Can Australian medical students’ predictions of peers’ responses assist with gaining reliable results on course evaluations?

Authors

  • Stephen Bacchi Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia. University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia.
  • Brad Guo Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia. University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia.
  • Stuart Brown Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia. University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia.
  • Ian Symonds University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia.
  • Judith (Nicky) Hudson University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11157/fohpe.v19i2.250

Keywords:

course evaluation, medical student, survey methods, response rate

Abstract

Introduction: Student feedback is integral to continuous improvement of medical programmes. A key challenge with student course evaluations is gaining large enough response rates for results to be reliable. This study investigated whether student predictions of peer, rather than personal, responses could address this challenge. 

Method: An anonymous paper-based student experience of learning and teaching (SELT) survey was distributed to the Year 1–3 medical student cohorts. Students responded to 20 survey statements, using a 6-option Likert-type scale. Ten statements evaluated students’ personal perspectives of the course, while the other 10 statements asked students to predict the most common response by their year cohort. Mean scores between the individual opinion-based and prediction-based statements were compared. An iterative process involving random subsampling was conducted to enable calculation of the minimum required number of responses for a stable outcome for each statement. 

Results: Two hundred and fifty-nine students participated (response rate 81.7%). Three out of the 10 paired statements in the prediction-based survey accurately predicted the group opinion-based mean. For the remaining seven statement pairs, there were statistically significant (although small) differences in mean. The calculation of mean number of responses required for a stable outcome found that the prediction-based SELT required significantly fewer (189) responses than the opinion-based SELT (215) (95% CI 15.3–35.7, p < 0.001).

Conclusions: A prediction-based style of course evaluation using a 6-option Likert-type scale approximated the results gained when asking for individual opinion and required fewer responses to achieve a stable outcome.

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Published

2018-07-26

How to Cite

Bacchi, S., Guo, B., Brown, S., Symonds, I., & Hudson, J. (Nicky). (2018). Can Australian medical students’ predictions of peers’ responses assist with gaining reliable results on course evaluations?. Focus on Health Professional Education: A Multi-Professional Journal, 19(2), 14–22. https://doi.org/10.11157/fohpe.v19i2.250

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