Differences in Trainee Evaluations of Faculty by Rater and Ratee Gender

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Abstract

Purpose To examine whether gender differences exist in medical trainees' (residents' and fellows') evaluations of faculty at a number of clinical departments. Method The authors conducted a single-institution (University of Minnesota Medical School) retrospective cohort analysis of 5,071 trainee evaluations of 447 faculty (for which trainee and faculty gender information was available) completed between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2022. The authors developed and employed a 17-item measure of clinical teaching effectiveness, with 4 dimensions: overall teaching effectiveness, role modeling, facilitating knowledge acquisition, and teaching procedures. Using both between- and within-subject samples, they conducted analyses to examine gender differences among the trainees making ratings (rater effects), the faculty receiving ratings (ratee effects), and whether faculty ratings differed by trainee gender (interaction effects). Results There was a statistically significant rater effect for the overall teaching effectiveness and facilitating knowledge acquisition dimensions (B = -0.28 and -0.14, 95% CI: [-0.35, -0.21] and [-0.20, -0.09], respectively, P

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Cullen, M. J., Zhou, Y., Sackett, P. R., Mustapha, T., Hane, J., & Culican, S. M. (2023). Differences in Trainee Evaluations of Faculty by Rater and Ratee Gender. Academic Medicine, 98(10), 1196–1203. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000005260

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