Edelstein R A, Reid H M, Usatine R, Wilkes M S
Department of Family Medicine, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, College of Medicine--Academic Affairs, Los Angeles, CA 90059, USA.
Acad Med. 2000 Aug;75(8):825-33. doi: 10.1097/00001888-200008000-00016.
To assess how new National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) performance examinations--computerbased case simulations (CBX) and standardized patient exams (SPX)-compare with each other and with traditional internal and external measures of medical students' performances. Secondary objectives examined attitudes of students toward new and traditional evaluation modalities.
Fourth-year students (n = 155) at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine (including joint programs at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science and University of California, Riverside) were assigned two days of performance examinations (eight SPXs, ten CBXs, and a self-administered attitudinal survey). The CBX was scored by the NBME and the SPX by a NBME/Macy consortium. Scores were linked to the survey and correlated with archival student data, including traditional performance indicators (licensing board scores, grade-point averages, etc.).
Of the 155 students, 95% completed the testing. The CBX and the SPX had low to moderate statistically significant correlations with each other and with traditional measures of performance. Traditional measures were intercorrelated at higher levels than with the CBX or SPX. Students' perceptions of the various evaluation methods varied based on the assessment. These findings are consistent with the theoretical construct for development of performance examinations. For example, to assess clinical decision making, students rated the CBX best, while they rated multiple-choice examinations best to assess knowledge.
Examination results and student perception studies provide converging evidence that performance examinations measure different physician competency domains and support using multipronged assessment approaches.
评估美国国家医学考试委员会(NBME)新的执业考试——基于计算机的病例模拟考试(CBX)和标准化病人考试(SPX)之间的比较情况,以及它们与衡量医学生成绩的传统内部和外部指标之间的比较情况。次要目标是考察学生对新的和传统评估方式的态度。
加利福尼亚大学洛杉矶分校医学院(包括查尔斯·R·德鲁医学与科学大学以及加利福尼亚大学河滨分校的联合项目)的四年级学生(n = 155)参加了为期两天的执业考试(八次SPX、十次CBX以及一项自我管理的态度调查)。CBX由NBME评分,SPX由NBME/梅西财团评分。分数与调查相关联,并与学生档案数据相关,包括传统的成绩指标(执照考试分数、平均绩点等)。
155名学生中,95%完成了测试。CBX和SPX之间以及它们与传统成绩指标之间的相关性在统计学上呈低到中度显著。传统指标之间的相互关联性高于与CBX或SPX的关联性。学生对各种评估方法的看法因评估方式而异。这些发现与执业考试发展的理论构想一致。例如,为了评估临床决策能力,学生对CBX的评价最高,而在评估知识方面,他们对多项选择题考试的评价最高。
考试结果和学生认知研究提供了一致的证据,即执业考试衡量不同的医生能力领域,并支持使用多管齐下的评估方法。