Title: Selection of Students for Health Professional Courses
1Selection of Studentsfor Health Professional
Courses
- David Powis
- Faculty of Health
- The University of Newcastle
- New South Wales, Australia
2The Problem
3Why arent they choosing the right candidates for
medicine?
- LB Lockhart (1981)
- The Lancet 1 546-548
4Medical Student Selection in the UK
- For some time there has been dissatisfaction
over the way medical students are believed to be
selected, and much inconclusive discussion
continues - The Lancet, 24 September 1984, p1190
5Selection of Medical Students - A Burning Question
- Although mounting criticism and concern are
expressed for the manner in which our medical
students are selected, the status quo continues
6Selection of Medical Students - A Burning Question
- Although mounting criticism and concern are
expressed for the manner in which our medical
students are selected, the status quo continues - EF Campbell et al. The Medical Journal of
Australia 1 (1974) 785-788
7What was the status quo?
- In Australia and the UK
- students chosen predominantly on academic
criteria - likewise in N. America graduate students
8Medical Student Selection in Australia
- nobody has any other solution which is strong
enough to combat..the high enough mark method
- J Best. The Medical Journal of Australia, 150
(1989) 158-161
9Basis of high academic threshold
- some argue that A-level grades or HSC mark
accurately reflect academic ability and
academic potential - ease of administration!
10A survey at Adelaide University
- JE Marley I Carman, Medical Education
- 200 medical students, Years 1 2, 1995
- all had been selected on academic marks alone
11A survey at Adelaide University
- 52 stated a personal motivation to be a doctor
- but only half indicated that they wanted to work
with people - 48 admitted personal motivation was not
responsible for them being at medical school - 22 parental pressure
- 22 dont waste marks
- 4 no idea
12The Goal
- to match applicants with the course of study in
order to maximise the chance of successful
completion and to produce a good graduate
13What should we be doing?
- Selecting individuals who
- have a good idea what your course is about
- are motivated to do your course for the right
reasons - are likely to be academically successful in your
course - have the qualities necessary to be a good
professional as well as a good student
14To be selected
- applicants should have appropriate
- motivation
- academic qualifications
- cognitive skills
- non-cognitive qualities
- positive attitudes
- communication skills
- written and verbal
15Step 1
- Determine an explicit Admissions Policy, and
advertise this to applicants - Referring to both the Curriculum and the
Mission statement of the school list the specific
criteria that successful applicants need to meet
in order to achieve congruence
16Admissions Policy
- Influenced by a variety of factors
17Pressures that shape the Admissions Policy
Admissions Committee
Admissions Policy
18Admissions Committee
from within the university
Admissions Policy
19Admissions Committee
from within the university
from the profession
Admissions Policy
20Admissions Committee
from within the university
from the profession
from the community
Admissions Policy
21Admissions Committee
from within the university
from the profession
from the community
political pressures
Admissions Policy
22Pressures within the University
- compatibility with the curriculum
- examination success
- academic distinction
- social contribution to University community
- (professional competence)
23Pressure from the Profession
- registration and legal certification
- maintenance of professional standards
- need to fill various specialties
24Political Pressures
- widening access
- anti-discrimination legislation
- requirements of the healthcare system
- financial control
- resource efficiency
25Pressures from the community
- Good (caring) practitioners
- (Community at large)
- technically competent practitioners
- (Patients)
- Practitioners of particular gender or ethnic
background - preference to local candidates
26The Admissions Policy should state explicitly
- the level and breadth of prior knowledge and the
range of cognitive skills and non-cognitive
qualities essential or desirable - for success in the course
- congruence between admissions policy and
curriculum - in a good professional
27Step 2
- Specify what level of prior academic achievement
is necessary - Determine appropriate subject pre-requisites
28What prior academic scores are required?
- does a higher score really imply a better
student? - or (ultimately) a more competent professional?
29Biomedical Science, UDSC (1995,1996,1997 entry)
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A level points at entry
30Biomedical Science, UDSC (1995,1996,1997 entry)
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degree classification
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31Biomedical Science, UDSC (1995,1996,1997 entry)
12
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degree classification
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20
30
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A level points at entry
32Curriculum Congruence
- Does the course require more than an ability to
memorise and recall facts? - Do the academic demands of the course require
other cognitive skills?
33Cognitive skills
- literacy
- numeracy
- comprehension
- processing speed and efficiency
- application of knowledge/intellectual ability
- reasoning skills, logic, problem solving,
critical skills
34What is the relationship between academic
achievement and cognitive ability (i.e.,
intelligence)?
35Cognitive Skills Score v TER
r 0.1934
36Cognitive Skills Score v TER
r 0.1934
BBC
AAA
37Cognitive Skills Score v TER
r 0.1934
n 1737
BBC
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38In Australian medical school applicants.
