Standard setting anchor statements: a double cross-over trial of two different methods

This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Context: We challenge the philosophical acceptability of the Angoff method, and propose an alternative method of standard setting based on how important it is for candidates to know the material each test item assesses, and not how difficult it is for a subgroup of candidates to answer each item. Methods: The practicalities of an alternative method of standard setting are evaluated here, for the first time, with direct comparison to an Angoff method. To negate bias due to any leading effects, a prospective cross-over design was adopted involving two groups of judges (n=7 and n=8), both of which set the standards for the same two 100 item multiple choice question tests, by the two different methods. Results: Overall, we found that the two methods took a similar amount of time to complete. The alternative method produced a higher cut-score (by 12-14%), and had a higher degree of variability between judges’ cut-scores (by 5%). When using the alternative method, judges reported a small, but statistically significant, increase in their confidence to decide accurately the standard (by 3%). Conclusion: This is a new approach to standard setting where the quantitative differences are slight, but there are clear qualitative advantages associated with use of the alternative method.


Introduction
The Angoff method is widely used in the setting of standards for high-stakes medical assessments.Its proponents argue that its conceptual basis, estimating the performance of a group of borderline candidates, results in a reasonable standard.In practice, however, the assumptions of this conceptual ideal are difficult to realise.We have previously made the case that the Angoff method is conceptually flawed, outlining, among other issues, the difficulties with identifying a borderline group and estimating their performance (Burr et al., 2017).Here we present and evaluate an alternative approach that emphasises the importance of knowledge for all candidates, rather than the difficulty in answering experienced by a few.Importance of each item was rated using three criteria defined in the description of the technique below.The Angoff method is the most widely used and researched method of criterion standard setting (Talente et al., 2003, Stern et al. 2005, Bouriscot and Roberts, 2006, Elfaki and Salih, 2015), and the modified method has good interrater and moderate test-retest reliability (George et al., 2006).Angoff has lost some ground in clinical settings (Smee and Blackmore, 2001), and more recently approaches to standard setting which better protect patient safety have been proposed (Yudkowsky et al., 2014, Barsuk et al., 2018).However, the Angoff method retains its primacy for standard setting even the most challenging and high-stakes of knowledge assessments (Verhoeven et al., 1999, Elfaki and Salih, 2015, Karcher, 2019, Marcham, 2019).Therefore, we chose to compare an alternative with the Angoff method, and to evaluate the resulting scores as well as to undertake a rudimentary cost utility analysis.The alternative method (Burr et al., 2017), relies on explicit judgements of how important each item's content is for all candidates.This is in contrast to both the Angoff method, which, if judges behave as instructed, relies on judgements of how difficult each item would be for a borderline candidate (Angoff, 1971), and the Ebel method, which relies on combining judgements of both difficulty and importance (Ebel, 1972).Yudkowsky and colleagues have argued that if it is important to demonstrate mastery of clinical skills before progressing to the next stage of learning or practice, then a low level of achievement does not lessen that importance nor provide cause to lower the standard but rather identifies a gap that needs to be closed (Yudkowsky et al., 2015).We contend that the same is true for the development of understanding of the key concepts that contribute to a sound and usable medical knowledge (Neve et al., 2019).Thus, with the alternative method presented here, a standard is set based on what it is important to achieve, and not how difficult it is to achieve it, and for what all candidates should achieve, and not what a subgroup of candidates would achieve.Whilst judges taking part in other methods may implicitly or subconsciously incorporate other elements such as importance, difficulty, or curriculum delivery, these facets are not explicitly part of the process and their occurrence only serves to highlight conceptual difficulties and pragmatic issues with the methods.The alternative method explicitly seeks to elicit judgements of different facets of importance, and provides a clearly delineated method for combining them.
We postulate that the desirable qualities of a standard setting method are an extension of those that apply to assessments in general.There are many important values and principles for assessment design (Norcini, 2003;Race et al., 2005).However, assessments should foremost be valid, reliable, discriminating, transparent and fair (Burr, 2009;Scott et al., 2014).We further argue that they also need to be reasonable and acceptable to stakeholders.The aims of the current study were to evaluate the practicality of implementing our proposed alternative method, compare the standard derived using this new alternative method against a standard set using an Angoff method, and assess the judges' acceptability of implementing each method.

