Effect of ethnicity on performance in a final objective structured clinical examination: qualitative and quantitative study

V Wass, C Roberts, R Hoogenboom, R Jones, C Van der Vleuten

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

81 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective To assess the effect of ethnicity on Student performance in stations assessing communication, skills within an objective structured clinical examination. Design Quantitative and qualitative study Setting A final UK clinical examination consisting of a two day objective structured clinical examination with 22 stations. Participants 82 students from ethnic minorities and 97 white students. Main outcome measures Mean scores for stations (quantitative) and observations made using discourse analysis on selected communication stations (qualitative). Results Mean performance of students from ethnic minorities was significantly lower than that of white students for stations assessing communication skills on days 1 (67.0% (SD 6.8%) and 72.3% (7.6%); P=0.001) and 2 (65.2% (6.6%) and 69.5% (6.3%); P=0.003). No examples of overt discrimination were found in 309 video recordings. Transcriptions showed subtle differences in communication styles in some students from ethnic minorities who performed poorly. Examiners' assumptions about what is good communication may have contributed to differences in grading. Conclusions There was no evidence of explicit discrimination between students from ethnic minorities and white students in the objective structured clinical examination. A small group of male students from ethnic minorities used particularly poorly rated communicative styles, and some subtle problems in assessing communication skills may have introduced bias. Tests need to reflect issues of diversity to ensure that students from ethnic minorities are not disadvantaged.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)800 - 803
Number of pages4
JournalBMJ
Volume326
Issue number7393
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Apr 2003

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