39In Scottish medical school applicants.
40Conclusion
- secondary school matriculation examination
results dont necessarily reflect cognitive
ability
41Intelligence
- The intelligent person is far more easily
- spotted from his (sic) response to
- new problems
- not his knowledge of old solutions
- Paul Kline (1991)
- Intelligence The PsychometricView
- Routledge
42Which prior studied subjects are required?
- Do your students need Chemistry, Physics and
Mathematics, for example?
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45From HG Gough J Med Ed 53 (1978) 291-300
46High achievers
Science GPA
- less adept in
- areas requiring
- personal skills
- less articulate
- narrower interests
- less adaptable
Preference for Science Subjects
Composite Index of Scientific Aptitude
From HG Gough J Med Ed 53 (1978) 291-300
47What else is required?
- for success in the course
- to make a good graduate
- to make a professional practitioner
48Step 3
- specify what other personal qualities are to be
sought, and classify each as essential or
desirable - attitudes
- non-cognitive qualities
49Survey of professionals
- in 1998 Newcastle (NSW) academic staff members
and clinical colleagues were asked to rate the
importance in medical students of 39 qualities - 190 completed questionnaires were returned
50Seven top ranked attributes
- high personal integrity (95)
- critical thinker (91)
- good communication skills (91)
- highly motivated (88)
- evident spirit of enquiry (87)
- caring ethos / good empathy (85)
- racially tolerant (80)
51Another survey of professionals
- Clinical staff asked to list undesirable personal
characteristics they had observed in medical
students
52Common descriptors of ethically inappropriate
medical student behaviours and attitudes
- arrogant
- power-seeking
- inflexible
- defensive
- dishonest
- patronising
- brash
- egocentric
- isolated
- insensitive
- self-centred
- uncaring
- indifferent
- selfish
- antisocial
- amoral
- devious
- prejudiced
- flippant
- rude
- aggressive
- condescending
- rigid attitudes
- judgemental
53Step 4
- now we know what we are seeking, determine how it
can be done objectively, fairly, efficiently and
effectively
54Digression - the Macnamara fallacy(Charles
Handy, quoted in BMJ, 325 (2002) S193)
- Measure whatever can be easily measured
- (OK as far as it goes)
- Disregard that which cant easily be measured, or
give it an arbitrary quantitative value - (artificial and misleading)
- Presume that what cant be measured easily isnt
important - (this is blindness!)
- Say that what cant easily be measured really
doesnt exist - (this is suicide!!)
55Tools for Selection
- choose the most appropriate technique to obtain
the information required
56Guiding Principles
- use methods that allow direct observation/measurem
ent of the quality in question - use only objective, valid and reliable measuring
tools
57Sources of Informationfor making selection
decisions
- academic record
- report from School Principal
- referees reports, testimonials
- self-reports
- written psychometric tests
- structured task
- observed group activity
- personal interview
58Sources of Informationfor making selection
decisions
- academic record
- report from School Principal
- referees reports, testimonials
- self-reports
- written psychometric tests
- structured task
- observed group activity
- personal interview
59Assessing Cognitive Skills
Factual Knowledge
Literacy
Numeracy
Decision Making
Logical Reasoning
Problem Solving
Critical Reasoning
Comprehension
Processing speed
60Assessing Cognitive Skills
Academic Record
Principals Report
Factual Knowledge
Literacy
Numeracy
Decision Making
Logical Reasoning
Problem Solving
Critical Reasoning
Comprehension
Processing speed
61Assessing Cognitive Skills
Academic Record
Principals Report
?
Factual Knowledge
?
Literacy
probably
probably
Numeracy
probably
possibly
Decision Making
not usually
possibly
Logical Reasoning
not usually
possibly
Problem Solving
not usually
possibly
Critical Reasoning
not usually
possibly
Comprehension
not usually
possibly
possibly
Processing speed
not usually
62Assessing Cognitive Skills
Academic Record
Principals Report
Psychometric Tests
?
?
Factual Knowledge
?
Literacy
probably
probably
?
Numeracy
probably
possibly
?
Decision Making
not usually
possibly
?
?
Logical Reasoning
not usually
possibly
?
Problem Solving
not usually
possibly
?
Critical Reasoning
not usually
possibly
?
Comprehension
not usually
possibly
possibly
?
