SCORING MODELS FOR PEER ASSESSMENT IN TEAM-BASED LEARNING PROJECTS

Author(s):  
Paul Hubert Vossen
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 90
Author(s):  
Alba Regina de Abreu Lima ◽  
Júlio César André ◽  
Marina Kamimura ◽  
Ana Carolina dos Reis ◽  
Juanita Justina Ferreira da Silva ◽  
...  

In medical education, the team-based learning method (TBL) is a teaching strategy used to intensify interactive learning in small groups, in which the student is given the role of evaluating his/her peers - peer assessment (PA). To investigate the interference of the students' interpersonal relationships in awarding their peers grades (''halo effect''). A qualitative and quantitative retrospective study. The study participants were 78 first-year medical students, divided into 17 teams for the TBL. The final grade of the PA for each member was calculated by the average of the grades received from their peers. Results: The comparison between the average of the evaluations in the TBL method (MTBLs) and the PA showed that 17.64% of the teams showed a significant difference between the grades, thus having the “halo effect”. In the qualitative analysis, the “halo effect” was evidenced in only one of these teams. Although many studies corroborate the idea that using PA in the formative assessment is appropriate, advancing in the use of PA in the summative assessment is necessary, integrating it into the institution's evaluation system. Data presented here can help in continuing its use and in increasing its reliability.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 254-260
Author(s):  
Shannon L. Sibbald ◽  
Ava John-Baptiste ◽  
Mark Speechley

Team-based learning (TBL) appeals to public health educators because it mimics the real world of public health practice. Public health is an interdisciplinary field in which practitioners from various professional backgrounds come together to apply their different skills and competencies to a steadily changing array of public health problems. In addition to fostering synergistic learning, TBL can break down barriers between people from different professions and backgrounds. Many students have had past negative experiences with group work such as perceptions of unequal distribution of work and responsibility among team members. TBL extends beyond group work by supporting a pedagogical philosophy to empower students. Various methods of peer assessment have been proposed that embolden team members to evaluate one another’s contributions to group learning. We describe our TBL approach along with the strategies we employ to mitigate this particular challenge associated with TBL. Overall, we believe our approach to peer assessment in the context of TBL to be effective; students are more satisfied with the authentic assessment, and it has led to improved team functioning.


2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 (116) ◽  
pp. 69-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina M. Cestone ◽  
Ruth E. Levine ◽  
Derek R. Lane

Author(s):  
Alexis Horst ◽  
Brian D. Schwartz ◽  
Jenifer A. Fisher ◽  
Nicole Michels ◽  
Lon J. Van Winkle

More compassionate behavior should make both patients and their providers happier and healthier. Consequently, work to increase this behavior ought to be a major component of premedical and medical education. Interactions between doctors and patients are often less than fully compassionate owing to implicit biases against patients. Such biases adversely affect treatment, adherence, and health outcomes. For these reasons, we studied whether selecting and performing service-learning projects by teams of prospective medical students prompts them to write reflections exhibiting dissonance, self-examination, bias mitigation, dissonance reconciliation, and compassionate behavior. Not only did these students report changes in their behavior to become more compassionate, but their reflective capacity also grew in association with selecting and performing team service-learning projects. Components of reflective capacity, such as reflection-on-action and self-appraisal, correlated strongly with cognitive empathy (a component of compassion) in these students. Our results are, however, difficult to generalize to other universities and other preprofessional and professional healthcare programs. Hence, we encourage others to test further our hypothesis that provocative experiences foster frequent self-examination and more compassionate behavior by preprofessional and professional healthcare students, especially when teams of students are free to make their own meaning of, and build trust and psychological safety in, shared experiences.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document