Backhouse S, Chiavaroli N G, Schmid K L, McKenzie T, Cochrane A L, Phillips G, Jalbert I
School of Medicine, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia.
Australian Council for Educational Research, Melbourne, Australia.
BMC Med Educ. 2021 Jan 6;21(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s12909-020-02417-6.
Credentialing assessment for overseas-educated optometrists seeking registration in Australia and New Zealand is administered by the Optometry Council of Australia and New Zealand. The aim was to review the validation and outcomes of the written components of this exam to demonstrate credentialing meets entry-level competency standards.
The Competency in Optometry Examination consists of two written and two clinical parts. Part 1 of the written exam comprises multiple choice questions (MCQ) covering basic and clinical science, while Part 2 has 18 short answer questions (SAQ) examining diagnosis and management. Candidates must pass both written components to progress to the clinical exam. Validity was evaluated using Kane's framework for scoring (marking criteria, item analysis), generalization (blueprint), extrapolation (standard setting), and implications (outcome, including pass rates). A competency-based blueprint, the Optometry Australia Entry-level Competency Standards for Optometry 2014, guided question selection with the number of items weighted towards key competencies. A standard setting exercise, last conducted in 2017, was used to determine the minimum standard for both written exams. Item response theory (Rasch) was used to analyse exams, produce reliability metrics, apply consistent standards to the results, calibrate difficulty across exams, and score candidates.
Data is reported on 12 administrations of the written examination since 2014. Of the 193 candidates who sat the exam over the study period, 133 (68.9%) passed and moved on to the practical component. Ninety-one (47.2%) passed both the MCQ and SAQ exams on their first attempt. The MCQ exam has displayed consistently high reliability (reliability index range 0.71 to 0.93, average 0.88) across all 12 administrations. Prior to September 2017 the SAQ had a set cutscore of 50%, and the difficulty of the exam was variable. Since the introduction of Rasch analysis to calibrate difficulty across exams, the reliability and power of the SAQ exam has been consistently high (separation index range 0.82 to 0.93, average 0.86).
The findings from collective evidence support the validity of the written components (MCQ and SAQ) of the credentialing of the competency of overseas-educated optometrists in Australia and New Zealand.
澳大利亚和新西兰验光师理事会负责对寻求在澳大利亚和新西兰注册的海外验光师进行资格评估。目的是审查该考试书面部分的有效性和结果,以证明资格评估符合入门级能力标准。
验光能力考试由两部分笔试和两部分临床考试组成。笔试第一部分包括涵盖基础科学和临床科学的多项选择题(MCQ),而第二部分有18道简答题(SAQ),考查诊断和管理能力。考生必须通过两个书面部分才能进入临床考试。使用凯恩评分框架(评分标准、项目分析)、概括(蓝图)、外推(标准设定)和影响(结果,包括通过率)来评估有效性。基于能力的蓝图《2014年澳大利亚验光入门级能力标准》指导问题选择,题目数量根据关键能力进行加权。2017年最后一次进行的标准设定练习用于确定两次笔试的最低标准。项目反应理论(Rasch)用于分析考试、生成可靠性指标、对结果应用一致的标准、校准不同考试的难度以及给考生评分。
报告了自2014年以来12次笔试的数据。在研究期间参加考试的193名考生中,133人(68.9%)通过并进入实践部分。91人(47.2%)在第一次尝试时通过了MCQ和SAQ考试。在所有12次考试中,MCQ考试一直显示出高可靠性(可靠性指数范围为0.71至0.93,平均0.88)。2017年9月之前,SAQ的及格分数设定为50%,考试难度各不相同。自引入Rasch分析以校准不同考试的难度以来,SAQ考试的可靠性和效度一直很高(区分指数范围为0.82至0.93,平均0.86)。
综合证据的结果支持澳大利亚和新西兰海外验光师能力认证书面部分(MCQ和SAQ)的有效性。