Study design
Two groups of judges were recruited, A (n=7) and B (n=8), each with a similar mix of areas of expertise.Judges were all teaching staff with substantial experience of the breadth and depth of content knowledge expected of students, in part due facilitating enquiry based learning in a programme that is both vertically and horizontally integrated.All judges received training, including scoring questions using both methods guided by an instruction sheet, and had the opportunity to contribute to the refinement of both methods.Judges were allocated to groups A and B randomly, but stratified to take account of discipline expertise and prior experience of the Angoff process.Two summative Single-Best-Answer Multiple Choice Question tests, T1 and T2, each comprising 100 negatively marked items focussed on end of year one medical knowledge (encompassing all aspects of the healthy individual from a biopsychosocial perspective), were standard set by two methods by both groups of judges.
Method 1 used a percentage based Angoff approach, and Method 2 was our proposed alternative, as described by Burr et al. (2017).Judges were also asked to rate their own confidence in the accuracy of their decisions for each item during both methods on a three-point scale ranging from 1 (lowest) to 3 (highest) confidence.They were also asked to record both the time taken and their satisfaction with each method, and provided space for open-ended comments concerning their thoughts on the process of each method.During the moderation meetings, comments about the standard setting process were also recorded to provide further qualitative data.
Judges were sent questions to standard set three weeks before meeting and asked to return their ratings one week before meeting.There was a three week interval between each standard setting exercise.A double cross-over method design was adopted to prevent the possibility that familiarity with the questions could have a leading effect on judges' ratings.The study design is detailed in Figure 1.
The relevant Faculty Ethics Committee was approached and confirmed that study-specific approval was not required.All judges are co-authors.The first and last authors were not judges, but led and analysed the study data respectively.

Summary of alternative method
For every item, each judge is required to rate three elements: Links, Frequency, and Consequences.These elements combined indicate a level of item importance.Links (L) refers to how much the knowledge provides a fundamental basis and foundation for other concepts (conditional knowledge within the same discipline and for other disciplines; bearing in mind any other compensatory knowledge).Frequency (F) refers to how often the knowledge is required during the next stage of study.Consequences (C) refers to the impact if the knowledge was misunderstood and misapplied, or required but not known during the next stage (stage refers to a year of study or a point in the formal progression of a candidate).
Each rating is made on a scale of 1 to 3 (1 representing the lowest rating, 3 representing the highest rating).The anchor statement stresses: When deciding each rating, you should consider the information in all aspects of the item (including the vignette and answer options), and its importance.Importance is judged relative to the purpose of the test as a gate to ensure fitness to progress to the next stage of study.Unless setting a standard for a final assessment, judges should try not to be influenced by the impact a lack of knowledge would have in clinical practice once qualified.This is in contrast to the Angoff anchor statement which states: Your score indicates the average percentage that 'just-passing' (minimally competent) candidates would achieve for that question (Hess et al., 2007).
For the alternative method, the concept of item difficulty for specific candidates should be disregarded.However, the ability to distinguish between 'easy' and 'plausible distractors should be taken into consideration when determining the importance of all the knowledge needed to answer the item correctly as a whole.The distractors factor into the judgement in the alternative method because it is necessary to consider whether it's important that candidates know the difference between the distractors.One set of distractors would quite possibly result in a different importance rating to another set of distractors for the same question.Thus, the number of factors and degree of synthesis required to answer an item correctly may be considered to represent difficulty, but should instead be included in consideration of importance.In order to derive a cut-score from element scores, each of the elements are summed with equal weighting (L+F+C), converted to a percentage, corrected for the lack of a zero point, and averaged across items within judges, then across judges to obtain overall cut-score.

Comparisons to Angoff
In order to address our research aims, an analysis of variance was used to compare the standards derived using the Angoff method with the standards derived using the alternative method.Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated as a measure of the relationship between item-level standards generated by the Angoff and alternative methods (derived from a combination of L, F, and C ratings as described above), both after judges' initial ratings (Phase 1), and after a moderation meeting (Phase 2).Correlations were not separated by Test as the relationship of interest is between item-level standards, and items may appear in any test in practice.
Descriptive statistics reflecting the distribution of individual judge's cut-scores (an average of each of their item ratings) for each method before and after moderation sessions are also provided as a measure of the variability of cut-scores generated by each method and the impact of discussion in moderation meetings.Inter-rater reliability was also evaluated for each method by calculating intra-class correlation coefficients of agreement between individual judges' item-level standards before and after moderation meetings for each method.

Results/Analysis Comparison of cut-scores between Angoff and alternative method standards
The cut-scores generated by each phase of the Angoff and alternative methods are shown below (Table 1).The cut-scores generated for each data collection point are shown in Table 2.These values provide an indication of the variation in cutscores generated by each method, as well as an indication of the impact of moderation meetings.
Pearson correlation coefficients suggest that the individual item ratings generated by each phase of each method are positively correlated (p<0.001).However, the individual item ratings generated by each method are not (p>0.05).This pattern of correlations suggests that item difficulty (of which the Angoff ratings are a measure) is not necessarily associated with the importance of the content assessed by each item (of which the alternative method ratings provides a measure).
A two Method (Angoff, Alternative; within-participants) by two Phase (One, Two; within participants) by 15 Judges (individual Judges; between-participants) analysis of variance was conducted on item ratings.Judges showed a statistically significant main effect of Method, F(1,1287)=220.863, p<0.001, but not Phase, F(1,1287)=3.472,p=0.063.There was also a statistically significant main effect of Judge, F(1,1287)=14.965,p<0.001.The Angoff method produced significantly lower standards than the alternative, and Phase Two standards were marginally higher than Phase One.
Inter-rater reliability was assessed by calculating intra-class correlation coefficients, both within Groups and Tests by Method and Phase across item-standards from each Judge.The results of these analyses are shown in Table 4.All subsets  of item ratings show significant absolute agreement between raters, and absolute agreement between raters increased between Phase One and Phase Two within both methods.Intra-class correlation coefficients were modelled for absolute agreement rather than consistency between item-standards across Judges.

Confidence in Angoff and Alternative Judgements
Table 5 shows the mean confidence ratings of each judge, across all items, by Group, Test, Phase, and Method.Although there was a statistically significant positive correlation between Angoff and Alternative confidence ratings (r=0.458,p<0.001), a 2 Method (Angoff, Alternative; within participants) by 15 Judge (individual Judges; between-participants) ANOVA on Phase One confidence ratings showed that the alternative method elicited significantly greater confidence ratings (M=2.02,SD=0.73) than the Angoff method (M=1.92,SD=0.77),F(1,2985)=-46.644, p<.001.

Feedback from judges
There was a consensus that the Links element represented the number of other domains the concept or concepts in the item were connected to.There was also consensus that Frequency represented the number of times the concept was likely to be   encountered in the next stage of the programme.Whereas, Consequences represented the impact if the content was not understood in the next stage of the programme.However, it was thought that all three overlapped to some extent.There was the possibility for deducing that high Frequency may correspond to low Consequence, due to opportunities for remediation.In the moderation meetings, it was necessary to remind judges to: (1) completely disregard all ideas of difficulty, (2) ensure that they considered and factored in the importance of distractors and wider applications of the content (in addition to the specific intrinsic question and answer, and, (3) consider the importance of the question content for the remainder of the programme and not for clinical practice after qualification (as this was an end of year one test).

Qualitative comments about alternative method
As part of Phase One, where judges provided their individual item ratings, and Phase Two during moderation meetings, they were given the opportunity to provide qualitative feedback on the processes and methods.These comments focussed on the shift from difficulty to importance, and the change in perspective from the familiar Angoff process.Examples of judges' comments are provided below.
"provides a form of quality control for teaching content that we don't get from Angoff." "made me challenge my assumptions and think about the questions in a different way." "may encourage me to change the way questions are written, to maximise the impact for importance of all 3 elements of importance (e.g. to make vignettes more explicit)." "encourages staff to learn more about how their discipline fits in to the whole curriculum." "takes less time than Angoff, even though we were less familiar with it." Whilst these comments are based on a small sample of judges, there was general agreement amongst judge participants, which would suggest there is some weight in their overall sentiment.Thus, these reflections provide additional support for the alternative method and additional context to the quantitative findings.

