Measuring assessors' experiences of grading marginal student performances in clinical assessments - The assess-safe tool: Development and preliminary psychometric validation
Author(s)
Hughes, Lynda J
Mitchell, Marion L
Jones, Cindy
Johnston, Amy NB
Year published
2020
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Assessment of fitness for practice in the nursing student population is an essential yet challenging component of nursing education. The aim of this research was to describe the development and preliminary validation of the Assess-Safe instrument that explores assessors' experiences of grading nursing student performances in clinical courses when that performance is not a clear pass or fail. A 3 phase approach was used to develop and psychometrically test the instrument. Phase 1 involved the development of a pool of items following a literature review, coupled with findings from qualitative data. In phase 2, an expert panel ...
View more >Assessment of fitness for practice in the nursing student population is an essential yet challenging component of nursing education. The aim of this research was to describe the development and preliminary validation of the Assess-Safe instrument that explores assessors' experiences of grading nursing student performances in clinical courses when that performance is not a clear pass or fail. A 3 phase approach was used to develop and psychometrically test the instrument. Phase 1 involved the development of a pool of items following a literature review, coupled with findings from qualitative data. In phase 2, an expert panel rated the items for clarity and relevance, reducing the item pool. Assessors of Australian undergraduate nursing students from industry and academia were recruited for this study. A sample of 149 assessors across industry and academia completed the resultant survey to pilot test the instrument; constituting Phase 3. A high content validity index score of 0.95 was achieved through expert review. Construct validity using factor analysis revealed four factors including: assessor support; process support; assessor introspection; and student support. The Assess-Safe instrument achieved good internal reliability with an overall Cronbach's alpha coefficient of 0.77; and sub-scale scores ranging from 0.71 to 0.79. The Assess-Safe instrument demonstrated satisfactory psychometric properties and has utility for education programmes, research and policy development across a variety of practice based professions. Nonetheless, further psychometric validation is warranted.
View less >
View more >Assessment of fitness for practice in the nursing student population is an essential yet challenging component of nursing education. The aim of this research was to describe the development and preliminary validation of the Assess-Safe instrument that explores assessors' experiences of grading nursing student performances in clinical courses when that performance is not a clear pass or fail. A 3 phase approach was used to develop and psychometrically test the instrument. Phase 1 involved the development of a pool of items following a literature review, coupled with findings from qualitative data. In phase 2, an expert panel rated the items for clarity and relevance, reducing the item pool. Assessors of Australian undergraduate nursing students from industry and academia were recruited for this study. A sample of 149 assessors across industry and academia completed the resultant survey to pilot test the instrument; constituting Phase 3. A high content validity index score of 0.95 was achieved through expert review. Construct validity using factor analysis revealed four factors including: assessor support; process support; assessor introspection; and student support. The Assess-Safe instrument achieved good internal reliability with an overall Cronbach's alpha coefficient of 0.77; and sub-scale scores ranging from 0.71 to 0.79. The Assess-Safe instrument demonstrated satisfactory psychometric properties and has utility for education programmes, research and policy development across a variety of practice based professions. Nonetheless, further psychometric validation is warranted.
View less >
Journal Title
Nurse Education in Practice
Volume
43
Subject
Nursing
Curriculum and pedagogy
Midwifery
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Fitness for practice
Marginal performances