J Educ Eval Health Prof.  2022;19(1):26. 10.3352/jeehp.2022.19.26.

Acceptability of the 8-case objective structured clinical examination of medical students in Korea using generalizability theory: a reliability study

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Dong-A University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea
  • 2Department of Medical Education, Dong-A University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea
  • 3Department of Medical Education and Neurology, Kosin University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea
  • 4Department of Neurology, Busan Paik Hospital, College of Medicine, Inje University, Busan, Korea
  • 5Department of Emergency Medicine, Pusan National University School of Medicine, Busan, Korea

Abstract

Purpose
This study investigated whether the reliability was acceptable when the number of cases in the objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) decreased from 12 to 8 using generalizability theory (GT).
Methods
This psychometric study analyzed the OSCE data of 439 fourth-year medical students conducted in the Busan and Gyeongnam areas of South Korea from July 12 to 15, 2021. The generalizability study (G-study) considered 3 facets—students (p), cases (c), and items (i)—and designed the analysis as p×(i:c) due to items being nested in a case. The acceptable generalizability (G) coefficient was set to 0.70. The G-study and decision study (D-study) were performed using G String IV ver. 6.3.8 (Papawork, Hamilton, ON, Canada).
Results
All G coefficients except for July 14 (0.69) were above 0.70. The major sources of variance components (VCs) were items nested in cases (i:c), from 51.34% to 57.70%, and residual error (pi:c), from 39.55% to 43.26%. The proportion of VCs in cases was negligible, ranging from 0% to 2.03%.
Conclusion
The case numbers decreased in the 2021 Busan and Gyeongnam OSCE. However, the reliability was acceptable. In the D-study, reliability was maintained at 0.70 or higher if there were more than 21 items/case in 8 cases and more than 18 items/case in 9 cases. However, according to the G-study, increasing the number of items nested in cases rather than the number of cases could further improve reliability. The consortium needs to maintain a case bank with various items to implement a reliable blueprinting combination for the OSCE.

Keyword

Medical students; Educational measurement; Reproducibility of Results; Republic of Korea; Psychometrics
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