Abstract

BackgroundReliable interpretation of the Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice (APP) tool is necessary for consistent assessment of physiotherapy students in the clinical setting. However, since the APP was implemented, no study has reassessed how consistently a student performance is evaluated against the threshold standards. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to determine the consistency among physiotherapy educators when assessing a student performance using the APP tool.MethodsPhysiotherapists (n = 153) from Australia with a minimum 3 years clinical experience and who had supervised a physiotherapy student within the past 12-months were recruited. Three levels of performance (not adequate, adequate, good/excellent) were scripted and filmed across outpatient musculoskeletal, neurorehabilitation, cardiorespiratory and inpatient musculoskeletal. In the initial phase of the study, scripts were written by academic staff and reviewed by an expert panel (n = 8) to ensure face and content validity as well as clinical relevance prior to filming. In the second phase of the study, pilot testing of the vignettes was performed by clinical academics (n = 16) from Australian universities to confirm the validity of each vignette. In the final phase, study participants reviewed one randomly allocated vignette, in their nominated clinical area and rated the student performance including a rationale for their decision. Participants were blinded to the performance level. Percentage agreement between participants was calculated for each vignette with an a priori percentage agreement of 75% considered acceptable.ResultsConsensus among educators across all areas was observed when assessing a performance at either the ‘not adequate’ (97%) or the ‘good/excellent’ level (89%). When assessing a student at the ‘adequate’ level, consensus reduced to 43%. Similarly, consensus amongst the ‘not adequate’ and ‘good/excellent’ ranged from 83 to 100% across each clinical area; while agreement was between 33 and 46% for the ‘adequate’ level. Percent agreement between clinical educators was 89% when differentiating ‘not adequate’ from ‘adequate’ or better.ConclusionConsistency is achievable for ‘not adequate’ and ‘good/excellent’ performances, although, variability exists at an adequate level. Consistency remained when differentiating an ‘adequate’ or better from a ‘not adequate’ performance.

Highlights

  • Reliable interpretation of the Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice (APP) tool is necessary for consistent assessment of physiotherapy students in the clinical setting

  • Based on the study findings, it appears that physiotherapy educators demonstrate consistency in assessing a student at the ‘not adequate’ and ‘good/excellent’ level regardless of clinical area

  • When adjusted for identifying the ‘not adequate’ performance from the ‘adequate’ or better, educators again demonstrated consistency. This suggests that physiotherapy educators with a minimum of 3 years clinical experience are consistent at ensuring physiotherapy graduates are achieving at least the minimum entry standard during clinical placements based on the APP global rating scale (GRS)

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Summary

Introduction

Reliable interpretation of the Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice (APP) tool is necessary for consistent assessment of physiotherapy students in the clinical setting. Since the APP was implemented, no study has reassessed how consistently a student performance is evaluated against the threshold standards. The primary aim of this study was to determine the consistency among physiotherapy educators when assessing a student performance using the APP tool. Within health professional programs such as physiotherapy, direct assessment of authentic clinical practice at the ‘does’ level is required to certify fitness to practice. Given the high stakes of these workplace based performance assessments, it is essential that the assessment practices are valid, reliable and fair to all students [3, 4]

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