Amy J. Lin, Rana A. Sedky, Betty Ben Dor, Lang Liang, Vivian Ha, Masako Nagasawa, Hiroe Ohyama
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
This observational study seeks to investigate student self-assessment skills in the United States, Egypt and Japan and to elucidate gender's impact on the self-assessment abilities of students from various cultural backgrounds.
Methods
Dental students from the United States (n = 350), Egypt (n = 335) and Japan (n = 301) completed various preclinical exercises. In the United States, students took preclinical practical exams in Class II amalgam preparation and restoration and Class III resin-composite preparation and restoration. Students in Egypt completed a Class II resin-composite preparation and restoration, and those in Japan prepared a full metal crown. Students self-assessed their work, faculty evaluated it, and a student-faculty (S-F) gap was calculated to understand self-assessment accuracy.
Results
Dental students in all three countries overestimated their performance (United States: 9.0% ± 7.9%; Egypt: 11.4% ± 9.9%; Japan: 2.9% ± 10.5%). Japanese dental students' self-assessment aligned most with the faculty graders. Students in the bottom quartile had significantly larger S-F gaps, while those in the top quartile had significantly smaller S-F gaps. Comparing male and female students, no significant difference in self-assessment scores was found, but there was a significant difference between genders in both faculty grades and S-F gaps in the Egyptian cohort.
Conclusion
Generally, students exhibited a consistent positive bias when self-assessing, with lower performing students being less accurate self-assessors. Self-assessment scores, when stratified by gender, did not significantly differ across the three countries. The results from our study underscore the importance of providing dental students with more consistent exposure to self-assessment practices throughout their education to increase the alignment of student expectations with faculty standards.
期刊介绍:
The Clinical Teacher has been designed with the active, practising clinician in mind. It aims to provide a digest of current research, practice and thinking in medical education presented in a readable, stimulating and practical style. The journal includes sections for reviews of the literature relating to clinical teaching bringing authoritative views on the latest thinking about modern teaching. There are also sections on specific teaching approaches, a digest of the latest research published in Medical Education and other teaching journals, reports of initiatives and advances in thinking and practical teaching from around the world, and expert community and discussion on challenging and controversial issues in today"s clinical education.