News bites: Medical education
Personality traits can be tested reliably in
applicants to medical school - Psychometric
tests seem to be a reliable way of assessing medical school
applicants' personality traits and ethical and moral reasoning, as
well as their cognitive ability, a study has found. The new test - the
personal qualities assessment - was tested in medical schools in the
United Kingdom, Australia, Israel, and Fiji. The study showed that
cognitive ability did not vary with sex or educational background, although
it tended to be lower in applicants from more deprived backgrounds.
Applicants from independent and state funded schools had similar
psychometric scores. The authors concluded that applicants from deprived
backgrounds would not be disadvantaged by an admissions process based on
the instrument (Medical Education 2005;39:258-65).
UK Postgraduate medical curriculum launched
The operational framework for the new foundation
programmes in the United Kingdom has now been launched. The document
outlines how the changes in the initial years in postgraduate medical
education in the UK will be rolled out. There are clear statements of
intention within both the curriculum and the operational framework to shift
from assessment being simply a knowledge based exam following time served,
to that of measuring a doctor's performance in a variety of settings
against the standards set out in GMC's Good
Medical Practice (www.mmc.nhs.uk).
CHESS aids medical student learning
CHESS (the clinical health economics system
simulation), a team based contest designed to teach the principles and
practice of health economics, is an effective way of communicating health
economics to students. Teams compete with each other to manage healthcare
scenarios with limited resources. In a questionnaire evaluation (which had
a 94% response rate), 98% of students found the game considerably more
stimulating than traditional lectures and small group format teaching for
health economics (Academic Medicine 2005;80:129-34).
studentBMJ 2005;13:221-264 June ISSN 0966-6494