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Examiners' decision-making processes in observation-based clinical examinations.

Bunmi Sherifat Malau-AduliRichard B HaysKaren D'SouzaAmy M SmithKarina JonesRichard C TurnerLizzi ShiresJane SmithShannon Lea SaadCassandra E RichmondAntonio CelenzaTarun Sen Gupta
Published in: Medical education (2020)
Examiners demonstrate that judging candidate performance is a complex, cognitively difficult task, particularly when performance is of borderline or lower standard. At programme exit level, examiners intuitively want to rate candidates against a construct of a prototypical graduate when marking criteria appear not to describe both what and how a passing candidate should demonstrate when completing clinical tasks. This construct should be shared, agreed upon and aligned with marking criteria to best guide examiner training and calibration. Achieving this integration may improve the accuracy and consistency of examiner judgements and reduce cognitive workload.
Keyphrases
  • decision making
  • working memory
  • cognitive decline
  • mild cognitive impairment