Summative assessment of 5 th year medical students clinical reasoning by script concordance test: Requirements and challenges

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Abstract

Background: The Script Concordance Test (SCT) has not been reported in summative assessment of students across the multiple domains of a medical curriculum. We report the steps used to build a test for summative assessment in a medical curriculum. Methods: A 51 case, 158-question, multidisciplinary paper was constructed to assess clinical reasoning in 5th-year. 1016 experts in each of 7 discipline-based reference panels answered questions on-line. A multidisciplinary group considered reference panel data and data from a volunteer group of 6th Years, who sat the same test, to determine the passing score for the 5th Years. Results: The mean (SD) scores were 63.6 (7.6) and 68.6 (4.8) for the 6th Year (n = 23, alpha = 0.78) and and 5th Year (n = 132, alpha =0.62) groups (p<0.05), respectively. The passing score was set at 4 SD from the expert mean. Four students failed. Conclusions: The SCT may be a useful method to assess clinical reasoning in medical students in multidisciplinary summative assessments. Substantial investment in training of faculty and students and in the development of questions is required. © 2012 Takla et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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APA

Duggan, P., & Charlin, B. (2012). Summative assessment of 5 th year medical students clinical reasoning by script concordance test: Requirements and challenges. BMC Medical Education, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6920-12-29

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