Community and Health Research Unit, School of Health and Social Care, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK.
AKT examination core group member, MRCGP examination, Royal College of General Practitioners, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 May 30;9(5):e030341. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030341.
International medical graduates (IMGs) perform less well in national postgraduate licensing examinations compared with UK graduates, even in computer-marked multiple-choice licensing examinations. We aimed to investigate thought processes of candidates answering multiple- choice questions, considering possible reasons for differential attainment between IMGs and UK graduates.
We employed a semistructured qualitative design using cognitive interviews. Systematic grounded theory was used to analyse data from 'think aloud' interviews of general practitioner specialty trainees (GPSTs) while answering up to 15 live questions from the UK Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners Applied Knowledge Test (AKT).
East Midlands, UK.
21 GPSTs including 13IMGs and 8 UK-trained doctors.
Perceptions of participants on how they answered AKT questions together with strategies used or difficulties experienced.
We interviewed 21 GPSTs (8 female, 13 male, 13 IMGs, 14 from black and minority ethnic groups, age 24-64 years) in years 1-3 of training between January and April 2017. Four themes were identified. 'Theoretical versus real-life clinical experience': participants reported difficulties recalling information and responding to questions from theoretical learning compared with clinical exposure; rote learning helped some IMGs recall rare disease patterns. Recency, frequency, opportunity and relevance: participants reported greater difficulty answering questions not recently studied, less frequently encountered or perceived as less relevant. Competence versus insight: some participants were over optimistic about their performance despite answering incorrectly. Cultural barriers: for IMGs included differences in undergraduate experience, lack of familiarity with UK guidelines and language barriers which overlapped with the other themes.
The difficulties we identified in candidates when answering AKT questions may be addressed through training. IMGs face additional difficulties which impede examination success due to differences in educational experience, content familiarity and language, which are also potentially amenable to additional training support.
与英国毕业生相比,国际医学毕业生(IMGs)在国家研究生执照考试中的表现较差,即使在计算机标记的多项选择执照考试中也是如此。我们旨在研究候选人回答多项选择题的思维过程,考虑 IMGs 和英国毕业生之间差异的可能原因。
我们采用半结构化定性设计,使用认知访谈。使用系统扎根理论分析了普通医生专业培训生(GPST)在回答多达 15 个来自英国皇家普通医生学院会员应用知识测试(AKT)的实时问题时的“大声思考”访谈中的数据。
英国东米德兰兹。
包括 13 名 IMG 在内的 21 名 GPST 和 8 名英国培训医生。
参与者对他们如何回答 AKT 问题的看法,以及他们使用的策略或遇到的困难。
我们在 2017 年 1 月至 4 月期间对培训 1-3 年的 21 名 GPST 进行了采访(8 名女性,13 名男性,13 名 IMG,14 名来自黑人和少数民族群体,年龄 24-64 岁)。确定了四个主题。“理论与现实临床经验”:参与者报告说,与临床暴露相比,他们在回忆信息和回答理论学习中的问题方面遇到困难;死记硬背帮助一些 IMG 回忆罕见的疾病模式。近期、频率、机会和相关性:参与者报告说,他们更难回答最近没有学习过、较少遇到或认为不太相关的问题。能力与洞察力:尽管回答错误,一些参与者对自己的表现过于乐观。文化障碍:对于 IMG 来说,包括本科经历的差异、对英国指南的不熟悉以及语言障碍,这些障碍与其他主题重叠。
我们在候选人回答 AKT 问题时发现的困难可以通过培训来解决。IMG 面临额外的困难,由于教育经历、内容熟悉程度和语言的差异,考试成功受到阻碍,这些困难也可以通过额外的培训支持来解决。