Literature DB >> 34534035

Building reliable and generalizable clerkship competency assessments: Impact of 'hawk-dove' correction.

Sally A Santen1, Michael Ryan1, Marieka A Helou1, Alicia Richards1, Robert A Perera1, Kellen Haley1, Melissa Bradner1, Fidelma B Rigby1, Yoon Soo Park2,3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Systematic differences among raters' approaches to student assessment may result in leniency or stringency of assessment scores. This study examines the generalizability of medical student workplace-based competency assessments including the impact of rater-adjusted scores for leniency and stringency.
METHODS: Data were collected from summative clerkship assessments completed for 204 students during 2017-2018 the clerkship at a single institution. Generalizability theory was used to explore variance attributed to different facets (rater, learner, item, and competency domain) through three unbalanced random-effects models by clerkship including applying assessor stringency-leniency adjustments.
RESULTS: In the original assessments, only 4-8% of the variance was attributed to the student with the remainder being rater variance and error. Aggregating items to create a composite score increased variability attributable to the student (5-13% of variance). Applying a stringency-leniency ('hawk-dove') correction substantially increased the variance attributed to the student (14.8-17.8%) and reliability. Controlling for assessor leniency/stringency reduced measurement error, decreasing the number of assessments required for generalizability from 16-50 to 11-14.
CONCLUSIONS: Similar to prior research, most of the variance in competency assessment scores was attributable to raters, with only a small proportion attributed to the student. Making stringency-leniency corrections using rater-adjusted scores improved the psychometric characteristics of assessment scores.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical; assessment; medicine; psychometrics; undergraduate

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34534035     DOI: 10.1080/0142159X.2021.1948519

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Teach        ISSN: 0142-159X            Impact factor:   3.650


  1 in total

1.  Pass/fail decisions and standards: the impact of differential examiner stringency on OSCE outcomes.

Authors:  Matt Homer
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 3.629

  1 in total

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