Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Gold Coast, Australia.
Translational Simulation Collaborative, Gold Coast, Australia.
Med Teach. 2022 Nov;44(11):1296-1302. doi: 10.1080/0142159X.2022.2093704. Epub 2022 Jul 4.
Self-Assessment (SA) is often assumed to be essential for learning, however, this assumption has been extensively rebutted. Research shows SA has significant limitations, including its lack of correlation with competence.
We undertook a scoping review of SA in medical education (2011-2021) and surprisingly discovered substantial research where SA was erroneously assumed to be a valid measure of successful learning, or a skill needing to be taught. Although the initial intent of our scoping review was to explore where SA is being effectively used to advance lifelong learning, we paused to explore the extent of the problem of its misuse and resulting in wasted research, by examining excluded studies.
From 1151 articles, we identified 207 which ignored the documented limitations of SA. Thirty-nine studies explored SA of learning. This research has limited utility: increasing the accuracy of SA does not improve performance or lifelong learning. One hundred and sixty-eight used SA as an outcome measure to assess a program or intervention, including 63 where self-assessed improvement in knowledge/skills was the sole measure. SA of self-confidence was measured in 62 studies. When confidence was compared with an objective measure of performance, both invariably increased, but confidence did not always align with competence when measured.
Many researchers mistakenly assume the ability to accurately self-assess is essential for learning, so focus on teaching self-calibration rather than evidence-based methods of advancing learning. Other researchers incorrectly suppose that self-reported improvements in knowledge/skills provide evidence of the efficacy of a program/intervention. This is particularly troubling with regards to novices, who may believe that because they self-assess to have improved/gained confidence, they are now competent.
Our findings highlight the significant volume of research being done where SA is misunderstood and/or misused as a measurement. We posit reasons that such research continues to take place and suggest solutions moving forward.
自我评估(SA)通常被认为对学习至关重要,但这一假设已被广泛反驳。研究表明,SA 存在显著的局限性,包括其与能力缺乏相关性。
我们对医学教育中的 SA 进行了范围综述(2011-2021 年),令人惊讶的是,我们发现了大量研究,其中错误地假设 SA 是成功学习的有效衡量标准,或者是需要教授的技能。尽管我们范围综述的最初意图是探索 SA 在促进终身学习方面的有效应用,但我们暂停了这一探索,转而研究其被滥用的程度以及由此导致的研究浪费问题,方法是检查被排除的研究。
从 1151 篇文章中,我们确定了 207 篇忽略了 SA 记录在案的局限性的文章。39 项研究探讨了学习的 SA。这项研究的实用性有限:提高 SA 的准确性并不能提高绩效或终身学习。168 项研究将 SA 用作评估计划或干预措施的结果衡量标准,其中包括 63 项研究,自我评估的知识/技能提高是唯一的衡量标准。62 项研究测量了自我信心的 SA。当信心与客观的绩效衡量标准进行比较时,两者都无一例外地增加,但当进行衡量时,信心并不总是与能力一致。
许多研究人员错误地认为准确进行自我评估的能力对于学习至关重要,因此他们专注于教授自我校准,而不是推进学习的基于证据的方法。其他研究人员错误地认为,自我报告的知识/技能提高提供了计划/干预措施有效性的证据。这对于新手来说尤其令人担忧,他们可能会认为,因为他们自我评估已经提高/获得了信心,所以他们现在就有能力了。
我们的研究结果突出了大量误解和/或误用 SA 作为衡量标准的研究。我们提出了为什么这种研究仍在继续的原因,并提出了前进的解决方案。