Do students' self-reflections of performance align with their graded performance in objective structured clinical exams?
Author | Lim, Angelina S. |
Author | Krishnan, Sunanthiny |
Author | Tan, George |
Author | Stewart, Derek |
Author | Al-Diery, Tarik |
Available date | 2024-09-23T06:45:20Z |
Publication Date | 2024 |
Publication Name | Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning |
Resource | Scopus |
ISSN | 18771297 |
Abstract | Introduction: Self-awareness of strengths and weaknesses through self-reflection are important for life-long learning and development. The aim of this study was to assess the alignment in third-year undergraduate pharmacy students' self-reflections of their objective structured clinical exam (OSCE) performance to their actual OSCE scores and explore the most common aspects students reflected on as markers of perceived performance. Methods: Students completed a three-station OSCE and a written self-reflection about their performance. These reflections were coded using a latent pattern content analysis, with categories defined as "doing well (? 50% on exam)" and "not doing well (< 50% on exam)" and compared to their actual OSCE exam scores, to determine the degree of alignment. Results: Two hundred sixty-nine students completed the OSCE and reflection. Students had a low degree of alignment between their self-reflections and actual OSCE performance. Low alignment was overwhelmingly prevalent and significant in high-achieving students with OSCE scores of ?90%. Most common aspects students reflected on as indicators of performance were finishing on time and communicating effectively. High-achieving students reflected on aspects such as empathy, systematic questioning, and patient teach-back as aspects of their performance. Conclusions: Student reflections on exam performance do not align with their actual performance, particularly amongst the high-achieving students. High-achieving students were more aware of the different aspects that affected their performance. To ensure that high-achieving students are aware of their strengths, educators should provide more targeted feedback mechanisms and positive reassurances to help these students become more confident in their decision-making skills. |
Sponsor | Open access funding provided by the Qatar National Library. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Subject | Competency development Metacognition Objective structured clinical exam Self-awareness Self-reflection |
Type | Article |
Issue Number | 8 |
Volume Number | 16 |
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Pharmacy Research [1314 items ]