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Midclerkship feedback in the surgical clerkship: the "Professionalism, Reporting, Interpreting, Managing, Educating, and Procedural Skills" application utilizing learner self-assessment

Hochberg, Mark; Berman, Russell; Ogilvie, Jennifer; Yingling, Sandra; Lee, Sabrina; Pusic, Martin; Pachter, H Leon
BACKGROUND: The Liaison Committee on Medical Education requires midclerkship formative (low stakes) feedback to students regarding their clinical skills. Student self-assessment is not commonly incorporated into this evaluation. We sought to determine the feasibility of collecting and comparing student self-assessment with that of their preceptors using an iPad application. These student self-ratings and preceptor ratings are jointly created and reviewed as part of a face-to-face midclerkship feedback session. METHODS: Using our iPad application for Professionalism, Reporting, Interpreting, Managing, Educating, and Procedural Skills ("PRIMES"), students answer 6 questions based on their self-assessment of performance at midclerkship. Each skill is rated on a 3-point scale (beginning, competent, and strong) with specific behavioral anchors. The faculty preceptors then complete the same PRIMES form during the face-to-face meeting. The application displays a comparison of the 2 sets of ratings, facilitating a discussion to determine individualized learning objectives for the second half of the clerkship. RESULTS: A total of 209 student-preceptor pairs completed PRIMES ratings. On average, student-preceptor ratings were in agreement for 38% of the time. Agreement between students and preceptors was highest for Professionalism (70%) and lowest for Procedural Skills (22%). On average, 60% of student-preceptor ratings did not agree. Students rated themselves lower than preceptors 52% of the time, while only 8% of students rated themselves higher than their preceptors' ratings (this difference is significant at the P value <.05 level). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the value of using the PRIMES framework to incorporate surgery clerkship students' self-assessment into formative face-to-face midclerkship feedback sessions with their preceptors with the goal to improve performance during the second half of the clerkship.
PMID: 27756451
ISSN: 1879-1883
CID: 2718782

MEASURING PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY FORMATION EARLY IN MEDICAL SCHOOL: VALIDITY EVIDENCE. [Meeting Abstract]

Kalet, Adina; Song, Hyuksoon; Buckvar-Keltz, Lynn; Monson, Verna; Hubbard, Steven; Crowe, Ruth; Rivera, Rafael; Yingling, Sandra
ISI:000440259000365
ISSN: 0884-8734
CID: 5327732

Toward full student engagement in pre-clerkship training

Crowe, Ruth; Yingling, Sandra
PMID: 26494074
ISSN: 1365-2923
CID: 1830632

Remediation of Learners Who Perform Poorly on an OSCE

Chapter by: Kalet, Adina; Tewksbury, Linda; Ogilvie, Jennifer; Buckvar-Keltz, Lynn; Porter, Barbara; Yingling, Sandra
in: Objective structured clinical examinations : 10 steps to planning and implementing OSCEs and other standardized patient exercises by Zabar, Sondra; Kachur, Elizabeth Krajic; Kalet, Adina; Hanley, Kathleen [Eds]
New York ; London : Springer, 2013
pp. 35-38
ISBN: 9781461437499
CID: 1019882