Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation

Abstract Background Digital assessment is becoming more and more popular within medical education. To analyse the dimensions of this digital trend, we investigated how exam questions (items) are created and designed for use in digital medical assessments in Germany. Thus, we want to explore whether...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saskia Egarter, Anna Mutschler, Ara Tekian, John Norcini, Konstantin Brass
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-03-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02014-7
id doaj-b7419a46aef744c1b3d395cc1886d16f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b7419a46aef744c1b3d395cc1886d16f2020-11-25T03:50:57ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202020-03-012011810.1186/s12909-020-02014-7Medical assessment in the age of digitalisationSaskia Egarter0Anna Mutschler1Ara Tekian2John Norcini3Konstantin Brass4Institute for Communication and Assessment ResearchInstitute for Communication and Assessment ResearchDepartment of Medical Education, University of IllinoisFoundation for the Advancement of International Medical Education ResearchInstitute for Communication and Assessment ResearchAbstract Background Digital assessment is becoming more and more popular within medical education. To analyse the dimensions of this digital trend, we investigated how exam questions (items) are created and designed for use in digital medical assessments in Germany. Thus, we want to explore whether different types of media are used for item creation and if a digital trend in medical assessment can be observed. Methods In a cross-sectional descriptive study, we examined data of 30 German medical faculties stored within a common assessment platform. More precise, 23,008 exams which contained 847,137 items were analysed concerning the exam type (paper-, computer- or tablet-based) and their respective media content (picture, video and/or audio). Out of these, 5252 electronic exams with 12,214 questions were evaluated. The media types per individual question were quantified. Results The amount of computer- and tablet-based exams were rapidly increasing from 2012 until 2018. Computer- and tablet-based written exams showed with 45 and 66% a higher percentage of exams containing media in comparison to paper-based exams (33%). Analysis on the level of individual questions showed that 90.8% of questions had one single picture. The remaining questions contained either more than one picture (2.9%), video (2.7%), audio (0.2%) or 3.3% of questions had picture as well as video added. The main question types used for items with one picture are TypeA (54%) and Long_Menu (31%). In contrast, questions with video content contain only 11% TypeA questions, whereas Long_Menu is represented by 66%. Nearly all questions containing both picture and video are Long_Menu questions. Conclusions It can be stated that digital assessment formats are indeed on the raise. Moreover, our data indicates that electronic assessments formats have easier options to embed media items and thus show a higher frequency of media addition. We even identified the usage of different media types in the same question and this innovative item design could be a useful feature for the creation of medical assessments. Moreover, the choice of media type seems to depend on the respective question type.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02014-7Digital assessmentMedical educationItemManagementSystemElectronic exams, Item designAssessment Alliance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saskia Egarter
Anna Mutschler
Ara Tekian
John Norcini
Konstantin Brass
spellingShingle Saskia Egarter
Anna Mutschler
Ara Tekian
John Norcini
Konstantin Brass
Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
BMC Medical Education
Digital assessment
Medical education
ItemManagementSystem
Electronic exams, Item design
Assessment Alliance
author_facet Saskia Egarter
Anna Mutschler
Ara Tekian
John Norcini
Konstantin Brass
author_sort Saskia Egarter
title Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
title_short Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
title_full Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
title_fullStr Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
title_full_unstemmed Medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
title_sort medical assessment in the age of digitalisation
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract Background Digital assessment is becoming more and more popular within medical education. To analyse the dimensions of this digital trend, we investigated how exam questions (items) are created and designed for use in digital medical assessments in Germany. Thus, we want to explore whether different types of media are used for item creation and if a digital trend in medical assessment can be observed. Methods In a cross-sectional descriptive study, we examined data of 30 German medical faculties stored within a common assessment platform. More precise, 23,008 exams which contained 847,137 items were analysed concerning the exam type (paper-, computer- or tablet-based) and their respective media content (picture, video and/or audio). Out of these, 5252 electronic exams with 12,214 questions were evaluated. The media types per individual question were quantified. Results The amount of computer- and tablet-based exams were rapidly increasing from 2012 until 2018. Computer- and tablet-based written exams showed with 45 and 66% a higher percentage of exams containing media in comparison to paper-based exams (33%). Analysis on the level of individual questions showed that 90.8% of questions had one single picture. The remaining questions contained either more than one picture (2.9%), video (2.7%), audio (0.2%) or 3.3% of questions had picture as well as video added. The main question types used for items with one picture are TypeA (54%) and Long_Menu (31%). In contrast, questions with video content contain only 11% TypeA questions, whereas Long_Menu is represented by 66%. Nearly all questions containing both picture and video are Long_Menu questions. Conclusions It can be stated that digital assessment formats are indeed on the raise. Moreover, our data indicates that electronic assessments formats have easier options to embed media items and thus show a higher frequency of media addition. We even identified the usage of different media types in the same question and this innovative item design could be a useful feature for the creation of medical assessments. Moreover, the choice of media type seems to depend on the respective question type.
topic Digital assessment
Medical education
ItemManagementSystem
Electronic exams, Item design
Assessment Alliance
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02014-7
work_keys_str_mv AT saskiaegarter medicalassessmentintheageofdigitalisation
AT annamutschler medicalassessmentintheageofdigitalisation
AT aratekian medicalassessmentintheageofdigitalisation
AT johnnorcini medicalassessmentintheageofdigitalisation
AT konstantinbrass medicalassessmentintheageofdigitalisation
_version_ 1724489689031770112