Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States

Purpose Summative evaluation forms assessing a student’s clinical performance are often completed by a faculty preceptor at the end of a clinical training experience. At our institution, despite the use of an electronic system, timeliness of completion has been suboptimal, potentially limiting our a...

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Main Authors: Conrad Krawiec, Vonn Walter, Abigail Kate Myers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Health Insurance Licensing Examination Institute 2019-10-01
Series:Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-16-32.pdf
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spelling doaj-56df85100fba464baba3895c39c2dd192021-01-19T23:42:41ZengKorea Health Insurance Licensing Examination InstituteJournal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions1975-59372019-10-011610.3352/jeehp.2019.16.32339Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United StatesConrad Krawiec0Vonn Walter1Abigail Kate Myers2Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Penn State Children’s Hospital, Hershey, PA, USADepartment of Public Health Sciences, Pennsylvania State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USAGeneral Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Penn State Children’s Hospital, Hershey, PA, USAPurpose Summative evaluation forms assessing a student’s clinical performance are often completed by a faculty preceptor at the end of a clinical training experience. At our institution, despite the use of an electronic system, timeliness of completion has been suboptimal, potentially limiting our ability to monitor students’ progress. The aim of the present study was to determine whether a student-directed approach to summative evaluation form collection at the end of a pediatrics clerkship would enhance timeliness of completion for third-year medical students. Methods This was a pre- and post-intervention educational quality improvement project focused on 156 (82 pre-intervention, 74 post-intervention) third-year medical students at Penn State College of Medicine completing their 4-week pediatric clerkship. Utilizing REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) informatics support, student-directed evaluation form solicitation was encouraged. The Wilcoxon rank-sum test was applied to compare the pre-intervention (May 1, 2017 to March 2, 2018) and post-intervention (April 2, 2018 to December 21, 2018) percentages of forms completed before the rotation midpoint. Results In total, 740 evaluation forms were submitted during the pre-intervention phase and 517 during the post-intervention phase. The percentage of forms completed before the rotation midpoint increased after implementing student-directed solicitation (9.6% vs. 39.7%, P<0.05). Conclusion Our clerkship relies on subjective summative evaluations to track students’ progress, deploy improvement strategies, and determine criteria for advancement; however, our preceptors struggled with timely submission. Allowing students to direct the solicitation of evaluation forms enhanced the timeliness of completion and should be considered in clerkships facing similar challenges.http://www.jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-16-32.pdfeducational measurementeducational technologymedical educationreminder systemsunited states
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Conrad Krawiec
Vonn Walter
Abigail Kate Myers
spellingShingle Conrad Krawiec
Vonn Walter
Abigail Kate Myers
Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions
educational measurement
educational technology
medical education
reminder systems
united states
author_facet Conrad Krawiec
Vonn Walter
Abigail Kate Myers
author_sort Conrad Krawiec
title Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States
title_short Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States
title_full Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States
title_fullStr Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the United States
title_sort effect of student-directed solicitation of evaluation forms on the timeliness of completion by preceptors in the united states
publisher Korea Health Insurance Licensing Examination Institute
series Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions
issn 1975-5937
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Purpose Summative evaluation forms assessing a student’s clinical performance are often completed by a faculty preceptor at the end of a clinical training experience. At our institution, despite the use of an electronic system, timeliness of completion has been suboptimal, potentially limiting our ability to monitor students’ progress. The aim of the present study was to determine whether a student-directed approach to summative evaluation form collection at the end of a pediatrics clerkship would enhance timeliness of completion for third-year medical students. Methods This was a pre- and post-intervention educational quality improvement project focused on 156 (82 pre-intervention, 74 post-intervention) third-year medical students at Penn State College of Medicine completing their 4-week pediatric clerkship. Utilizing REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) informatics support, student-directed evaluation form solicitation was encouraged. The Wilcoxon rank-sum test was applied to compare the pre-intervention (May 1, 2017 to March 2, 2018) and post-intervention (April 2, 2018 to December 21, 2018) percentages of forms completed before the rotation midpoint. Results In total, 740 evaluation forms were submitted during the pre-intervention phase and 517 during the post-intervention phase. The percentage of forms completed before the rotation midpoint increased after implementing student-directed solicitation (9.6% vs. 39.7%, P<0.05). Conclusion Our clerkship relies on subjective summative evaluations to track students’ progress, deploy improvement strategies, and determine criteria for advancement; however, our preceptors struggled with timely submission. Allowing students to direct the solicitation of evaluation forms enhanced the timeliness of completion and should be considered in clerkships facing similar challenges.
topic educational measurement
educational technology
medical education
reminder systems
united states
url http://www.jeehp.org/upload/jeehp-16-32.pdf
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