BMJ 2002;324:748-749 ( 30 March )

Editorials

The long case versus objective structured clinical examinations

The long case is a bit better, if time is equal

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

The examination of graduates of medicine to ensure competence has a long tradition predicated on the historical right of self regulation bestowed on the professions. While many may wish to replace such summative and frequently punitive assessment with softer assessment to facilitate learning, this amounts to a shirking of social responsibility. A consequence of the importance attached to such examinations is that considerable research has been devoted to establishing the reliability and validity of these examinations.

One truism in educational research is that few self evident truths are true. Historically, it has seemed self evidently true that an experienced physician could, by active questioning around a case, determine whether a candidate was or was not competent---the long case. Unfortunately this assertion was challenged by evidence showing that the reliability of the long case was insufficient to justify decisions about competence to practice.1 The replacement of the long case by . . . [Full text of this article]


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