Is there a relationship between attending physicians' and residents' teaching skills and students' examination scores?

Faculty development programs and faculty incentive systems have heightened the need to validate a connection between the quality of teaching and students' learning. This study was designed to determine the association between attending physicians' and residents' teacher ratings and th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic Medicine 2000-11, Vol.75 (11), p.1144-1146
Hauptverfasser: Stern, D T, Williams, B C, Gill, A, Gruppen, L D, Woolliscroft, J O, Grum, C M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Faculty development programs and faculty incentive systems have heightened the need to validate a connection between the quality of teaching and students' learning. This study was designed to determine the association between attending physicians' and residents' teacher ratings and their students' examination scores. From a database of 362 students, 138 faculty, and 107 residents in internal medicine, student-faculty (n = 476) and student-resident (n = 474) pairs were identified. All students were in their third year, rotating on inpatient general medicine and cardiology services, July 1994 through June 1996, at a single institution. The outcome measure for students' knowledge was the NBME Subject Examination in internal medicine. To control for students' baseline knowledge, the predictors were scores on the USMLE Step 1 and a sequential examination (a clinically-based pre- and post-clerkship examination). Teaching abilities of faculty and residents were rated by a global item on the post-clerkship evaluation. Faculty's ratings used only scores from prior to the study period; residents' ratings included those scores students gave during the study period. Multivariate analyses showed faculty's teaching ratings were a small but significant predictor of the increase in students' knowledge. Residents' teaching ratings did not predict an increase in students' knowledge. Attending faculty's clinical teaching ability has a positive and significant effect on medical students' learning.
ISSN:1040-2446
DOI:10.1097/00001888-200011000-00024