Script concordance test acceptability and utility for assessing medical students’ clinical reasoning: a user’s survey and an institutional prospective evaluation of students’ scores

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Abstract

Script Concordance Testing (SCT) is a method for clinical reasoning assessment in the field of health-care training. Our aim was to assess SCT acceptability and utility with a survey and an institutional prospective evaluation of students’ scores.With a user’s online survey, we collected the opinions and satisfaction data of all graduate students and teachers involved in the SCT setting. We performed a prospective analysis comparing the scores obtained with SCT to those obtained with the national standard evaluation modality. General opinions about SCT were mostly negative. Students tended to express more negative opinions and perceptions. There was a lower proportion of negative responses in the teachers’ satisfaction survey. The proportion of neutral responses was higher for teachers. There was a higher proportion of positive positions towards all questions among teachers. PCC scores significantly increased each year, but SCT scores increased only between the first and second tests. PCC scores were found significantly higher than SCT scores for the second and third tests. Medical students’ and teachers’ global opinion on SCT was negative. At the beginning SCT scores were found quite similar to PCC scores. There was a higher progression for PCC scores through time.

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APA

Kün-Darbois, J. D., Annweiler, C., Lerolle, N., & Lebdai, S. (2022). Script concordance test acceptability and utility for assessing medical students’ clinical reasoning: a user’s survey and an institutional prospective evaluation of students’ scores. BMC Medical Education, 22(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-022-03339-1

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