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May 2006. IV National Medical Education Congress. Overview. Planning curriculum assessmentCompetence
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1. 03 May 2006 IV National Congress Medical Education A Practical Framework for Integrating Assessment, Learning & Curriculum Stewart Mennin, PhD
Professor Emeritus
University of New Mexico School of Medicine
2. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Overview Planning curriculum assessment
Competence & capability
Matrices Blueprinting
Assessment of Competencies
Preparing teachers & students for assessment
Governance & assessment
3. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Planning Assessment & Curriculum National & regional priority health needs
Capabilities & Competencies
Program (curriculum) evaluation
Student assessment
Objectives
Curriculum design & implementation
Continuous evaluation Curriculum is too important to be planned first.
Curriculum is too important to be planned first.
4. Fraser and Greenhalgh BMJ 2001 323 Oct 6
Traditional education and training largely focuses on enhancing competence (knowledge, skills, and attitudes)
In today's complex world, we must educate not merely for competence, but for capability (the ability to adapt to change, generate new knowledge, and continuously improve performance)
Capability is enhanced through feedback on performance, the challenge of unfamiliar contexts, and the use of nonlinear methods such as story telling and small group, problem based learning Education for capability must focus on process (supporting learners to construct their own learning goals, receive feedback, reflect, and consolidate) and avoid goals with rigid and prescriptive content
In complex adaptive systems the behaviour of the
individual agents, and therefore of the system of which
they are part, evolves in response to local feedback
about the impact of actions. Similarly, the basis of
transformational learning is the information that is fed
back to learners about the impact of their own actions
and those of others. An education process that
provides feedback about performance as it takes place
will enhance capability. O
Fraser and Greenhalgh BMJ 2001 323 Oct 6
Traditional education and training largely focuses on enhancing competence (knowledge, skills, and attitudes)
In today's complex world, we must educate not merely for competence, but for capability (the ability to adapt to change, generate new knowledge, and continuously improve performance)
Capability is enhanced through feedback on performance, the challenge of unfamiliar contexts, and the use of nonlinear methods such as story telling and small group, problem based learning Education for capability must focus on process (supporting learners to construct their own learning goals, receive feedback, reflect, and consolidate) and avoid goals with rigid and prescriptive content
In complex adaptive systems the behaviour of the
individual agents, and therefore of the system of which
they are part, evolves in response to local feedback
about the impact of actions. Similarly, the basis of
transformational learning is the information that is fed
back to learners about the impact of their own actions
and those of others. An education process that
provides feedback about performance as it takes place
will enhance capability. O
5. Competency Comparisons
7. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Competent Capable
9. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Integrated Curriculum
10. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Assessment Methods Selection
Supply
Performance
11. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Selection Methods MCQ
Matching
Extended Matching
True False
Multiple True False
Extended matching good for more complex and diagnostic questionsExtended matching good for more complex and diagnostic questions
12. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Supply Methods MEQ
Essay (long & short)
Practical
Short Answer
Written simulations
13. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Performance Assessment Procedures skills lab
OSCE (with skills stations)
Mini CEX
Long Case
Logs
Portfolio
Clinical Notes
Observation
Other
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17. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Competencies
Critical Reasoning & Integration of Knowledge
Patient Care
Communication Interpersonal Skills
Professional Attitudes, Values, Ethics & Self Assess
Systems & Community Based Practice
Permanent Education
Humanization
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19. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Phase I
20. Assessment As Learning How much
When
Who
Culture of formative assessment
How much
When
Who
Culture of formative assessment
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22. May 2006 Critical Integration of Knowledge Skills Problem Identification
Hypothesis Generation
Testing Hypothesis
Evaluating Data
Describing Mechanism
Research
Analysis
Communication
23. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress CRIK Skills Spidergram
24. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress CRIK Skills Spidergram
25. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress CRIK Skills Spidergram
26. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Assessment Item banks
Progress tests
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29. Exam Standardized patient stations Content Areas Interview PE Verbal feedback Write-up Comments
