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Anatomy education environment measurement inventory: A valid tool to measure the anatomy learning environment.

Siti Nurma Hanim HadieAsma' HassanZul Izhar Mohd IsmailMohd Asnizam AsariAaijaz Ahmed KhanFazlina KasimNurul Aiman Mohd YusofHusnaida Abdul Manan SulongTg Fatimah Murniwati Tg MudaWan Nor ArifinMuhamad Saiful Bahri Yusoff
Published in: Anatomical sciences education (2017)
Students' perceptions of the education environment influence their learning. Ever since the major medical curriculum reform, anatomy education has undergone several changes in terms of its curriculum, teaching modalities, learning resources, and assessment methods. By measuring students' perceptions concerning anatomy education environment, valuable information can be obtained to facilitate improvements in teaching and learning. Hence, it is important to use a valid inventory that specifically measures attributes of the anatomy education environment. In this study, a new 11-factor, 132-items Anatomy Education Environment Measurement Inventory (AEEMI) was developed using Delphi technique and was validated in a Malaysian public medical school. The inventory was found to have satisfactory content evidence (scale-level content validity index [total] = 0.646); good response process evidence (scale-level face validity index [total] = 0.867); and acceptable to high internal consistency, with the Raykov composite reliability estimates of the six factors are in the range of 0.604-0.876. The best fit model of the AEEMI is achieved with six domains and 25 items (X2  = 415.67, P < 0.001, ChiSq/df = 1.63, RMSEA = 0.045, GFI = 0.905, CFI = 0.937, NFI = 0.854, TLI = 0.926). Hence, AEEMI was proven to have good psychometric properties, and thus could be used to measure the anatomy education environment in Malaysia. A concerted collaboration should be initiated toward developing a valid universal tool that, using the methods outlined in this study, measures the anatomy education environment across different institutions and countries. Anat Sci Educ 10: 423-432. © 2017 American Association of Anatomists.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • quality improvement
  • psychometric properties
  • mental health
  • medical education
  • electronic health record