The School Effect on the Reliability of Clinical Performance Examination in Medical Schools.
- Author:
Mi Kyoung YIM
1
;
Gue Min LEE
Author Information
1. National Health Personnel Licensing Examination Board, Seoul, Korea. mkyim@kuksiwon.or.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Clinical performance examination;
Generalizability theory;
Reliability
- MeSH:
Humans;
Research Design;
Schools, Medical;
Statistics as Topic
- From:Korean Journal of Medical Education
2010;22(3):215-223
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to test the reliability of the clinical performance examination (CPX) using Generalizability theory (G-theory). Through G-theory, the effects of not only students and tasks but also the school will be analyzed as primary sources of error, which can affect the interpretation of the reliability of the CPX. METHODS: One thousand three hundred nineteen students from 16 medical schools that participated in the Seoul-Gyeonggi CPX Consortium 2008 were enrolled. In our research design, we suppose that student is nested within school and crossed with task. Data analysis was conducted with urGenova. RESULTS: According to our analysis, the percentage of error variance was 6.2% for school, 14.9% for student nested within school, 14.4% for task, and 3% for interaction between school and task. An effect of school on students was observed, but the interaction between task and school was insignificant. When student is nested within school, the universe score decreased and the g-coefficient was less than the g-coefficient of the p x t (p: studentm, t: task) design. CONCLUSION: The results show that generalizability theory is useful in detecting various error components in the CPX. Using the generalizability theory to improve the technical quality of performance assessments provides us with greater information compared with traditional test theories.