | 1 |
| Give choices | |
| No choice | 0 |
| Choice of date or choice of place | 1 |
| Choice of date and choice of place | 1 |
Descriptive statistics of strategies
| Strategy | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Consequences for not participating | |||
| No | 974 (10%) | 8817 (90%) | 9791 |
| Yes | 11,383 (12%) | 86,996 (88%) | 98,379 |
| Presentation type | |||
| Evaluation | 6068 (18%) | 27,440 (82%) | 33,508 |
| Assessment | 5902 (9%) | 61,474 (91%) | 67,376 |
| Individuality of discussed results | |||
| No | 12,069 (14%) | 74,938 (86%) | 87,007 |
| Yes | 288 (1%) | 20,875 (99%) | 21,163 |
| Discussing results with mentor | |||
| No | 12,321 (13%) | 85,600 (87%) | 97,921 |
| Yes | 36 (< 1%) | 10,213 (> 99%) | 10,249 |
| Give choices | |||
| No | 7344 (9%) | 73,645 (91%) | 80,989 |
| Yes | 5013 (18%) | 22,168 (82%) | 27,181 |
NTTB nonserious test-taking behavior, STTB serious test-taking behavior. Note that the reported proportions are of the total sample. Due to potential occurrences of Simpson’s paradoxes, odds and odds ratios from this table might differ, even in sign, from model results reported in Table 3, where results were conditional on medical school as a control variable
Model results
| Parameter | Est. | exp(Est.) | 95% CI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LLexp(Est.) | ULexp(Est.) | |||||
| Fixed effects | ||||||
| Intercept | 2.13 | 0.42 | < 0.001 | 8.43 | 3.73 | 19.09 |
| Consequences for not participating | 0.93 | 0.46 | 0.043 | 2.53 | 1.03 | 6.20 |
| Presentation type | 0.36 | 0.37 | 0.333 | 1.43 | 0.69 | 2.98 |
| Individuality of discussed results | 0.81 | 0.74 | 0.275 | 2.24 | 0.53 | 9.52 |
| Discussing results with mentor | 2.72 | 0.36 | < 0.001 | 15.23 | 7.53 | 30.80 |
| Give choices | − 4.25 | 0.31 | < 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.03 |
| Presentation type × give choice | 2.42 | 0.94 | 0.010 | 11.21 | 1.79 | 70.04 |
| Random effects | ||||||
| Person (between person) | 2.27 | |||||
| Medical School × Wave | 0.31 | |||||
| Model fit | ||||||
| Deviance | 59,851.3 | |||||
| AIC | 59,915.3 | |||||
| BIC | 60,222.2 | |||||
AIC Akaike information criterion, BIC Bayesian information criterion, Est. estimate. The reported estimate for random effects is the standard deviation. Number of responses = 108,140. Number of persons = 31,107. Fixed effects for the control variables Medical School and Wave are reported in the Online Supplemental Material