Eugene Marie Carl, Montes-Rivera Jose, Adair White Bobbie Ann
From the Neurology Department (M.C.E., J.M.-R.), UConn Health/UConn School of Medicine, Farmington, CT; and MGH Institute of Health Professions (B.A.A.W.), Boston, MA.
Neurol Educ. 2023 Nov 29;2(4):e200104. doi: 10.1212/NE9.0000000000200104. eCollection 2023 Dec 22.
End-of-rotation assessments (ERAs) completed by clinical faculty supervising medical students are an important component of medical student performance during clinical rotations. The quality and quantity of the formative and/or summative comments provided by faculty to students on ERAs vary. The goal of this study was to better understand the experiences, limitations, and barriers that may affect faculty at a single institution and its affiliated sites when completing this assessment.
A qualitative study design was used, with phenomenology as the qualitative design of inquiry. Clinical faculty at 3 student rotation sites who worked with students and had filled out the electronic assessment form were asked to participate. A virtual platform was used to conduct semistructured interviews. Transcripts of the recorded interviews were reviewed and analyzed to identify emerging and recurrent themes.
Eleven faculty members (8 men and 3 women) were interviewed. Most participants felt that the time spent with medical students was limited, compromising the assessment process-particularly at sites where they are assigned to inpatient service for 1 week at a time. Longer intervals between end-of-rotation and completing the assessment limited details in the narrative components. Some participants were hesitant to assign students lower scores and to write negative comments in their assessments. Although constructive comments could be provided verbally, they were not always stipulated as comments on the assessment form. Many were concerned that written comments could negatively affect a student's future career. The participants recognized the importance and benefit of writing comments specific to the individual student. Many opined that providing prewritten examples of suggested comments would result in a generic assessment.
The experiences, limitations, and barriers that affected faculty members' ability to assess medical students at the end of the neurology rotation included limited time spent with students, a longer time taken to fill out the assessment form, and reluctance to write negative comments that could potentially affect a student's career. Specific comments about individual students were deemed important. Shorter and more frequent assessments, modifications to faculty schedules, faculty development initiatives, and adoption of a growth mindset are potential ways to overcome barriers faced by faculty.
由指导医学生的临床教员完成的轮转结束评估(ERA)是医学生临床轮转期间表现的重要组成部分。教员在ERA上向学生提供的形成性和/或总结性评语的质量和数量各不相同。本研究的目的是更好地了解在完成这项评估时可能影响单一机构及其附属地点教员的经历、限制因素和障碍。
采用定性研究设计,以现象学作为定性探究设计。邀请了在3个学生轮转地点与学生合作并填写了电子评估表的临床教员参与。使用虚拟平台进行半结构化访谈。对访谈记录进行审查和分析,以确定新出现的和反复出现的主题。
采访了11名教员(8名男性和3名女性)。大多数参与者认为与医学生相处的时间有限,这影响了评估过程,尤其是在他们每次被分配到住院服务1周的地点。轮转结束与完成评估之间的间隔时间较长,限制了叙述部分的细节。一些参与者在评估中不愿给学生打低分或撰写负面评语。虽然可以口头提供建设性评语,但这些评语并不总是被规定为评估表上的评语。许多人担心书面评语会对学生未来的职业产生负面影响。参与者认识到撰写针对个别学生的评语的重要性和益处。许多人认为提供预先编写的建议评语示例会导致评估缺乏针对性。
影响教员在神经科轮转结束时评估医学生能力的经历