Assessment of students' critical-thinking and problem-solving abilities across a 6-year doctor of pharmacy program
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education
Abstract
Objective. To determine the feasibility of using a validated set of assessment rubrics to assess students' critical-thinking and problem-solving abilities across a doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) curriculum. Methods. Trained faculty assessors used validated rubrics to assess student work samples for critical-thinking and problem-solving abilities. Assessment scores were collected and analyzed to determine student achievement of these 2 ability outcomes across the curriculum. Feasibility of the process was evaluated in terms of time and resources used. Results. One hundred sixty-one samples were assessed for critical thinking, and 159 samples were assessed for problem-solving. Rubric scoring allowed assessors to evaluate four 5- to 7-page work samples per hour. The analysis indicated that overall critical-thinking scores improved over the curriculum. Although low yield for problem-solving samples precluded meaningful data analysis, it was informative for identifying potentially needed curricular improvements. Conclusions. Use of assessment rubrics for program ability outcomes was deemed authentic and feasible. Problem-solving was identified as a curricular area that may need improving. This assessment method has great potential to inform continuous quality improvement of a PharmD program.
DOI
10.5688/ajpe778166
Publication Date
1-1-2013
Recommended Citation
Gleason, Brenda L.; Gaebelein, Claude J.; Grice, Gloria R.; Crannage, Andrew J.; Weck, Margaret A.; Hurd, Peter; Walter, Brenda; and Duncan, Wendy, "Assessment of students' critical-thinking and problem-solving abilities across a 6-year doctor of pharmacy program" (2013). Pharmacy Practice Faculty Publications. 279.
https://doi.org/10.5688/ajpe778166
https://collections.uhsp.edu/pharm-practice_pubs/279