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      International consensus statement on the assessment of interprofessional learning outcomes

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          Most cited references49

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          The assessment of clinical skills/competence/performance.

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            Assessing professional competence: from methods to programmes.

            We use a utility model to illustrate that, firstly, selecting an assessment method involves context-dependent compromises, and secondly, that assessment is not a measurement problem but an instructional design problem, comprising educational, implementation and resource aspects. In the model, assessment characteristics are differently weighted depending on the purpose and context of the assessment. Of the characteristics in the model, we focus on reliability, validity and educational impact and argue that they are not inherent qualities of any instrument. Reliability depends not on structuring or standardisation but on sampling. Key issues concerning validity are authenticity and integration of competencies. Assessment in medical education addresses complex competencies and thus requires quantitative and qualitative information from different sources as well as professional judgement. Adequate sampling across judges, instruments and contexts can ensure both validity and reliability. Despite recognition that assessment drives learning, this relationship has been little researched, possibly because of its strong context dependence. When assessment should stimulate learning and requires adequate sampling, in authentic contexts, of the performance of complex competencies that cannot be broken down into simple parts, we need to make a shift from individual methods to an integral programme, intertwined with the education programme. Therefore, we need an instructional design perspective. Programmatic instructional design hinges on a careful description and motivation of choices, whose effectiveness should be measured against the intended outcomes. We should not evaluate individual methods, but provide evidence of the utility of the assessment programme as a whole.
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              Sustainable Assessment: Rethinking assessment for the learning society

              David Boud (2000)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Medical Teacher
                Medical Teacher
                Informa UK Limited
                0142-159X
                1466-187X
                April 05 2017
                April 03 2017
                December 26 2016
                April 03 2017
                : 39
                : 4
                : 347-359
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Medicine and Health Institute for the Development of Education and Scholarship (Health IDEAS), Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia;
                [2 ] School of Communication, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia;
                [3 ] Department of Medical Education, The University of Leicester, Leicester, UK;
                [4 ] Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden;
                [5 ] College of Pharmacy, University of Manitoba, Manitoba, Canada;
                [6 ] School of Human Health and Social Sciences, Central Queensland University, Rockhampton, Australia;
                [7 ] Centre for Medical Education (CenMED), National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
                Article
                10.1080/0142159X.2017.1270441
                28024436
                5855830c-d8e3-4206-b97d-39dad391b7c7
                © 2017
                History

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