Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 301 Mason Lord Dr, Suite 2500, Baltimore, 21224, MD, USA.
Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2017 Aug 8;17(1):132. doi: 10.1186/s12909-017-0969-1.
Programs encouraging medical student research such as Scholarly Concentrations (SC) are increasing nationally. However, there are few validated measures of mentoring quality tailored to medical students. We sought to modify and validate a mentoring scale for use in medical student research experiences.
SC faculty created a scale evaluating how medical students assess mentors in the research setting. A validated graduate student scale of mentorship, the Ideal Mentor Scale, was modified by selecting 10 of the 34 original items most relevant for medical students and adding an item on project ownership. We administered this 11-item assessment to second year medical students in the Johns Hopkins University SC Program from 2011 to 2016, and performed exploratory factor analysis with oblique rotation to determine included items and subscales. We correlate overall mentoring quality scale and subscales with four student outcomes: 'very satisfied' with mentor, 'more likely' to do future research, project accepted at a national meeting, and highest SC faculty rating of student project.
Five hundred ninety-eight students responded (87% response rate). After factor analysis, we eliminated three items producing a final scale of overall mentoring quality (8 items, Cronbach's alpha = 0.92) with three subscales: advocacy, responsiveness, and assistance. The overall mentoring quality scale was significantly associated with all four student outcomes, including mentor satisfaction: OR [(95% CI), p-value] 1.66 [(1.53-1.79), p < 0.001]; likelihood of future research: OR 1.06 [(1.03-1.09), p < 0.001]; abstract submission to national meetings: OR 1.05 [(1.02-1.08), p = 0.002]; and SC faculty rating of student projects: OR 1.08 [(1.03-1.14), p = 0.004]. Each subscale also correlated with overall mentor satisfaction, and the strongest relationship of each subscale was seen with 'mentor advocacy.'
Mentor quality can be reliably measured and associates with important medical student scholarly outcomes. Given the lack of tools, this scale can be used by other SC Programs to advance medical students' scholarship.
鼓励医学生进行研究的项目,如学术集中(SC),在全国范围内逐渐增多。然而,针对医学生量身定制的导师质量验证措施却寥寥无几。我们试图修改和验证一种用于医学生研究经历的导师评估量表。
SC 教师创建了一个评估医学生在研究环境中评估导师的量表。一个经过验证的研究生导师量表,即理想导师量表,通过选择与医学生最相关的 34 个原始项目中的 10 个,并添加一个关于项目所有权的项目进行修改。我们于 2011 年至 2016 年向约翰霍普金斯大学 SC 项目的二年级医学生发放了这份 11 项评估问卷,并进行了探索性因子分析,采用斜交旋转确定纳入的项目和子量表。我们将整体导师质量量表及其子量表与四项学生成果进行相关性分析:对导师“非常满意”、“更有可能”进行未来研究、项目在全国会议上被接受,以及 SC 教师对学生项目的最高评价。
共有 598 名学生(87%的回应率)做出了回应。经过因子分析,我们删除了三个项目,得出一个最终的整体导师质量量表(8 个项目,克朗巴赫 α系数为 0.92),包含三个子量表:倡导、响应和帮助。整体导师质量量表与四项学生成果均显著相关,包括导师满意度:比值比(95%置信区间),p 值为 1.66 [(1.53-1.79),p<0.001];未来研究的可能性:比值比 1.06 [(1.03-1.09),p<0.001];向全国会议提交摘要的可能性:比值比 1.05 [(1.02-1.08),p=0.002];以及 SC 教师对学生项目的评价:比值比 1.08 [(1.03-1.14),p=0.004]。每个子量表也与整体导师满意度相关,每个子量表与“导师倡导”的相关性最强。
导师质量可以进行可靠地测量,并与医学生的重要学术成果相关联。鉴于缺乏工具,其他 SC 项目可以使用该量表来推进医学生的学术研究。