K.E. Hauer is associate dean for assessment and professor, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8812-4045. C.R. Lucey is vice dean for education and professor, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Acad Med. 2019 Apr;94(4):469-472. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002413.
Core clerkship grading creates multiple challenges that produce high stress for medical students, interfere with learning, and create inequitable learning environments. Students and faculty alike succumb to the illusion of objectivity-that quantitative ratings converted to grades convey accurate measures of the complexity of clinical performance.Clerkship grading is the first high-stakes assessment within medical school and occurs just as students are newly immersed full-time in an environment in which patient care supersedes their needs as learners. Students earning high marks situate themselves to earn entry into competitive residency programs and selective specialties. However, there is no commonly accepted standard for how to assign clerkship grades, and the process is vulnerable to imprecision and bias. Rewarding learners for the speed with which they adapt inherently favors students who bring advantages acquired before medical school and discounts the goal of all learners achieving competence.The authors propose that, rather than focusing on assigning core clerkship grades, assessment of student performance should incorporate expert judgment of learning progress. Competency-based medical education is predicated on the articulation of stepwise expectations for learners, with the support and time allocated for each learner to meet those expectations. Concurrently, students should ideally review their own performance data with coaches to self-assess areas of relative strength and areas for further growth. Eliminating grades in favor of competency-based assessment for learning holds promise to engage learners in developing essential patient care and teamwork skills and to foster their development of lifelong learning habits.
核心实习评分带来了诸多挑战,给医学生带来了巨大压力,干扰了学习,并造成了不公平的学习环境。学生和教师都屈服于一种错觉,即量化评分转化为成绩可以准确衡量临床表现的复杂性。实习评分是医学院内的第一次高风险评估,而此时学生刚刚全身心地投入到一个以患者护理优先于他们作为学习者需求的环境中。获得高分的学生为进入竞争激烈的住院医师培训计划和选择性专业做好了准备。然而,如何分配实习成绩并没有一个普遍接受的标准,而且这个过程容易出现不精确和偏见。奖励学习者适应速度的做法本质上有利于那些在医学院之前就已经获得优势的学生,而忽视了所有学习者都要达到能力水平的目标。作者建议,与其专注于分配核心实习成绩,不如将学生表现的评估纳入对学习进展的专家判断。基于能力的医学教育以逐步为学习者制定期望为前提,为每个学习者提供支持和时间,以满足这些期望。同时,学生应该理想地与教练一起查看自己的绩效数据,进行自我评估相对优势领域和进一步发展的领域。用基于能力的学习评估代替成绩,有望让学习者积极参与培养基本的患者护理和团队合作技能,并促进他们发展终身学习习惯。