Datta Arijit, Tiwari Preeti, Goswami Dhara, Galoria Darshan, Verma Prashant
Professor, Forensic Medicine & Toxicology, Pramukhswami Medical College & Shree Krishna Hospital, Bhaikaka University, Karamsad, Gujarat, India.
Associate Professor, Community Medicine, Pramukhswami Medical College & Shree Krishna Hospital, Bhaikaka University, Karamsad, Gujarat, India.
J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2025 May 6;12:23821205251333194. doi: 10.1177/23821205251333194. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
Competency-Based Medical Education [CBME] is a framework for organizing medical education programs that emphasize ongoing assessments to monitor learners' progress. Implemented by the erstwhile Medical Council of India since the 2019-2020 academic year, this approach has influenced undergraduate summative assessments for Forensic Medicine. To assess the implementation, effectiveness, and alignment of the new curriculum with the goals of medical education, it is necessary to compare summative assessment question papers of undergraduate MBBS students from 2017 to 2020.
Researchers evaluated 32 summative examination question papers from eight medical universities across India, categorizing them into structured, non-structured, and action verb-based categories, according to Bloom's revised taxonomy's cognitive domain (remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, and create). They compared the data with the pre- and post-implementation benchmarks of the CBME curriculum of the National Medical Commission (NMC) from the 2019 batch MBBS program.
Most universities used unstructured questions and most marks were allocated to remember the levels of the cognitive domain. It was also found that marks were skewed towards specific topics in all universities, leading to inappropriate sampling and coverage of the competencies. The study also revealed that core areas, such as medical jurisprudence and toxicology, were inappropriately assessed.
The quality of the summative exam questions in Forensic Medicine and Toxicology subjects was poor and not aligned with the CBME, highlighting the need to assess the clarity and utility of blueprints currently employed by universities.
基于能力的医学教育[CBME]是一个组织医学教育项目的框架,强调通过持续评估来监测学习者的进展。自2019 - 2020学年起由印度前医学委员会实施,这种方法影响了法医学本科终结性评估。为了评估新课程的实施情况、有效性以及与医学教育目标的一致性,有必要比较2017年至2020年医学学士本科学生的终结性评估试卷。
研究人员评估了印度八所医学院校的32份终结性考试试卷,根据布鲁姆修订分类法的认知领域(记忆、理解、应用、分析、评价和创造)将其分为结构化、非结构化和基于行为动词的类别。他们将数据与2019级医学学士课程国家医学委员会(NMC)CBME课程实施前后的基准进行了比较。
大多数大学使用非结构化问题,且大部分分数分配给了认知领域的记忆层次。研究还发现,所有大学的分数都偏向特定主题,导致能力抽样和覆盖不恰当。该研究还表明,法医学和毒理学等核心领域的评估不恰当。
法医学和毒理学学科终结性考试问题的质量较差,与CBME不一致,这突出表明有必要评估大学目前使用的蓝图的清晰度和实用性。