Kampmeyer Daniela, Matthes Jan, Herzig Stefan
Department of Pharmacology, University of Cologne, Priv.-Doz. Dr. med. Jan Matthes, Gleueler Strasse 24, 50931, Cologne, Germany,
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2015 May;20(2):431-40. doi: 10.1007/s10459-014-9537-1. Epub 2014 Aug 8.
Multiple-choice-questions are common in medical examinations, but guessing biases assessment results. Confidence-based-testing (CBT) integrates indicated confidence levels. It has been suggested that correctness of and confidence in an answer together indicate knowledge levels thus determining the quality of a resulting decision. We used a CBT approach to investigate whether decision quality improves during undergraduate medical education. 3rd- and 5th-year students attended formative multiple-choice exams on pharmacological issues. Students were asked to indicate their confidence in a given answer. Correctness of answers was scored binary (1-correct; 0-wrong) and confidence levels were transformed to an ordinal scale (guess: 0; rather unsure: 0.33; rather sure: 0.66; very sure: 1). 5th-year students gave more correct answers (73 ± 16 vs. 49 ± 13 %, p < 0.05) and were on average more confident regarding the correctness of their answers (0.61 ± 0.18 vs. 0.46 ± 0.13, p < 0.05). Correlation of these parameters was stronger for 5th-year students (r = 0.81 vs. r = 0.52), but agreement of confidence and correctness ('centration') was lower. By combining the Bland-and-Altman approach with categories of decision-quality we found that 5th-year students were more likely to be 'well-informed' (41 vs. 5 %), while more 3rd-students were 'uninformed' (24 vs. 76 %). Despite a good correlation of exam results and confidence in given answers increased knowledge might be accompanied by a more critical view at the own abilities. Combining the statistical Bland-and-Altman analysis with a theoretical approach to decision-quality, more advanced students are expected to apply correct beliefs, while their younger fellows are rather at risk to hesitate or to act amiss.
多项选择题在医学考试中很常见,但猜测会影响评估结果。基于信心的测试(CBT)纳入了所表明的信心水平。有人提出,答案的正确性和对答案的信心共同表明知识水平,从而决定最终决策的质量。我们采用CBT方法来研究在本科医学教育期间决策质量是否会提高。三年级和五年级学生参加了关于药理学问题的形成性多项选择题考试。要求学生表明他们对给定答案的信心。答案的正确性按二元计分(1-正确;0-错误),信心水平转换为有序量表(猜测:0;不太确定:0.33;比较确定:0.66;非常确定:1)。五年级学生给出了更多正确答案(73±16%对49±13%,p<0.05),并且平均而言对自己答案的正确性更有信心(0.61±0.18对0.46±0.13,p<0.05)。这些参数之间的相关性在五年级学生中更强(r=0.81对r=0.52),但信心和正确性的一致性(“集中程度”)较低。通过将布兰德-奥特曼方法与决策质量类别相结合,我们发现五年级学生更有可能“见多识广”(41%对5%),而更多的三年级学生“所知甚少”(24%对76%)。尽管考试成绩与对给定答案的信心之间有良好的相关性,但知识的增加可能伴随着对自身能力更批判性的看法。将统计性的布兰德-奥特曼分析与决策质量的理论方法相结合,预计高年级学生能运用正确的信念,而低年级学生则更有可能犹豫不决或做出错误行为。