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Interviewing skills: self‐evaluation by medical students
Author(s) -
Farnill D,
Hayes S C,
Todisco J
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2923.1997.tb02470.x
Subject(s) - interview , psychology , medical education , self assessment , observer (physics) , applied psychology , social psychology , medicine , physics , quantum mechanics , political science , law
SUMMARY In an independent learning project, 52 third‐year medical students carried out a structured self‐assessment of two videotaped psycho‐social interviews they had conducted with volunteer clients 1 year earlier, as part of a previous course. The interviews had been conducted in small tutorials with feedback from their clients, fellow students and tutors, facilitated by videotape playback. During the sequence of 16 tutorials each student had carried out an early and a late interview and had observed and participated in the discussion of the interviews of 14 peers. Students were asked to tally the frequencies of various interview behaviours, to evaluate the quality of their behaviours, and to establish priorities for future learning. The videotapes were also reliably rated by an independent observer. Students' overall self‐assessments correlated 0.46 with those of the independent observer. This correlation was higher than is typically reported in studies of the validity of self‐assessment. In absolute terms, the students' mean rating of interviewing performance was 3.2 (adequate plus) which was significantly lower than the observer's mean of 3.6 (adequate to good). Results are discussed in terms of Gordon's (1992) two recommendations for improving the validity of self‐assessments and two further suggestions, for paired comparisons and low‐threat learning environments, are added.