Recent developments in assessing medical students
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Postgraduate Medical Journal
- Vol. 74 (867) , 18-24
- https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.74.867.18
Abstract
Summary: Most medical schools in the UK are revising their undergraduate courses in response to the recommendations published by the General Medical Council Education Committee in Tomorrow's doctors. However, achievement of the objectives of curricular change is attendant on revision of the assessment process. This paper reviews traditional and more recently developed methods for assessment of medical education in the light of the General Medical Council's recommendations which relate specifically to summative assessment of the core curriculum. The importance of reliability and validity is highlighted, and the case for criterion-referenced assessment is examined.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Reliability, Validity and Evaluation of the Objective Structured Clinical Examination in Podiatry (Chiropody)Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 1996
- Validity of three clinical performance assessments of internal medicine clerksAcademic Medicine, 1995
- Station-length requirements for reliable performance-based examination scoresAcademic Medicine, 1993
- Extended‐matching items: A practical alternative to free‐response questionsTeaching and Learning in Medicine, 1993
- Postgraduate medical education: Modifying trainees’ study approaches by changing the examinationTeaching and Learning in Medicine, 1992
- A comparison of short-answer and extended-matching question scores in an objective structured clinical examAcademic Medicine, 1991
- The validity of an essay test of clinical judgmentAcademic Medicine, 1990
- The effects of student personal characteristics on the evaluation of clinical performanceAcademic Medicine, 1980
- The reliability, validity, and taxonomic structure of the oral examinationAcademic Medicine, 1966
- An evaluation of oral examinationsAcademic Medicine, 1966