Department of Surgery, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7081, USA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2010 May;210(5):680-3, 683-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2009.12.020.
Medical student knowledge is assessed during surgical clerkships subjectively and objectively. Subjective evaluation depends on faculty assessment during clinical and didactic interactions. Objective measurement derives from standardized tools, such as the National Board of Medical Examiners Surgery Subject test (shelf). Few efforts have been made to characterize the correlation between subjective and objective measures of medical knowledge.
All 308 third-year medical students who completed the 8-week surgery clerkship at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill between July 2005 and June 2007 received subjective assessment of knowledge on 3 clinical rotations (one 4-week core and two 2-week elective rotations) and a longitudinal small-group tutorial. Faculty evaluators assigned percentile scores to rate students' knowledge base relative to their peers. In addition, students took the shelf test the last day of clerkship, and percentile scores were assigned based on National Board of Medical Examiners-supplied normative data from first-time test-takers within the same academic quarter. Subjective versus objective knowledge scores were plotted overall, and Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were generated for core, elective, and tutorial assessments.
There were only weak linear relationships noted between subjective faculty-assigned knowledge scores and objective shelf scores. Pearson correlations were 0.24 for core rotations (4 weeks exposure), 0.14 for elective rotations (2 weeks exposure), and 0.22 for tutorials (1-hour exposure/week during 8 weeks), with p values <0.0001.
Faculty assessment of knowledge is only weakly correlated with shelf performance. Faculty evaluations after 4-week rotations or longitudinal small-group interactions are better correlated with shelf scores than after 2-week electives.
医学生的知识在外科实习期间通过主观和客观的方式进行评估。主观评估取决于教师在临床和教学互动中的评估。客观测量来自标准化工具,如美国医师执照考试委员会外科科目考试(架子)。很少有人努力描述医学知识的主观和客观测量之间的相关性。
2005 年 7 月至 2007 年 6 月期间,北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校的所有 308 名完成了 8 周外科实习的三年级医学生,在 3 次临床轮转(1 次 4 周核心轮转和 2 次 2 周选修轮转)和纵向小组辅导中接受了知识的主观评估。教师评估员分配百分位数分数,以评估学生的知识库相对于其同行的水平。此外,学生在实习的最后一天参加了架子考试,根据国家医师执照考试委员会提供的同一学术季度内首次参加考试的考生的标准数据,分配百分位数分数。总体上绘制了主观与客观知识分数,为核心、选修和辅导评估生成了 Pearson 积矩相关系数。
主观教师分配的知识分数与客观架子分数之间仅存在微弱的线性关系。核心轮转(4 周暴露)的 Pearson 相关系数为 0.24,选修轮转(2 周暴露)为 0.14,辅导(8 周每周 1 小时暴露)为 0.22,p 值均<0.0001。
知识的教师评估与架子表现仅存在微弱的相关性。4 周轮转或纵向小组互动后的教师评估与架子分数的相关性优于 2 周选修后的评估。