A Simple and Sustainable Exercise to Enhance Student Self-Reflection on Error-Making, Focus Support, and Guide Curricular Design

Teach Learn Med. 2022 Feb 23:1-8. doi: 10.1080/10401334.2022.2033981. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTProblem: Self-reflection is a critical component of professional development and clinical practice, but medical students' ability to self-reflect is typically limited. While inadequate self-reflection impacts future clinical decision-making, it may also adversely impact current learning through an inability to identify learning-behavior deficits. This may be exacerbated by common use of multiple-choice questions (MCQ) where incorrect responses provide less insight than other measures for students, faculty, or academic support. To address this, an Error Reflection Method (ERM) was developed to help students focus on 'why' they got an MCQ wrong rather than 'what' they got wrong, thereby promoting self-reflection and a learning-focus on assessment. Understanding students' learning-behavior deficits could also enrich engagement with academic support services and guide curricular design. Intervention: The ERM is a list of 10 common types of exam errors that were either 'test-taking' (unwitting) errors or 'learning-behavior' errors that reflected learning deficits. The ERM is simple, transferable, and sustainable, allowing longitudinal and regular monitoring of individual and collective error-making to focus support and guide curricular development. Context: Undergraduate medical students at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, USA, used the ERM in formative assessment revi...
Source: Teaching and Learning in Medicine - Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: Source Type: research