Time taken
Judges were also asked to record how long Phase One of each method took them to complete, and the meeting chairs recorded the duration of the moderation meetings.Timings showed that Phase One of the alternative method took on average 27 minutes less time to complete that Phase One of the Angoff method (Alternative: M=108, SD=42, Angoff: M=135, SD=41 minutes; t(15)=2.791,p=0.014).The moderation meetings for the alternative method were also shorter (M=121, SD=28 minutes) than those for the Angoff method (M=137, SD=31 minutes), though this difference was not statistically significant, t(14)=1.065,p=0.305.However, although small, these differences may be significant time savings to individuals in practical terms, and would certainly represent large cumulative time savings over multiple standard setting processes.

Discussion
Comparison of scores between the two methods Is there an assumption in the Angoff method that all items are of equal importance?Angoff focusses on rating item difficulty irrespective of importance.Similarly, the alternative method makes an assumption that all items are of equal There is a tension between trying to set a standard to identify candidates who should just pass, and defining a range of abilities, when using test items of varying importance.Excellence cannot be defined by how much of the essential content someone knows, as they should ideally know all the essential content in order to pass.Thus, excellence should be defined as a score that represents development beyond the required standard for the particular stage of study, i.e., reaching into the knowledge that might reasonably be expected in subsequent years.A stretch objective tests more detailed information or understanding than is needed for competence, and thus lowers the alternative method cut-score (and can also be expected to be inherently more difficult if the content doesn't receive as much emphasis in the syllabus).It does not matter if a test includes a higher proportion of less important content and thus has a lower cut score; what matters is that tests are set to test the necessary learning outcomes and that candidates are given fair opportunity to demonstrate they have met the standards that are required.However, the less important the content the more compensation is possible, reducing the need to answer the more important questions correctly to meet the standard.More questions of lower importance also directly increases the scope for demonstrating excellence, where demonstrating excellence depends on achieving more specialist knowledge stretch objectives; and achieving higher overall scores relative to the cut-score.Naturally, the more essential content there is in an assessment the higher the cut-score will be.This highlights the need to have the assessment content aligned to the syllabus and aims of the curriculum.

