Dual Process Clinical Reasoning Assessment: Quantifying the Qualitative

J Physician Assist Educ. 2022 Jun 1;33(2):127-130. doi: 10.1097/JPA.0000000000000428.

Abstract

Purpose: The objectives of this study were to: (1) describe a standardized clinical reasoning (CR) assessment process for preclinical physician assistant (PA) students; (2) describe student grades on a checklist by comparing clinical faculty members' judgment on a global rating scale (GRS) with judgments made by a faculty panel; and (3) evaluate interrater reliability between individual faculty members' grading and faculty panel grading.

Methods: Three clinical faculty members created a checklist to assess preclinical PA students' CR on a standardized patient assessment. Individual faculty graders and a panel of faculty graders evaluated student performance. Interrater reliability between individual faculty members and the faculty panel was assessed with Cohen's kappa.

Results: The study participants included 88 PA students (n = 88) and 12 faculty evaluators (n = 12). The faculty panel changed 11 grades (12.5%) from individual faculty members. Cohen's kappa indicated substantial agreement (k = 0.698, [95% CI: 0.54-0.85]) between the individual faculty members' grades and the faculty panel's grades.

Conclusions: The process of conducting a comparison of a checklist, the GRS, and a panel review improves the standardization of assessment and reduces grade inflation.

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Competence
  • Clinical Reasoning
  • Educational Measurement*
  • Humans
  • Physician Assistants* / education
  • Reproducibility of Results