Hill Jeffery, Stull Matthew, Stettler Brian, Paulsen Robbie, Hart Kimberly, McDonough Erin
Department of Emergency Medicine University of Cincinnati Cincinnati OH.
Emergency Medicine Residency Training Program University of Cincinnati Cincinnati OH.
AEM Educ Train. 2018 Sep 17;2(4):310-316. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10121. eCollection 2018 Oct.
Delivering quality lectures is a critical skill for residents seeking careers in academia yet no validated tools for assessing resident lecture skills exist.
The authors sought to develop and validate a lecture assessment tool.
Using a nominal group technique, the authors derived a behaviorally anchored assessment tool. Baseline characteristics of resident lecturers including prior lecturing experience and perceived comfort with lecturing were collected. Faculty and senior residents used the tool to assess lecturer performance at weekly conference. A postintervention survey assessed the usability of the form and the quantity and quality of the feedback. Analysis of variance was used to identify relationships in performance within individual domains to baseline data. Generalizability coefficients and scatterplots with jitter were used to assess inter-rater reliability.
Of 64 residents assessed, most (68.8%) had previous lecturing experience and 6.3% had experience as a regional/national speaker. There was a significant difference in performance within the domains of Content Expertise (p < 0.001), Presentation Design/Structure (p = 0.014), and Lecture Presence (p = 0.001) for first-year versus fourth-year residents. Residents who had higher perceived comfort with lecturing performed better in the domains of Content Expertise (p = 0.035), Presentation Design/Structure (p = 0.037), and Lecture Presence (p < 0.001). We found fair agreement between raters in all domains except Goals and Objectives. Both lecturers and evaluators perceived the feedback delivered as specific and of adequate quantity and quality. Evaluators described the form as highly useable.
The derived behaviorally anchored assessment tool is a sufficiently valid instrument for the assessment of resident-delivered lectures.
对于有志于从事学术事业的住院医师而言,提供高质量的讲座是一项关键技能,但目前尚无经过验证的工具来评估住院医师的讲座技能。
作者旨在开发并验证一种讲座评估工具。
作者采用名义群体技术,得出了一种行为锚定评估工具。收集了住院医师讲师的基线特征,包括先前的讲座经验以及对讲座的自我感觉舒适度。教员和高年级住院医师使用该工具在每周的会议上评估讲师的表现。干预后的调查评估了表格的可用性以及反馈的数量和质量。采用方差分析来确定各个领域内的表现与基线数据之间的关系。使用概化系数和带抖动的散点图来评估评分者间的信度。
在接受评估的64名住院医师中,大多数(68.8%)有过讲座经验,6.3%有过地区/全国性演讲者的经验。一年级与四年级住院医师在内容专业知识(p < 0.001)、演示设计/结构(p = 0.014)和讲座仪态(p = 0.001)领域的表现存在显著差异。对讲座自我感觉更舒适的住院医师在内容专业知识(p = 0.035)、演示设计/结构(p = 0.037)和讲座仪态(p < 0.001)领域表现更好。除目标和目的外,我们发现评分者在所有领域的意见一致性一般。讲师和评估者都认为所提供的反馈具体且数量和质量充足。评估者称该表格非常实用。
所推导的行为锚定评估工具是评估住院医师讲座的一种足够有效的工具。