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Short and long multiple-choice question stems in a primary care oriented undergraduate medical curriculum

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 03:40 authored by Richard HaysRichard Hays, Coventry, P, Wilcock, D, Hartley, K
In this study Year 1 students in a new, primary care-oriented undergraduate course were offered a practice multiple-choice question (MCQ) examination with two question item formats - with and without brief primary care-based clinical scenarios - with the same correct answers. Data collected included: completion time; number correct; and responses to a questionnaire seeking student perception on the time required, clarity, ease of choice, and curriculum relevance. The mean scores for both groups of students were no different, although about 20% more time was required to complete clinical scenario stem question sets. Students perceived that the clinical scenarios had little effect on choosing the correct answer, improved question clarity and increased relevance to the curriculum. This study suggests that it is possible to assess junior medical students studying integrated undergraduate medical curricula by using MCQs containing brief clinical scenario stems, so long as either item numbers or timing are adjusted. This item format better reflects the learning process and may better prepare students for later professional practice assessment. GPs have an important role in developing assessment items that reflect early clinical integration.

History

Publication title

Education for Primary Care

Volume

20

Pagination

173-177

ISSN

1473-9879

Department/School

Tasmanian School of Medicine

Publisher

Radcliffe Publishing Ltd.

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Assessment, development and evaluation of curriculum

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