Khan Rishad, Chahine Saad, Macaluso Steven, Viana Ricardo, Cassidy Caitlin, Miller Thomas, Bartley Debra, Payne Michael
Department of Medicine, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, 1151 Richmond Street North, London, ON N6A 3K7 Canada.
Centre for Education Research and Innovation, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, 1151 Richmond Street North, London, ON N6A 3K7 Canada.
Med Sci Educ. 2020 Feb 18;30(1):429-437. doi: 10.1007/s40670-020-00923-2. eCollection 2020 Mar.
Peer assessment of performance in the objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) is emerging as a learning instrument. While peers can provide reliable scores, there may be a trade-off with students' learning. The purpose of this study is to evaluate a peer-based OSCE as a viable assessment instrument and its potential to promote learning and explore the interplay between these two roles.
A total of 334 medical students completed an 11-station OSCE from 2015 to 2016. Each station had 1-2 peer examiners (PE) and one faculty examiner (FE). Examinees were rated on a 7-point scale across 5 dimensions: Look, Feel, Move, Special Tests and Global Impression. Students participated in voluntary focus groups in 2016 to provide qualitative feedback on the OSCE. Authors analysed assessment data and transcripts of focus group discussions.
Overall, PE awarded higher ratings compared with FE, sources of variance were similar across 2 years with unique variance consistently being the largest source, and reliability ( ) was generally low. Focus group analysis revealed four themes: Conferring with Faculty Examiners, Difficulty Rating Peers, Insider Knowledge, and Observing and Scoring
While peer assessment was not reliable for evaluating OSCE performance, PE's perceived that it was beneficial for their learning. Insight gained into exam technique and self-appraisal of skills allows students to understand expectations in clinical situations and plan approaches to self-assessment of competence.
在客观结构化临床考试(OSCE)中,同伴对表现的评估正逐渐成为一种学习工具。虽然同伴能够给出可靠的分数,但这可能会与学生的学习产生权衡。本研究的目的是评估基于同伴的OSCE作为一种可行的评估工具及其促进学习的潜力,并探索这两种作用之间的相互影响。
2015年至2016年,共有334名医学生完成了一场包含11个考站的OSCE。每个考站有1 - 2名同伴考官(PE)和一名教师考官(FE)。考生在5个维度上按照7分制进行评分:外观、感觉、动作、特殊检查和整体印象。2016年,学生参加了自愿性的焦点小组,以提供关于OSCE的定性反馈。作者分析了评估数据和焦点小组讨论的文字记录。
总体而言,与FE相比,PE给出的评分更高,两年间方差来源相似,独特方差始终是最大来源,并且可靠性( )普遍较低。焦点小组分析揭示了四个主题:与教师考官协商、给同伴评分的难度、内部知识以及观察和评分。
虽然同伴评估在评估OSCE表现方面不可靠,但同伴认为这对他们的学习有益。对考试技巧的深入了解和对技能的自我评估使学生能够理解临床情境中的期望,并规划自我能力评估的方法。