• Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract · Jan 2003

    Multicenter Study

    A sequenced OSCE for licensure: administrative issues, results and myths.

    • Sydney M Smee, W Dale Dauphinee, David E Blackmore, Arthur I Rothman, Richard K Reznick, and Jacques Des Marchais.
    • Medical Council of Canada, P.O. Box 8234, Station T, 2283 St. Laurent Blvd., Ottawa K1G 3H7, Canada.
    • Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2003 Jan 1;8(3):223-36.

    AbstractIn response to stakeholder demands for a more cost-effective clinical examination, the Medical Council of Canada adopted a sequenced format for the OSCE component of its licensure examination. The sequenced OSCE was administered in 1997 at 14 sites and assessed 1,796 test takers. The 10-station screening test had an alpha = 0.66 (M = 61.3%, SD = 4.7%). The fail rate of 1.7% for Canadian first-time takers was the lowest since 1992. Significant savings were realized despite costs incurred by the new format. The logistical problems that were encountered were largely due to the constraints of administering a multi-site OSCE. Although the sequenced format was cost effective and psychometrically acceptable, the response of many test takers and faculty members was negative. Consequently, it is the logistical and political lessons that may be the most generalizable.

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