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Med Teach. 2004 Feb;26(1):28-32. doi: 10.1080/0142159032000150502.

Formal appraisal of undergraduate medical students: is it worth the effort?.

Medical teacher

Deborah G Murdoch-Eaton, Malcolm I Levene

Affiliations

  1. Medical Education Unit, School of Medicine, University of Leeds, UK. [email protected]

PMID: 14744691 DOI: 10.1080/0142159032000150502

Abstract

Medical student stress is most often related to difficulties of adjusting to university academic standards, and work-social life balance. Faculty systems identify academically failing students for counselling, whilst the majority of students do not have opportunities for individual discussion about progress. This study reports a pilot formal appraisal process for first-year undergraduates. Preparatory material required students to reflect on their academic performance, factors contributing to their university life and satisfaction with career choice. Individual appraisal sessions were held with trained, experienced senior faculty staff, with completion of an appraisal record to document agreed outcomes. Individualized study skills advice was the commonest documented outcome on appraisal records. Students were overwhelmingly positive about the experience, reporting both enhanced perceptions of faculty and reduced anxiety about academic performance. Medical schools have responsibilities to consider ways to optimize students' performance; attainment can be related more to personal and motivational factors than academic ability.

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