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Evaluating the Quality of Examination Items From the Pathophysiology, Drug Action, and Therapeutics Course Series.

Benjamin ShultzMary Sullivan KopaleScott BenkenJeffrey Mucksavage
Published in: American journal of pharmaceutical education (2024)
Item-writing flaws differently impact student performance. Implausible distractors artificially lower the difficulty of questions, even those designed to assess higher-level skills. This effect contributes to a lack of significant difference in difficulty between higher- and lower-level items. Unfocused stems, on the other hand, likely increase confusion and hinder performance, regardless of the question's cognitive complexity.
Keyphrases
  • medical students
  • small molecule
  • quality improvement
  • psychometric properties