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Can medical students accurately predict their learning?: A study comparing perceived and actual performance in neuroanatomy

Can medical students accurately predict their learning?: A study comparing perceived and actual performance in neuroanatomy
Can medical students accurately predict their learning?: A study comparing perceived and actual performance in neuroanatomy
It is important that clinicians are able to adequately assess their level of knowledge and competence in order to be safe practitioners of medicine. The medical literature contains numerous examples of poor self-assessment accuracy amongst medical students over a range of subjects however this ability in neuroanatomy has yet to be observed. Second year medical students attending neuroanatomy revision sessions at the University of Southampton and the competitors of the National Undergraduate Neuroanatomy Competition were asked to rate their level of knowledge in neuroanatomy. The responses from the former group were compared to performance on a ten item multiple choice question examination and the latter group were compared to their performance within the competition. In both cohorts, self-assessments of perceived level of knowledge correlated weakly to their performance in their respective objective knowledge assessments (r = 0.30 and r = 0.44). Within the NUNC, this correlation improved when students were instead asked to rate their performance on a specific examination within the competition (spotter, rS = 0.68; MCQ, rS = 0.58). Despite its inherent difficulty, medical student self-assessment accuracy in neuroanatomy is comparable to other subjects within the medical curriculum. Anat Sci Educ 9: 488-495. © 2016 American Association of Anatomists.
Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Learning, Male, Mentoring, Middle Aged, Neuroanatomy/education, Self-Assessment, Students, Medical/psychology
1935-9772
488-495
Hall, Samuel R
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Stephens, Jonny R
5153a144-bada-4002-a57e-0d8d1fba7102
Seaby, Eleanor G
f9011f96-bbc5-4364-970a-0f510489c539
Andrade, Matheus Gesteira
c57e58a4-31f1-406e-ba12-97e4ba39d334
Lowry, Andrew F
8679c624-35c6-4ad0-9da0-78feef53418b
Parton, Will J C
e639acf9-aea5-43c6-aede-6127144454db
Smith, Claire F
4faa1ea7-c0d1-4ea4-b38c-dfcf1ed60665
Border, Scott
67fce2e0-d2cd-43a2-a9cc-e6cb6fd28544
Hall, Samuel R
916bdd35-45bc-44b5-a72b-29c1a1ddcd7c
Stephens, Jonny R
5153a144-bada-4002-a57e-0d8d1fba7102
Seaby, Eleanor G
f9011f96-bbc5-4364-970a-0f510489c539
Andrade, Matheus Gesteira
c57e58a4-31f1-406e-ba12-97e4ba39d334
Lowry, Andrew F
8679c624-35c6-4ad0-9da0-78feef53418b
Parton, Will J C
e639acf9-aea5-43c6-aede-6127144454db
Smith, Claire F
4faa1ea7-c0d1-4ea4-b38c-dfcf1ed60665
Border, Scott
67fce2e0-d2cd-43a2-a9cc-e6cb6fd28544

Hall, Samuel R, Stephens, Jonny R, Seaby, Eleanor G, Andrade, Matheus Gesteira, Lowry, Andrew F, Parton, Will J C, Smith, Claire F and Border, Scott (2016) Can medical students accurately predict their learning?: A study comparing perceived and actual performance in neuroanatomy. Anatomical Sciences Education, 9 (5), 488-495. (doi:10.1002/ase.1601).

Record type: Article

Abstract

It is important that clinicians are able to adequately assess their level of knowledge and competence in order to be safe practitioners of medicine. The medical literature contains numerous examples of poor self-assessment accuracy amongst medical students over a range of subjects however this ability in neuroanatomy has yet to be observed. Second year medical students attending neuroanatomy revision sessions at the University of Southampton and the competitors of the National Undergraduate Neuroanatomy Competition were asked to rate their level of knowledge in neuroanatomy. The responses from the former group were compared to performance on a ten item multiple choice question examination and the latter group were compared to their performance within the competition. In both cohorts, self-assessments of perceived level of knowledge correlated weakly to their performance in their respective objective knowledge assessments (r = 0.30 and r = 0.44). Within the NUNC, this correlation improved when students were instead asked to rate their performance on a specific examination within the competition (spotter, rS = 0.68; MCQ, rS = 0.58). Despite its inherent difficulty, medical student self-assessment accuracy in neuroanatomy is comparable to other subjects within the medical curriculum. Anat Sci Educ 9: 488-495. © 2016 American Association of Anatomists.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 January 2016
Published date: 1 October 2016
Additional Information: © 2016 American Association of Anatomists.
Keywords: Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Learning, Male, Mentoring, Middle Aged, Neuroanatomy/education, Self-Assessment, Students, Medical/psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470044
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470044
ISSN: 1935-9772
PURE UUID: d43aa6f3-06ec-44e4-aa10-668b533427ed

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Date deposited: 30 Sep 2022 16:51
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 21:05

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Contributors

Author: Samuel R Hall
Author: Jonny R Stephens
Author: Eleanor G Seaby
Author: Matheus Gesteira Andrade
Author: Andrew F Lowry
Author: Will J C Parton
Author: Claire F Smith
Author: Scott Border

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