CLINICAL-EXPERIENCE, PERFORMANCE IN FINAL EXAMINATIONS, AND LEARNING STYLE IN MEDICAL-STUDENTS - PROSPECTIVE-STUDY

Citation
Ic. Mcmanus et al., CLINICAL-EXPERIENCE, PERFORMANCE IN FINAL EXAMINATIONS, AND LEARNING STYLE IN MEDICAL-STUDENTS - PROSPECTIVE-STUDY, BMJ. British medical journal, 316(7128), 1998, pp. 345-350
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, General & Internal
ISSN journal
09598138
Volume
316
Issue
7128
Year of publication
1998
Pages
345 - 350
Database
ISI
SICI code
0959-8138(1998)316:7128<345:CPIFEA>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Objective: To assess whether the clinical experience of undergraduate medical students relates to their performance in final examinations an d whether learning styles relate either to final examination performan ce or to the extent of clinical experience. Design: Prospective, longi tudinal study of two cohorts of medical students assessed by questionn aire at time of application to medical school and by questionnaire and university examination at the end of their final clinical year. Subje cts: Two cohorts of students who had applied to St Mary's Hospital Med ical School during 1980 (n = 1478) and 1985 (n = 2399) for admission i n 1981 and 1986 respectively. Students in these cohorts who entered an y medical school in the United Kingdom were followed up in their final clinical year in 1986-7 and 1991-2. Main outcome measures: Students' clinical experience of a range of acute medical conditions, surgical o perations, and practical procedures as assessed by questionnaire in th e final year, and final examination results for the students taking th eir examinations at the University of London. Results: Success in the final examination was not related to a student's clinical experiences. The amount of knowledge gained from clinical experience was, however, related to strategic and deep learning styles both in the final year and also at the time of application, five or six years earlier. Grades in A level examinations did not relate either to study habits or to c linical experience. Success in the final examination was also related to a strategic or deep learning style in the final year (although not at time of entry to medical school). Conclusions: The lack of correlat ion between examination performance and clinical experience calls into question the validity of final examinations. How much knowledge is ga ined from clinical experience as a student is able to be predicted fro m measures of study habits made at the time of application to medical school, some six years earlier, although not from results of A level e xaminations. Medical schools wishing to select students who will gain the most knowledge from clinical experience cannot use the results of A level examinations alone but could assess a student's learning style .