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Evaluating Psychiatric Clinical Clerks With a Mini-Objective Structured Clinical Examination
Brian Hodges; Jodi Lofchy
Academic Psychiatry 1997;21:219-225.
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The authors would like to thank Glenn Regehr, Ph.D., for statistical support and Richard Tiberius, Ph.D., for help in clarifying the research agenda.
Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada
© 1997 Academic Psychiatry.
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Abstract
Although objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs) are well-accepted performance-based assessments with good reliability, psychiatric educators have been slow to adopt this evaluation method, opting for oral exams that often have inferior psychometric properties. A 4-station " mini-OSCE" was developed and used to test 42 clinical clerks in psychiatry. The examination mean score and standard deviation were 74% and 8.08, respectively, while individual scores ranged from 56% to 86%. Interstation reliability was 0.61. Student and faculty satisfaction was high. A " mini-OSCE" for psychiatric clinical clerks confers the benefits of acceptable reliability and a high degree of acceptance without incurring the high costs usually associated with OSCE evaluation.Abstract Teaser
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