The development of an instrument to assess clinical teaching with linkage to CanMEDS roles: A psychometric analysis

Jill G. Nation, Elizabeth Carmichael, Herta Fidler, Claudio Violato

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14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Assessment of clinical teaching by learners is of value to teachers, department heads, and program directors, and must be comprehensive and feasible.Aims: To review published evaluation instruments with psychometric evaluations and to develop and psychometrically evaluate an instrument for assessing clinical teaching with linkages to the CanMEDS roles.Method: We developed a 19-item questionnaire to reflect 10 domains relevant to teaching and the CanMEDS roles. A total of 317 medical learners assessed 170 instructors. Fourteen (4.4 %) clinical clerks, 229 (72.3%) residents, and 53 (16.7%) fellows assessed 170 instructors. Twenty-one (6.6%) did not specify their position.Results: A mean number of eight raters assessed each instructor. The internal consistency reliability of the 19-item instrument was Cronbach's α=0.95. The generalizability coefficient (Ep2) analysis indicated that the raters achieved Ep2 of 0.95. The factor analysis showed three factors that accounted for 67.97% of the total variance. The three factors together, with the variance accounted for and their internal consistency reliability, are teaching skills (variance=53.25s%; Cronbach's α=0.92), Patient interaction (variance=8.56%; Cronbach's α=0.91), and professionalism (variance=6.16%; Cronbach's α=0.86). The three factors are intercorrelated (correlations=0.48, 0.58, 0.46; p<0.01).Conclusion: It is feasible to assess clinical teaching with the 19-item instrument that has demonstrated evidence of both validity and reliability.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)e290-e296
JournalMedical Teacher
Volume33
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2011

Bibliographical note

Copyright:
Copyright 2011 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

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