Phase ISummative 1One 15 minute, interviewHistory/Communication SkillsBasicInformedFacultySummative 2One 50 minute, complete H&P End of clinical skills courseBasicInformedFacultyxSummative 3Two 20 minute, focused H&PNeurology & Psychiatry examBasicInformed-Summative 4Five 20 minute, focused H&PCV & Pulm exams & other examBasicDecide-Summative 5One 50 minute, complete H&POne 20 minute, focused H&PReview complete exam Abdominal examPatient agendaDecide-xSummative 6Three 20 minute, focused H&PEndo/Renal/Repro Patient agendaDecide-Exam Standardized patient stations Content Areas Interview PE Verbal feedback Write-up Comments
Phase ISummative 1One 15 minute, interviewHistory/Communication SkillsBasicInformedFacultySummative 2One 50 minute, complete H&P End of clinical skills courseBasicInformedFacultyxSummative 3Two 20 minute, focused H&PNeurology & Psychiatry examBasicInformed-Summative 4Five 20 minute, focused H&PCV & Pulm exams & other examBasicDecide-Summative 5One 50 minute, complete H&POne 20 minute, focused H&PReview complete exam Abdominal examPatient agendaDecide-xSummative 6Three 20 minute, focused H&PEndo/Renal/Repro Patient agendaDecide-
30. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Tutorial Assessment: Criteria Observable behaviors
Change & growth
Helping behaviors
Learning contract
31. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Tutorial Assessment Knowledge base
Reasoning Process/Decision-Making
Communication
Assessment
Professional behavior
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33. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Phase II Subject examinations
OSCEs
34. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Phase II OB/Gynecology & Surgery
Pediatrics & Neurology Psychiatry
Internal Medicine & Family Medicine
35. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Clinical OSCEs 5 std pts stations 15 min each
three, 10 minute clinical write-ups in Calibrated Peer Review
two, 5 minute feedback sessions
Skills stations
Up to 14, eight minute skills stations A student will take this Phase II Performance Examination after completing 8 weeks of Internal Medicine and 8 weeks of Family medicine. This student, one of up to 23 students who have just completed the same rotations, will spend a morning seeing five standardized patients. Some of the patients will present with the sorts of clinical problems seen on the Internal Medicine and Family Medicine services and there will be patients with presentations that are not necessarily related to the rotations just completed. The student will write clinical notes after three of the patient evaluations. These notes will be entered into the Calibrated Peer Review computer program. A student will take this Phase II Performance Examination after completing 8 weeks of Internal Medicine and 8 weeks of Family medicine. This student, one of up to 23 students who have just completed the same rotations, will spend a morning seeing five standardized patients. Some of the patients will present with the sorts of clinical problems seen on the Internal Medicine and Family Medicine services and there will be patients with presentations that are not necessarily related to the rotations just completed. The student will write clinical notes after three of the patient evaluations. These notes will be entered into the Calibrated Peer Review computer program.
36. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Assessment Tools Checklists
Global ratings
Direct observation
Self assessment
Patient assessment
Supply Tests (MCQs)
37. Phase II: Blueprint Clinical Skills
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39. Phase II: Blueprint Clinical Skills
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41. Phase II: Blueprint Clinical Skills
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44. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Phase III: Clinical Skills Blueprint
45. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Standard Setting Modified Angoff Method
46. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Faculty Development in Assessment Test item writing
Formative feedback
Tutorial classroom clinic
Clinical assessment
Community based assessment
How people learn
Collaborative Teaching/learning
47. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Governance of Assessment Curriculum committee
Assessment review committee
Test review
Complaints
% new items
Accountability
Responsibility & authority
48. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress GOALS OF ASSESSMENT Enhance student learning
Guide faculty teaching efforts
Inform curricular development & revision
Fulfill responsibilities to students, institution & society
Contribute to research
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54. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Checklist/Global Rating Scale Comparison Checklists
Dichotomous scores (yes/no)
Relatively objective
Record rather than interpret
Station specific Rating Scales
Ordinal level measures (poor, good, excellent)
Relatively subjective
Station independent
55. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Global Rating Scale Scoring Methods Holistic
Overall measure of the performance
Analytic
Discrete dimensions separated
56. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Psychometric Comparison Global rating scales
Equally or more reliable across stations
Better construct validity
Better concurrent validity
57. May 2006 IV National Medical Education Congress Phase I