Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Comparative attainment of 5-year undergraduate and 4-year graduate entry medical students moving into foundation training

Manning, Gillian; Garrud, Paul

Comparative attainment of 5-year undergraduate and 4-year graduate entry medical students moving into foundation training Thumbnail


Authors

Gillian Manning

Paul Garrud



Abstract

Background

Graduate entry medicine is a recent innovation in UK medical training. Evidence is sparse at present as to progress and attainment on these programmes. Shared clinical rotations, between an established 5-year and a new graduate entry course, provide the opportunity to compare achievement on clinical assessments. To compare completion and attainment on clinical phase assessments between students on a 4-year graduate entry course and an established 5-year undergraduate medicine course.

Methods

Overall completion rates for the 4 and 5 year courses, fails at first attempt, and scores on 14 clinical assessments, were compared between 171 graduate-entry and 450 undergraduate medical students at the University of Nottingham, comprising two graduating cohorts. Percentage assessment marks were converted to z-scores separately for each graduating year and the normalised marks then combined into a single dataset. Z-score transformed percentage marks were analysed by multivariate analysis of variance and univariate analyses of variance for each summative assessment. Numbers of fails at first attempt were analysed aggregated across all assessments initially, then separately for each assessment using ?2.

Results

Completion rates were around 90% overall and significantly higher in the graduate entry course. Failures of assessments overall were similar, but a higher proportion of graduate entry students failed the final OSLER. Mean performance on clinical assessments showed a significant overall difference, made up of lower performance on 4 of 5 knowledge-based exams (as well as higher performance on the first exam) by the graduate entry group, but similar levels of performance on all the skills-based and attitudinal assessments.

Conclusions

High completion rates are encouraging. The lower performance in some knowledge-based exams may reflect lower prior educational attainment, a substantially different demographic profile (age, gender), or an artefact of the first 2 years of a new graduate entry programme.

Citation

Manning, G., & Garrud, P. (2009). Comparative attainment of 5-year undergraduate and 4-year graduate entry medical students moving into foundation training. BMC Medical Education, 9(76), https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6920-9-76

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Dec 22, 2009
Deposit Date Apr 2, 2014
Publicly Available Date Apr 2, 2014
Journal BMC Medical Education
Electronic ISSN 1472-6920
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Issue 76
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6920-9-76
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/705860
Publisher URL http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/9/76

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations