Abstract

BackgroundMedical schools must select students from a large pool of well-qualified applicants. A challenging issue set forward in the broader literature is that of which cognitive and (inter)personal qualities should be measured to predict diverse later performance. To address this gap, we designed a ‘backward chaining’ approach to selection, based on the competences of a ‘good doctor’. Our aim was to examine if this outcome-based selection procedure was predictive of study success in a medical bachelor program.MethodsWe designed a multi-tool selection procedure, blueprinted to the CanMEDS competency framework. The relationship between performance at selection and later study success across a three-year bachelor program was examined in three cohorts. Study results were compared between selection-positive and selection-negative (i.e. primarily rejected) students.ResultsSelection-positive students outperformed their selection-negative counterparts throughout the entire bachelor program on assessments measuring cognitive (e.g. written exams), (inter)personal and combined outcomes (i.e. OSCEs). Of the 30 outcome variables, selection-positive students scored significantly higher in 11 cases. Fifteen other, non-significant between-group differences were also in favor of the selection-positives. An overall comparison using a sign test indicated a significant difference between both groups (p < 0.001), despite equal pre-university GPAs.ConclusionsThe use of an outcome-based selection approach seems to address some of the predictive validity limitations of commonly-used selection tools. Selection-positive students significantly outperformed their selection-negative counterparts across a range of cognitive, (inter)personal, and mixed outcomes throughout the entire three-year bachelor in medicine.

Highlights

  • Medical schools must select students from a large pool of well-qualified applicants

  • Cognitive outcomes During the three-year bachelor program, the selection-positive students outperformed the selection-negative students on several cognitive assignments (Table 4)

  • All in all, we have shown that an outcome-based, holistic selection procedure is predictive of study success across a variety of cognitive,personal skills and mixed assessments

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Medical schools must select students from a large pool of well-qualified applicants. A challenging issue set forward in the broader literature is that of which cognitive and (inter)personal qualities should be measured to predict diverse later performance. To address this gap, we designed a ‘backward chaining’ approach to selection, based on the competences of a ‘good doctor’. As there are many more applicants than places, medical schools need to select students from a large pool of suitably qualified candidates. Developing a selection procedure that can fairly and accurately discriminate between applicants, based on academic as well as (inter)personal criteria, is challenging [10,11,12,13]. On a local level, the choice of selection tools is often rooted in tradition, resource

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call