D. Grbic is lead research analyst for medical education research, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC. E. Morrison was director of policy research studies, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC, at the time of this study. H.M. Sondheimer is professor emeritus, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado. S.S. Conrad is director, Advancing Holistic Review Initiative, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC. J.F. Milem is dean of education and professor, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California.
Acad Med. 2019 Mar;94(3):396-403. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002446.
The authors tested for an association between the Association of American Medical Colleges' holistic review in admissions (HRA) workshop and the compositional diversity of medical school accepted applicants and matriculants in schools that held workshops compared with those that did not.
The authors examined school-level data from 134 medical schools accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education for the years 2006-2016 using information from the American Medical College Application Service. They used a fixed-effects regression to examine the within-school association between an HRA workshop and four measures of diversity: percent first-generation college student, percent black/African American, percent Hispanic, and overall level of racial/ethnic diversity as measured by a diversity index.
For schools that held an HRA workshop, descriptive statistics showed higher mean values across all four measures of diversity for the post-HRA workshop period (the HRA implementation period) compared with the preworkshop period (accepted applicants: d = 0.34-0.79; matriculants: d = 0.29-0.73). Analyzing data for all schools, including those that did not hold a workshop, regression models showed that the HRA implementation period was associated with a significant and sustained increase in all four measures of diversity. These findings were consistent for both accepted applicants (P < .01) and matriculants (P < .01).
The significant increases in all four measures of diversity following an HRA workshop support the conclusion that this workshop was associated with increased compositional diversity at the participating medical schools.
作者检验了美国医学院协会(AAMC)整体招生审核(HRA)研讨会与参加研讨会的医学院和未参加研讨会的医学院在录取学生和入学学生的构成多样性之间的关联。
作者使用美国医学院申请服务(AMCAS)的数据,从 2006 年至 2016 年,对 134 所获得医学教育联络委员会(LCME)认证的医学院的学校层面数据进行了研究。他们使用固定效应回归,检验了 HRA 研讨会与四种多样性衡量指标(第一代大学生比例、黑人/非裔美国人比例、西班牙裔比例以及通过多样性指数衡量的整体种族/族裔多样性水平)之间的校内关联。
对于举办 HRA 研讨会的学校,描述性统计数据显示,在 HRA 研讨会后的时期(HRA 实施时期),所有四个多样性衡量指标的平均值都高于研讨会前时期(录取申请人:d=0.34-0.79;入学申请人:d=0.29-0.73)。对包括未举办研讨会的所有学校进行数据分析,回归模型显示,HRA 实施时期与所有四个多样性衡量指标的显著和持续增加有关。这些发现对于录取申请人(P<.01)和入学申请人(P<.01)都是一致的。
在 HRA 研讨会之后,所有四个多样性衡量指标的显著增加支持了这样的结论,即该研讨会与参与医学院的构成多样性增加有关。