Institute of Health Sciences Education, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, 1110 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, QC, H3A 1A3, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, and Chaire de recherche en pédagogie médicale Paul Grand'Maison de la Société des Médecins de l'Université de Sherbrooke, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC, Canada.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2024 Sep;29(4):1285-1308. doi: 10.1007/s10459-023-10307-x. Epub 2023 Dec 8.
Medical school admissions is a contentious and high stakes selection activity. Many assessment approaches are available to support selection; but how are decisions about building, monitoring, and adapting admissions systems made? What shapes the processes and practices that underpin selection decisions? We explore how these decisions are made across several Canadian medical schools, and how values shape the creation, monitoring, and adaptation of admissions systems. Using phenomenography (a qualitative method suited to examining variability), the authors analyzed interviews with 10 current or previous heads of admissions from 10 different undergraduate medical education programs in Canada. Interviews were conducted in English and French, and data was collected between 2016 and 2017 (therefore participants no longer hold these roles). Data was coded and analyzed iteratively, focusing on identifying underlying values, and exploring how these values shape admissions practices and considerations for validity. Eight different intersecting values were identified. Of these, four were shared across all participants: critically questioning the process and tools, aiming for equity, striving for better, and embracing the challenges of change. The expression of these values depended on different contextual variables (e.g., geographic location, access to expertise, resource availability), and values shaped how admissions systems were built, enacted, and monitored for quality. Ultimately, values shaped: (1) admissions practices resulting in different candidates being offered admission, and (2) how arguments supporting score interpretation are built (i.e., validity). This study documents various values that influence admissions processes, practices, and quality monitoring. The values that shape what is assessed, how it is assessed, and how fair and defensible practices are conceptualized have significant impact, ultimately determining who is selected. These values-whether implicit or explicit-result in intended and unintended consequences in selection processes. However, these values are rarely explicitly examined and questioned, leaving it uncertain as to which consequences are the intended outcomes of deliberately chosen values, and which are unintended consequences of implicitly held values of admissions systems and their actors.
医学院校招生是一项有争议且高风险的选拔活动。有许多评估方法可用于支持选拔;但是,如何做出构建、监控和调整招生系统的决策?是什么塑造了支撑选拔决策的过程和实践?我们探讨了这些决策在加拿大几所医学院校中的制定方式,以及价值观如何塑造招生系统的创建、监控和调整。使用现象学(一种适合研究变异性的定性方法),作者分析了对来自加拿大 10 个不同本科医学教育项目的 10 名现任或前任招生负责人的访谈。访谈以英语和法语进行,并于 2016 年至 2017 年期间(因此参与者不再担任这些职务)收集数据。数据经过迭代编码和分析,重点是确定潜在的价值观,并探讨这些价值观如何塑造招生实践和对有效性的考虑。确定了八个不同的交叉价值观。其中,有四个价值观被所有参与者共同认可:批判性地质疑过程和工具、追求公平、努力提高和接受变革的挑战。这些价值观的表达取决于不同的情境变量(例如,地理位置、获得专业知识的机会、资源可用性),并且价值观塑造了招生系统的构建、实施和质量监控方式。最终,价值观塑造了:(1)导致不同候选人获得录取的招生实践,以及(2)如何构建支持分数解释的论点(即有效性)。本研究记录了影响招生流程、实践和质量监控的各种价值观。塑造评估内容、评估方式以及公平性和可辩护性实践概念的价值观具有重大影响,最终决定了谁被选中。这些价值观——无论是隐含的还是明确的——在选拔过程中会产生有意和无意的后果。然而,这些价值观很少被明确审查和质疑,因此不确定哪些后果是经过深思熟虑选择的价值观的预期结果,哪些是招生系统及其参与者隐含价值观的意外后果。