Identifying Meaningful Patterns of Internal Medicine Clerkship Grading Distributions: Application of Data Science Techniques Across 135 US Medical Schools

被引:2
|
作者
Burk-Rafel, Jesse [1 ,2 ,6 ]
Reinstein, Ilan [3 ]
Park, Yoon Soo [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] NYU Langone Hlth, Div Hosp Med, New York, NY USA
[2] NYU Grossman Sch Med, Inst Innovat Med Educ, Precis & Translat Med Educ Lab, New York, NY USA
[3] NYU Grossman Sch Med, Inst Innovat Med Educ, New York, NY USA
[4] Harvard Med Sch, Boston, MA USA
[5] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Hlth profess Educ Res, Boston, MA USA
[6] NYU Grossman Sch Med, Inst Innovat Med Educ, 550 1st Ave,Ste MSB-G107, New York, NY 10016 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1097/ACM.0000000000005044
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
ProblemResidency program directors use clerkship grades for high-stakes selection decisions despite substantial variability in grading systems and distributions. The authors apply clustering techniques from data science to identify groups of schools for which grading distributions were statistically similar in the internal medicine clerkship. ApproachGrading systems (e.g., honors/pass/fail) and distributions (i.e., percent of students in each grade tier) were tabulated for the internal medicine clerkship at U.S. MD-granting medical schools by manually reviewing Medical Student Performance Evaluations (MSPEs) in the 2019 and 2020 residency application cycles. Grading distributions were analyzed using k-means cluster analysis, with the optimal number of clusters selected using model fit indices. OutcomesAmong the 145 medical schools with available MSPE data, 64 distinct grading systems were reported. Among the 135 schools reporting a grading distribution, the median percent of students receiving the highest and lowest tier grade was 32% (range: 2%-66%) and 2% (range: 0%-91%), respectively. Four clusters was the most optimal solution (eta(2) = 0.8): cluster 1 (45% [highest grade tier]-45% [middle tier]-10% [lowest tier], n = 64 [47%] schools), cluster 2 (25%-30%-45%, n = 40 [30%] schools), cluster 3 (20%-75%-5%, n = 25 [19%] schools), and cluster 4 (15%-25%-25%-25%-10%, n = 6 [4%] schools). The findings suggest internal medicine clerkship grading systems may be more comparable across institutions than previously thought. Next StepsThe authors will prospectively review reported clerkship grading approaches across additional specialties and are conducting a mixed-methods analysis, incorporating a sequential explanatory model, to interview stakeholder groups on the use of the patterns identified.
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页码:337 / 341
页数:5
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