Comparability of Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs) and Written Tests for Assessing Medical School Students’ Competencies: A Scoping Review

Author:

Chang Oswin12ORCID,Holbrook Anne M.13,Lohit Simran12,Deng Jiawen12ORCID,Xu Janice12,Lee Munil4,Cheng Alan12

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Research, St Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton

2. Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University

3. Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, McMaster University

4. Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry,University of Western Ontario

Abstract

Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs) and written tests are commonly used to assess health professional students, but it remains unclear whether the additional human resources and expenses required for OSCEs, both in-person and online, are worthwhile for assessing competencies. This scoping review summarized literature identified by searching MEDLINE and EMBASE comparing 1) OSCEs and written tests and 2) in-person and online OSCEs, for assessing health professional trainees’ competencies. For Q1, 21 studies satisfied inclusion criteria. The most examined health profession was medical trainees (19, 90.5%), the comparison was most frequently OSCEs versus multiple-choice questions (MCQs) (18, 85.7%), and 18 (87.5%) examined the same competency domain. Most (77.5%) total score correlation coefficients between testing methods were weak ( r < 0.40). For Q2, 13 articles were included. In-person and online OSCEs were most used for medical trainees (9, 69.2%), checklists were the most prevalent evaluation scheme (7, 63.6%), and 14/17 overall score comparisons were not statistically significantly different. Generally low correlations exist between MCQ and OSCE scores, providing insufficient evidence as to whether OSCEs provide sufficient value to be worth their additional cost. Online OSCEs may be a viable alternative to in-person OSCEs for certain competencies where technical challenges can be met.

Funder

eCampusOntario

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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