Abstract

BackgroundMedical students facing high-stakes exams want study resources that have a direct relationship with their assessments. At the same time, they need to develop the skills to think analytically about complex clinical problems. Multiple-choice questions (MCQs) are widely used in medical education and can promote surface learning strategies, but creating MCQs requires both in-depth content knowledge and sophisticated analytical thinking. Therefore, we piloted an MCQ-writing task in which students developed MCQs for their peers to answer.MethodsStudents in a fourth-year anatomic pathology course (N = 106) were required to write MCQs using the PeerWise platform. Students created two MCQs for each of four topic areas and the MCQs were answered, rated and commented on by their classmates. Questions were rated for cognitive complexity and a paper-based survey was administered to investigate whether this activity was acceptable, feasible, and whether it promoted desirable learning behaviours in students.ResultsStudents were able to create cognitively challenging MCQs: 313/421 (74%) of the MCQs which we rated required the respondent to apply or analyse pathology knowledge. However, students who responded to the end-of-course questionnaire (N = 62) saw the task as having little educational value. Students found PeerWise easy to use, and indicated that they read widely to prepare questions and monitored the quality of their questions. They did not, however, engage in extensive peer feedback via PeerWise.ConclusionsOur study showed that the MCQ writing task was feasible and engaged students in self-evaluation and synthesising information from a range of sources, but it was not well accepted and did not strongly engage students in peer-learning. Although students were able to create complex MCQs, they found some aspects of the writing process burdensome and tended not to trust the quality of each other’s MCQs. Because of the evidence this task did promote deep learning, it is worth continuing this mode of teaching if the task can be made more acceptable to students.

Highlights

  • Medical students facing high-stakes exams want study resources that have a direct relationship with their assessments

  • Evaluation We investigated whether the Multiple-choice questions (MCQs)-writing task was acceptable to students, whether they could feasibly complete it and whether it engaged students in desirable learning behaviours

  • 24% (15/62) of students agreed they perceived high educational value of the MCQ writing process, and 22% (14/62) of students agreed that MCQ writing improved their learning experience

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Summary

Introduction

Medical students facing high-stakes exams want study resources that have a direct relationship with their assessments. In order to write MCQs, students need to use higher-order thinking skills [4]. This challenging task requires deep understanding of the course content and thoughtful answering strategies [5]. In a question-generating process as a learning exercise students are required to Grainger et al BMC Medical Education (2018) 18:201 process, organize, integrate and reconstruct knowledge, which improves meta-cognitive development and encourages higher-order thinking [6,7,8,9,10]. Requiring students to write MCQs may develop these desirable problem-solving and collaborative skills while engaging students in a task that has immediate and clear relevance to their high-stakes MCQ assessments

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