Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.12669/pjms.302.4372
Title: A comprehensive, multi-modal evaluation of the assessment system of an undergraduate research methodology course: Translating theory into practice
Authors: Abdulghani, H.M
Ponnamperuma, G.G
Ahmad, F
Amin, Z 
Keywords: article
biostatistics
construct validity
content validity
cost effectiveness analysis
course content
course evaluation
face validity
female
human
male
methodology
publication
questionnaire
reliability
scoring system
Article
assessment of humans
correlation analysis
curriculum
data processing
decision making
psychometry
qualitative analysis
quantitative analysis
undergraduate research methodology course assessment
undergraduate student
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: Professional Medical Publications
Citation: Abdulghani, H.M, Ponnamperuma, G.G, Ahmad, F, Amin, Z (2014). A comprehensive, multi-modal evaluation of the assessment system of an undergraduate research methodology course: Translating theory into practice. Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences 30 (2) : 227-232. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.12669/pjms.302.4372
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Objective: To evaluate assessment system of the 'Research Methodology Course' using utility criteria (i.e. validity, reliability, acceptability, educational impact, and cost-effectiveness). This study demonstrates comprehensive evaluation of assessment system and suggests a framework for similar courses. Methods: Qualitative and quantitative methods used for evaluation of the course assessment components (50 MCQ, 3 Short Answer Questions (SAQ) and research project) using the utility criteria. Results of multiple evaluation methods for all the assessment components were collected and interpreted together to arrive at holistic judgments, rather than judgments based on individual methods or individual assessment. Results: Face validity, evaluated using a self-administered questionnaire (response rate-88.7%) disclosed that the students perceived that there was an imbalance in the contents covered by the assessment. This was confirmed by the assessment blueprint. Construct validity was affected by the low correlation between MCQ and SAQ scores (r=0.326). There was a higher correlation between the project and MCQ (r=0.466)/SAQ (r=0.463) scores. Construct validity was also affected by the presence of recall type of MCQs (70%; 35/50), item construction flaws and non-functioning distractors. High discriminating indices (> 0.35) were found in MCQs with moderate difficulty indices (0.3-0.7). Reliability of the MCQs was 0.75 which could be improved up to 0.8 by increasing the number of MCQs to at least 70. A positive educational impact was found in the form of the research project assessment driving students to present/publish their work in conferences/ peer reviewed journals. Cost per student to complete the course was US$164.50. Conclusions: The multi-modal evaluation of an assessment system is feasible and provides thorough and diagnostic information. Utility of the assessment system could be further improved by modifying the psychometrically inappropriate assessment items.
Source Title: Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/183901
ISSN: 1682-024X
DOI: 10.12669/pjms.302.4372
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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