Standard setting in Australian medical schools

Abstract Background Standard setting of assessment is critical in quality assurance of medical programs. The aims of this study were to identify and compare the impact of methods used to establish the passing standard by the 13 medical schools who participated in the 2014 Australian Medical Schools...

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Main Authors: Helena Ward, Neville Chiavaroli, James Fraser, Kylie Mansfield, Darren Starmer, Laura Surmon, Martin Veysey, Deborah O’Mara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-04-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1190-6
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spelling doaj-4675ddc52bd1426dbbabe48cbb78d95e2020-11-25T03:23:09ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202018-04-011811910.1186/s12909-018-1190-6Standard setting in Australian medical schoolsHelena Ward0Neville Chiavaroli1James Fraser2Kylie Mansfield3Darren Starmer4Laura Surmon5Martin Veysey6Deborah O’Mara7Adelaide Medical School, The University of AdelaideDepartment of Medical Education, Melbourne Medical School, The University of MelbourneSchool of Medicine, Griffith UniversitySchool of Medicine, University of WollongongSchool of Medicine, The University of Notre DameSchool of Medicine, Western Sydney UniversityHull York Medical SchoolEducation Office, Sydney Medical School, The University of SydneyAbstract Background Standard setting of assessment is critical in quality assurance of medical programs. The aims of this study were to identify and compare the impact of methods used to establish the passing standard by the 13 medical schools who participated in the 2014 Australian Medical Schools Assessment Collaboration (AMSAC). Methods A survey was conducted to identify the standard setting procedures used by participating schools. Schools standard setting data was collated for the 49 multiple choice items used for benchmarking by AMSAC in 2014. Analyses were conducted for nine schools by their method of standard setting and key characteristics of 28 panel members from four schools. Results Substantial differences were identified between AMSAC schools that participated in the study, in both the standard setting methods and how particular techniques were implemented. The correlation between the item standard settings data by school ranged from − 0.116 to 0.632. A trend was identified for panel members to underestimate the difficulty level of hard items and overestimate the difficulty level of easy items for all methods. The median derived cut-score standard across schools was 55% for the 49 benchmarking questions. Although, no significant differences were found according to panel member standard setting experience or clinicians versus scientists, panel members with a high curriculum engagement generally had significantly lower expectations of borderline candidates (p = 0.044). Conclusion This study used a robust assessment framework to demonstrate that several standard setting techniques are used by Australian medical schools, which in some cases use different techniques for different stages of their program. The implementation of the most common method, the Modified Angoff standard setting approach was found to vary markedly. The method of standard setting used had an impact on the distribution of expected minimally competent student performance by item and overall, with the passing standard varying by up to 10%. This difference can be attributed to the method of standard setting because the ASMSAC items have been shown over time to have consistent performance levels reflecting similar cohort ability. There is a need for more consistency in the method of standard setting used by medical schools in Australia.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1190-6Standard settingAssessmentPreclinical teachingMedical education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helena Ward
Neville Chiavaroli
James Fraser
Kylie Mansfield
Darren Starmer
Laura Surmon
Martin Veysey
Deborah O’Mara
spellingShingle Helena Ward
Neville Chiavaroli
James Fraser
Kylie Mansfield
Darren Starmer
Laura Surmon
Martin Veysey
Deborah O’Mara
Standard setting in Australian medical schools
BMC Medical Education
Standard setting
Assessment
Preclinical teaching
Medical education
author_facet Helena Ward
Neville Chiavaroli
James Fraser
Kylie Mansfield
Darren Starmer
Laura Surmon
Martin Veysey
Deborah O’Mara
author_sort Helena Ward
title Standard setting in Australian medical schools
title_short Standard setting in Australian medical schools
title_full Standard setting in Australian medical schools
title_fullStr Standard setting in Australian medical schools
title_full_unstemmed Standard setting in Australian medical schools
title_sort standard setting in australian medical schools
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Abstract Background Standard setting of assessment is critical in quality assurance of medical programs. The aims of this study were to identify and compare the impact of methods used to establish the passing standard by the 13 medical schools who participated in the 2014 Australian Medical Schools Assessment Collaboration (AMSAC). Methods A survey was conducted to identify the standard setting procedures used by participating schools. Schools standard setting data was collated for the 49 multiple choice items used for benchmarking by AMSAC in 2014. Analyses were conducted for nine schools by their method of standard setting and key characteristics of 28 panel members from four schools. Results Substantial differences were identified between AMSAC schools that participated in the study, in both the standard setting methods and how particular techniques were implemented. The correlation between the item standard settings data by school ranged from − 0.116 to 0.632. A trend was identified for panel members to underestimate the difficulty level of hard items and overestimate the difficulty level of easy items for all methods. The median derived cut-score standard across schools was 55% for the 49 benchmarking questions. Although, no significant differences were found according to panel member standard setting experience or clinicians versus scientists, panel members with a high curriculum engagement generally had significantly lower expectations of borderline candidates (p = 0.044). Conclusion This study used a robust assessment framework to demonstrate that several standard setting techniques are used by Australian medical schools, which in some cases use different techniques for different stages of their program. The implementation of the most common method, the Modified Angoff standard setting approach was found to vary markedly. The method of standard setting used had an impact on the distribution of expected minimally competent student performance by item and overall, with the passing standard varying by up to 10%. This difference can be attributed to the method of standard setting because the ASMSAC items have been shown over time to have consistent performance levels reflecting similar cohort ability. There is a need for more consistency in the method of standard setting used by medical schools in Australia.
topic Standard setting
Assessment
Preclinical teaching
Medical education
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1190-6
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