Gordon M J
Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
Acad Med. 1991 Dec;66(12):762-9. doi: 10.1097/00001888-199112000-00012.
Valid self-assessment is fundamental to continuing professional competence but is seldom explicitly taught in health professions training. This review analyzed 18 scholarly articles published between January 1970 and February 1990 (14 articles regarding health professions trainees, and four concerning college students or graduate trainees) in which it was possible to compare performance as self-assessed by trainees with performance as assessed by experts or objective tests. The validity of self-assessed performance was found to be low to moderate and did not improve with time in conventional health professions training programs. Self-assessed performance seemed closely related to generalized self-attributions and was minimally influenced by external feedback in the form of test scores, grades, or faculty assessments. In five programs emphasizing explicit self-assessment goals and training strategies, moderate-to-high validity outcomes or improvements over time were demonstrated. Much of what passes for self-assessment in training seems the exercise of an underdeveloped skill, but effective training to improve validity and accuracy is available and feasible.
有效的自我评估是持续专业能力的基础,但在卫生专业培训中很少明确教授。本综述分析了1970年1月至1990年2月发表的18篇学术文章(14篇关于卫生专业学员,4篇关于大学生或研究生学员),在这些文章中,可以将学员自我评估的表现与专家评估或客观测试的表现进行比较。研究发现,在传统的卫生专业培训项目中,自我评估表现的有效性为低到中等,且不会随着时间的推移而提高。自我评估表现似乎与普遍的自我归因密切相关,并且受测试分数、成绩或教师评估等外部反馈的影响最小。在五个强调明确自我评估目标和培训策略的项目中,展示了中等至高有效性的结果或随着时间推移的改进。培训中许多所谓的自我评估似乎是一种未充分发展的技能的运用,但有效的提高有效性和准确性的培训是可行的。