| Literature DB >> 34281820 |
Michael D Wolcott1,2, Nikki G Lobczowski3, Jacqueline M Zeeman4, Jacqueline E McLaughlin4.
Abstract
Objective. To describe the role of examinee knowledge and experience in situational judgment test (SJT) response processes.Methods. Thirty participants (15 students and 15 pharmacists) completed a 12-item SJT on empathy. Each participant completed a think-aloud interview followed by a cognitive interview to elicit their understanding of the items and factors that influenced their response selections. Interviews were coded to identify references to general and job-specific knowledge and experiences. Utterances were quantified to explore differences in the occurrence based on the individual item, item setting (ie, health care or non-health care setting), participant type (ie, student or pharmacists), and empathy component being assessed (ie, affective or cognitive empathy).Results. Participants made 480 references to knowledge and experiences: 45.2% were job-specific knowledge or experiences, 27.5% were general knowledge or experiences, 17.9% related to a lack of experience, and 9.4% were nondescript and could not be distinguished. There were significant differences in the reference to general and job-specific knowledge or experiences based on whether the item scenario occurred in a health care or non-health care setting and the component of empathy being assessed. Experience references often included comments about location, actors, task, similarity, specificity, and recency; knowledge references were classified by information, strategies, and skills.Conclusion. Findings from this study suggest general and job-specific knowledge and experiences influence response processes in SJTs.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive interview; empathy; response process; situational judgment test; think-aloud protocol; validity
Year: 2020 PMID: 34281820 DOI: 10.5688/ajpe8194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Pharm Educ ISSN: 0002-9459 Impact factor: 2.047