Korean J Med Educ.  2018 Sep;30(3):219-227. 10.3946/kjme.2018.96.

Comparison of competency level of medical, non-medical students and its relevance for admission policy

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Medical Education, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. nara@yuhs.ac

Abstract

PURPOSE
This study aims to analyze the competency of medical students and its relevance for admission policy in medical schools.
METHODS
This study examined the competency of 63 medical students from the 6-year program (group A) and 41 medical students from the 4-year program (group B) at Yonsei University using the Korea Collegiate Essential Skills Assessment (KCESA). The competency of groups A and B were compared to the corresponding competency levels of non-medical students (groups C and D). Group C is freshmen and D is senior students in universities. The KCESA is computer-based ability test composed of 228 items. The competency of participants were calculated on a T-scores (mean=50, standard deviation=10) based on KCESA norm-references. We conducted independent t-test for group comparisons of competency levels.
RESULTS
There are no differences in competency levels between groups A and B. Compared with the non-medical students (group B), the medical students showed a significantly stronger ability to use resources, information-technology and higher-order thinking. In the comparison between groups B and D, medical students showed lower levels of self-management, interpersonal, and cooperative skills.
CONCLUSION
The cognitive ability serves as an important indicator for the decision on admission to a basic medical education program. The efforts should be made to foster the competency that medical students have been found to lack, such as self-management, interpersonal, and cooperative skills. The admission committee should assess the cognitive and non-cognitive competency of applicants in a balanced manner.

Keyword

Competency-based education; Medical education; School admission criteria; Republic of Korea

MeSH Terms

Competency-Based Education
Education, Medical
Humans
Korea
Republic of Korea
School Admission Criteria
Schools, Medical
Self Care
Students, Medical
Thinking
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