Processing speed
not usually
63Cognitive skills
- academic record
- school principals report
- written psychometric tests
64Non-cognitive qualities
- autobiographical data
- school principals report
- written psychometric tests
- observed group exercise
- structured task
- interview
65Communication Skills
- autobiographical data
- observed group exercise
- structured task
- interview
66Psychometric tests
- objective
- efficient (in terms of numbers of applicants
processed) - can be made both reliable and valid
- can measure skills and attributes difficult to
assess by other methods - expensive (to set up, maintain and administer)
67psychometric tests in the context of medical
student performance
- Many reports in the literature, e.g.,
- HG Gough WB Hall (1964)
- Prediction of performance in medical school from
the California Psychological Inventory - J Appl Psychol 48 218-226
- R Murden et al. (1978)
- Academic and personal predictors of clinical
success in medical school - J Med Ed 53 711-719
68psychometric tests in the context of medical
student selection
- MCAT (N. America)
- Medical Colleges Admissions Test
- GAMSAT (Australia)
- Graduate Australian Medical Schools Admissions
Test - UMAT (Australia)
- Undergraduate Medicine and Health Sciences
Admissions Test - a development from the tests used by the
University of Newcastle
69Observed group exercise
- logistically demanding to set up
- labour intensive to run
- useful for observing actual behaviour and a range
of skills that are necessary in a course - scoring system must be predetermined and
objective
70Observed group exercise
- communication skills
- leadership qualities
- debating skills
- teamwork skills
- problem-solving abilities
- problem formulation
- hypothesis generation
- tolerance
71Structured task
- can be used to observe and measure exactly how a
candidate does something - rather than how they say they would do it!
- Communication skill and style
- de-technicalising or paraphrasing complex prose
- interpreting a report
- dealing with an ethical dilemma
- hand-eye co-ordination
72Interview
- labour intensive
- only useful if objective
- only valid if structured
- only reliable if interviewers trained for the
task
73Interview
- should only be used as a tool for data gathering
- best used only for qualities that can be assessed
directly - verbal communication skills
- verbal comprehension
- decision making
- critical thinking/reasoning process
74Interview
- acceptable for purposes of evaluating probable
future behaviour if care taken investigating past
experiences and actual behaviour
75Selection models
- Add the scores, and then rank
- e.g., academic score test score interview
- Philosophically flawed
- Good score in one can compensate for poor score
in another - If weightings applied how is the amount
determined? - Statistically flawed
- Adding apples to pears
76Selection models
- Sequential model
- Should be criterion referenced, and
non-compensatory
77A possible selection sequence
- coarse filters at the outset
- subject pre-requisites
- threshold academic mark
- psychometric tests in MCQ format for quantifying
desirable cognitive and non-cognitive skills
objectively and efficiently in potentially large
numbers of candidates
78A possible selection sequence
- labour intensive procedures in the later stages
when candidate numbers have been reduced - interview
- structured tasks
- observed group exercise
79A possible selection sequence
- set academic threshold
- subject pre-requisites
- mark
- psychometric tests for quantifying desirable
cognitive and non-cognitive skills - structured interview for identifying verbal
communication skills, attitudes, motivation,
decision making
80Selection decision
- An administrative decision that accommodates the
data collected - preferably directed by a predetermined algorithm
- objective data should not be diluted by
subjective judgements
81applicants
entrants
82Pre-determined criteria
first filter e.g., academic threshold
applicants
entrants
83Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
first filter e.g., academic threshold
third filter e.g., interview
second filter e.g., test
applicants
entrants
84Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
first filter e.g., academic threshold
third filter e.g., interview
second filter e.g., test
applicants
entrants
85Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined algorithm
applicants
entrants
86Things we do wrong...
- Use the interview as a selection tool
- apply selection criteria that havent been
defined - apply exclusion criteria that havent been
specified - Subscribe to the Macnamara fallacy!
87Useful References
- Medical Student Selection a tentative attempt to
establish a code of practice - Anderson et al. BMJ 280 (1980) 1216-1218
- Selecting Medical Students a rational approach
- J Lazarus JP deV van Niekirk Medical Teacher
8 (1986) 343-357 - Selecting Medical Students
- DA Powis Medical Education 28 (1994) 443-469
- Choosing Tomorrows Doctors
- Isobel Allen, Philip Brown and Patricia Hughes
(1997) - Selecting our Doctors
- Report of BMA conference, December 1999
88The Newcastle procedure
- academic threshold
- subject pre-requisites (none)
- mark (top 10, or top 15)
- psychometric tests for quantifying desirable
cognitive and non-cognitive skills - structured interview for identifying verbal
communication skills, attitudes, motivation,
decision making
89To be selected
- applicants must have appropriate
- motivation
- academic qualifications
- cognitive skills
- non-cognitive qualities
- positive attitudes
- communication skills
- written and verbal
90Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined criteria
Pre-determined algorithm
applicants
entrants
2300
1800
300
60
Year 2001 admission