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Megan Cornwell; Sebastian Charles Keith Shaw – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Recent statistics found the prevalence of dyslexia in UK medical schools to be 7%, sitting below the national prevalence of 10%. The factors contributing to this discrepancy are currently unknown, but may result from an interplay of individual and systemic barriers to entering medicine. This collaborative, analytic autoethnography aimed to use the…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Clinical Diagnosis, Identification, College Applicants
Klusmann, Dietrich; Knorr, Mirjana; Hampe, Wolfgang – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2023
The phenomenon of first impression is well researched in social psychology, but less so in the study of OSCEs and the multiple mini interview (MMI). To explore its bearing on the MMI method we included a rating of first impression in the MMI for student selection executed 2012 at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany (196…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Students, Admission Criteria, Interviews
Lawrence Grierson; Mathew Mercuri; Asiana Elma; Meera Mahmud; Dorothy Bakker; Neil Johnston; Monica Aggarwal; Gina Agarwal – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
The maldistribution of family physicians challenges equitable primary care access in Canada. The "Theory of Social Attachment" suggests that preferential selection and distributed training interventions have potential in influencing physician disposition. However, evaluations of these approaches have focused predominantly on rural…
Descriptors: Physicians, Graduate Medical Education, Correlation, Medical Schools
Schreurs, Sanne; Cleutjens, Kitty; Collares, Carlos F.; Cleland, Jennifer; oude Egbrink, Mirjam G. A. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2020
Medical school selection is currently in the paradoxical situation in which selection tools may predict study outcomes, but which constructs are actually doing the predicting is unknown (the 'black box of selection'). Therefore, our research focused on those constructs, answering the question: do the internal structures of the tests in an…
Descriptors: Medical Schools, Selection Criteria, College Admission, Prediction
Griffin, Barbara; Auton, Jaime; Duvivier, Robbert; Shulruf, Boaz; Hu, Wendy – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2019
This study compared the profile of those who, after initial failure to be selected, choose to reapply to study medicine with those who did not reapply. It also evaluates the chance of a successful outcome for re-applicants. In 2013, 4007 applicants to undergraduate medical schools in the largest state in Australia were unsuccessful. Those who…
Descriptors: College Applicants, Undergraduate Study, Medical Schools, Probability
Gay, Steven E.; Santen, Sally A.; Mangrulkar, Rajesh S.; Sisson, Thomas H.; Ross, Paula T.; Zaidi, Nikki L. Bibler – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Medical school admissions interviews are used to assess applicants' nonacademic characteristics as advocated by the Association of American Medical Colleges' Advancing Holistic Review Initiative. The objective of this study is to determine whether academic metrics continue to significantly influence interviewers' scores in holistic processes by…
Descriptors: Medical Schools, College Entrance Examinations, Interviews, Grade Point Average
Bajwa, Nadia M.; Yudkowsky, Rachel; Belli, Dominique; Vu, Nu Viet; Park, Yoon Soo – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2017
The purpose of this study was to provide validity and feasibility evidence in measuring professionalism using the Professionalism Mini-Evaluation Exercise (P-MEX) scores as part of a residency admissions process. In 2012 and 2013, three standardized-patient-based P-MEX encounters were administered to applicants invited for an interview at the…
Descriptors: Graduate Medical Education, College Admission, College Entrance Examinations, Validity
Grabowski, Christina J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Diversity in the physician workforce lags behind the rapidly changing US population. Since the gateway to becoming a physician is medical school, diversity must be addressed in the admissions process. The Association of American Medical Colleges has implemented a Holistic Review Initiative aimed at assisting medical schools with broadening…
Descriptors: Physicians, Disproportionate Representation, Medical Schools, Student Diversity
Ballejos, Marlene P.; Oglesbee, Scott; Hettema, Jennifer; Sapien, Robert – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Web-based interviewing may be an effective element of a medical school's larger approach to promotion of holistic review, as recommended by the Association of American Medical Colleges, by facilitating the feasibility of including rural and community physicians in the interview process. Only 10% of medical schools offer videoconference interviews…
Descriptors: Interviews, Medical Schools, College Admission, Regression (Statistics)
De Leng, W. E.; Stegers-Jager, K. M.; Husbands, A.; Dowell, J. S.; Born, M. Ph.; Themmen, A. P. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2017
Situational Judgment Tests (SJTs) are increasingly used for medical school selection. Scoring an SJT is more complicated than scoring a knowledge test, because there are no objectively correct answers. The scoring method of an SJT may influence the construct and concurrent validity and the adverse impact with respect to non-traditional students.…
Descriptors: Situational Tests, Scoring, Test Reliability, Correlation
Schripsema, Nienke R.; van Trigt, Anke M.; Borleffs, Jan C. C.; Cohen-Schotanus, Janke – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2017
Situational Judgement Tests (SJTs) are increasingly implemented in medical school admissions. In this paper, we investigate the effects of vocational interests, previous academic experience, gender and age on SJT performance. The SJT was part of the selection process for the Bachelor's degree programme in Medicine at University of Groningen, the…
Descriptors: Situational Tests, Vocational Interests, Gender Differences, Age Differences
Cleland, Jennifer; Fahey Palma, Tania – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Despite repeated calls for change, the problem of widening access (WA) to medicine persists globally. One factor which may be operating to maintain social exclusion is the language used in representing WA applicants and students by the gatekeepers and representatives of medical schools, Admissions Deans. We therefore examined the institutional…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Social Isolation, Academic Aspiration, Access to Education
Dore, Kelly L.; Reiter, Harold I.; Kreuger, Sharyn; Norman, Geoffrey R. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2017
Typically, only a minority of applicants to health professional training are invited to interview. However, pre-interview measures of cognitive skills predict for national licensure scores (Gauer et al. in "Med Educ Online" 21 2016) and subsequently licensure scores predict for performance in practice (Tamblyn et al. in "JAMA"…
Descriptors: Interviews, Thinking Skills, Certification, Predictor Variables
Benbassat, Jochanan; Baumal, Reuben – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2007
Decisions about admissions to medical school are based on assessments of the applicants' cognitive achievements and non-cognitive traits. Admission criteria are expected to be fair, transparent, evidence-based and legally defensible. However, unlike cognitive criteria, which are highly reliable and moderately valid, the reliability and validity of…
Descriptors: Medical Students, College Applicants, Medical Schools, Validity
Can Self-Declared Personal Values Be Used to Identify Those with Family Medicine Career Aspirations?
Beach, Renee A.; Eva, Kevin W.; Reiter, Harold I. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2008
Purpose: Self-declaration of personal values has been suggested as a means of identifying students with greater predilection for future primary care careers. While statistically significant differences have been demonstrated, absolute differences between those interested in primary care and those interested in specialist careers tend to be small.…
Descriptors: Careers, Medical Students, Medical Schools, Family Practice (Medicine)
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