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Examiner training: A study of examiners making sense of norm-referenced feedback

Authors :
David T. Croke
Peter A. Brennan
Jeremy Groves
Jim Crossley
Source :
Medical Teacher. 41:787-794
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2019.

Abstract

Purpose: Examiner training has an inconsistent impact on subsequent performance. To understand this variation, we explored how examiners think about changing the way they assess. Method: We provided comparative data to 17 experienced examiners about their assessments, captured their sense-making processes using a modified think-aloud protocol, and identified patterns by inductive thematic analysis. Results: We observed five sense-making processes: (1) testing personal relevance (2) interpretation (3) attribution (4) considering the need for change, and (5) considering the nature of change. Three observed meta-themes describe the manner of examiners' thinking: Guarded curiosity - where examiners expressed curiosity over how their judgments compared with others', but they also expressed guardedness about the relevance of the comparisons; Dysfunctional assimilation - where examiners' interpretation and attribution exhibited cognitive anchoring, personalization, and affective bias; Moderated conservatism - where examiners expressed openness to change, but also loyalty to their judgment-framing values and aphorisms. Conclusions: Our examiners engaged in complex processes as they considered changing their assessments. The 'stabilising' mechanisms some used resembled learners assimilating educational feedback. If these are typical examiner responses, they may well explain the variable impact of examiner training, and have significant implications for the pursuit of meaningful and defensible judgment-based assessment.

Details

ISSN :
1466187X and 0142159X
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical Teacher
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9ea2aae6d0730109427d290b5c2fc230
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/0142159x.2019.1579902