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Authors investigated the perspectives of stakeholders on feasibility elements of workplace-based assessments (WBA) with varying designs. In the transition to competency-based medical education, WBA are taking a more prominent role in assessment programs. However, the increased demand for WBA leads to new challenges for implementing suitable WBA tools with published validity evidence, while also being feasible and useful in practice. Despite the availability of published WBA tools, implementation does not necessarily occur; a more fulsome understanding of the perspectives of stakeholders who are ultimately the end-users of these tools, as well as the system factors that both deter or support their use, could help to explain why evidence-based assessment tools may not be incorporated into residency programs. We examined the perspectives of two groups of stakeholders, surgical teachers and resident learners, during an assessment intervention that varied the assessment tools while keeping the assessment process constant. We chose diverse exemplars from published assessment tools that each represented a different response format: global rating scales, step-by-step surgical rubrics, and an entrustability scale. The primary purpose was to investigate how stakeholders are impacted by WBA tools with varying response formats to better understand their feasibility for assessment of cataract surgery. Secondarily, we were able to explore the culture of assessment in cataract surgery education including stakeholders' perceptions of WBA unrelated to assessment form design. Semi-structured interviews with teachers and a focus group with the residents enabled discussion of their perspectives on dimensions of the tools such as acceptability, demand, implementation, practicality, adaptation, and integration. Three themes summarize teachers' and residents' experiences with the assessment tools: (1) Feedback is the priority; (2) Forms informing coaching; and (3) Forcing the conversation. The tools helped to facilitate the feedback conversation by serving as a reminder to initiate the conversation, a framework to structure the conversation, and a memory aid for providing detailed feedback. Surgical teachers preferred the assessment tool with a design that best aligned with their approach to teaching and how they wanted to provide feedback. Orientation to the tools, combined with established remediation pathways, may help preceptors to better use assessment tools and improve their ability to give critical feedback. Feedback, more so than assessment, dominated the comments provided by both teachers and residents after using the various WBA tools. Our typical assessment design efforts focus on the creation or selection of a robust assessment tool according to good design and measurement principles, but the current findings would encourage us to also prioritize the coaching relationship and include efforts to design WBA tools to function as a mediator to augment teaching, learning, and feedback exchange within that relationship in the workplace.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10401334.2020.1729162 | DOI Listing |
Perspect Med Educ
July 2025
GP Training Unit, Irish College of General Practitioners, Dublin, Ireland.
Introduction: Programmatic Assessment displays the comprehensive picture of a learner's competence through selection of assessment methods and design of organisational systems [1]. This paper describes how the Irish College of GPs (ICGP) designed and implemented a new, national, workplace-based assessment (WBA) system for GP training as part of an ongoing evolution towards Programmatic Assessment, with a focus on assessment-for-learning [1].
Methods: Six overlapping workstreams over five years led to success: iterative consultation and design, entrustable professional activities, software design, stepwise implementation, separation of mentor/assessor roles and WBA training embedded in feedback literacy and growth mindset learning.
J Surg Educ
September 2025
Consultant Gynecologist, Rawalpindi Medical University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
Background: Residents-assessors (RAA) face challenges in leading workplace-based assessments of surgical interns using direct observation of professional skills (DOPS). Effective training is essential to acknowledge and ensure their competence as assessors. Workshop pedagogy integrated with experiential learning offers various strategies to address this need.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Pharm Educ
May 2025
College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, Australia.
Objective: Growing interest in competency-based education has driven the need for reliable workplace-based assessment (WBA) tools to evaluate pharmacy graduate competency. Entrustable professional activities (EPAs), case-based discussion, and structured in-training assessment activities were introduced as part of an initial WBA "toolkit" for intern pharmacist training in Australia. The study aimed to explore perspectives on the impact of WBA tools-comprising EPAs, case-based discussion, and in-training assessment activities-on intern learning, feedback provision, intern-preceptor relationships, and workload.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Audiol
July 2024
Department of Audiology, Monash Health Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Objective: The objectives of the study were to (i) evaluate the effectiveness of wideband absorbance (WBA) at ambient pressure (WBA), tympanic peak pressure (WBA), and 0 daPa (WBA) to identify conductive hearing loss (CHL) in infants and (ii) compare the sensitivity and specificity of the three WBA tests with that of high-frequency tympanometry (HFT) and transient-evoked otoacoustic emissions (TEOAE).
Method: A total of 31 ears with hearing thresholds no greater than 20 dB HL (reference group from 20 infants [mean age: 3.1 weeks]) and 47 ears with CHL from 31 infants (mean age: 3.
BMC Surg
September 2024
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Background: Workplace-based assessment (WBA) can facilitate evaluation of operative performance; however, implementation of WBA is sometimes unsuccessful. The American Board of Surgery Entrustable Professional Activities WBA project was launched in July 2023. Some programs will face the challenge of re-implementation of a WBA following previous failures.
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