Acceptability of conceptualisation, and the need to agree weightings
It is logical to assume that expert knowledge may influence perceptions of importance (Clauser et al., 2016), but there are several elements of importance that can be considered.Advocacy for the importance of each judge's own area of expertise in content knowledge may be moderated, to some extent by rating each question in more than one element of importance, for example, the links to other concepts, the frequency with which the concept is encountered, and the consequences of not understanding a concept (Neve et al., 2019).
Given the paradigm shift from difficulty to importance involved in conceptualising the alternative method, it is notable that the time taken to complete Phase One and Phase Two of the standard setting process tended to be shorter than for the more familiar Angoff method.It may be easier to conceptualise and keep ratings focussed on what candidates need to know if the judges don't need to simultaneously keep in mind a reference group of candidates and estimate their performance in percentage terms.The use of equal weighting, or an Ebel-type grid, removes the need to decide a score of 0-100.
All judges agreed that it was philosophically and pedagogically more acceptable to set a pass-fail threshold or cut-score based on "how important it is for all candidates to know something" (at the particular point of assessment), rather than rate the difficulty of answering each item correctly for a hypothetical, subjectively-defined subgroup of candidates.For example, a CPR OSCE station wouldn't be set on how difficult it is for the average borderline candidate to pass, but on how important it is for any and all candidates to be able to successfully demonstrate the required skills.
Our initial approach has been to consider each of the three elements of importance as equally important.This is in contrast to standard-setting patient safety where patient safety is an issue and thus full and equal compensation may not be appropriate (Downing and Yudkowsky, 2009).To ameliorate for this, the method could reasonably be used with quotas and separate cut-scores for each element although this might undermine our attempt to limit judge bias and would need to be tested in future studies.In addition, our alternative method could easily be adapted to different contexts.For example, a foundation programme may require a greater emphasis on Links but be less applied and thus have lower scores for Frequency and Consequences, and thus be weighted accordingly.Depending on the subject context, more (or less) than three elements of importance may be appropriate, the weighting between them need not be equal, and the elements of importance could themselves be different.
All of the items came from a bank that were written in anticipation of being used for an Angoff process.Use of the alternative method for standard setting may influence the writing of future questions to improve their alignment with importance.Similarly learning outcomes may reemphasise expectations and be utilised by staff and students differently, focussing efforts to increase performance based on importance.As judges are more confident in the accuracy of the higher standard, then perhaps an interim period is needed which includes application of an offset value to ensure the practical acceptability of the final cut-score.If the alternative method sets a high cut-score, because candidates need to know more important things to pass, it may increase the failure rate.If something is important then the candidates need to know it, and those who don't know what they should may pass if the standard is set using Angoff.Do we stand our ground and argue that the cut-scores have been set too low historically?Instead, it may be prudent to supplement the method with a Hofstee moderation as a safeguard (Hofstee, 1983).This could be as a temporary interim measure until teaching and question writing develop to reflect the focus on importance rather than difficulty where the alternative method is applied to programmes with existing, historically difficulty-focussed assessments.

Cost utility evaluation
The alternative method was found to be: (1) valid, in as far as judges agreed on and favoured the focus on importancebased pedagogy; (2) reliable, with respect to consistency and agreement within and between judges' ratings; (3) discriminating, as candidates who don't know the important content will fail, irrespective of difficulty; (4) transparent, as it is possible for standard setting scores to be mapped to learning outcomes and correlated with performance; (5) fair, as the focus is moved from borderline candidates to the standard required by all candidates; and (6) reasonable as feedback confirmed it was acceptable to staff both conceptually and in terms of time commitment.

Conclusion
Standard setting procedures should be chosen to produce the most appropriate decision distribution in the context to which they are applied.With the Angoff method, difficult items lead to a low cut-score, even if it is more important to have learnt the content of those items.The Angoff method favours candidates who can answer difficult items regardless of their importance, and thus discriminates against those who can answer important items that are less difficult.The alternative method has several potential advantages over the Angoff method: (1) it provides an integral quality assurance check that a test contains what is important; (2) the standard setting scores could be validated by direct correlation with the performance of all candidates, not just a borderline group that can only be defined by the test; (3) ranking for elements of importance could become a feedback stream for candidates; (4) items could be written or modified to fit the matrix (to give specific scores in the different elements of importance); and (5) a sufficiently detailed searchable curriculum map could be used to semi-automatically populate standard setting ratings.It follows that a map of the occurrence of concepts could be used to check the spread, order, and spiralling of knowledge throughout a curriculum.

Take Home Messages
Our quantitative analyses do not reveal one method as statistically superior to the other.
Our qualitative findings indicate that the alternative method is philosophically better justified with certain conceptual, and potential practical, advantages.

Ken Masters
Sultan Qaboos University This review has been migrated.The reviewer awarded 4 stars out of 5 An interesting piece of research on a standard-setting method as a direct challenge to the Angoff method.I don't really agree with the authors' premise (especially the statement "How easy it is does not matter; what matters is whether candidates can do what is required, i.e. whether they know what is important.").Personally, I think it's a combination of the two.(Because it is possible to set an easy question on an important topic, and so, a student may not have real mastery of the important topic, even though they got the answer correct).As a reviewer of this paper, however, I think this is a novel approach, so my personal feelings are not relevant.I hope that others will take it further with experiments and tests."Itdoes not matter if a test includes a higher proportion of less important content and thushas a lower cut score" (and the sentences that follow).I'm not sure if I have misunderstood what the authors are arguing, but I would argue that, with their method, the low cut score would actually be a useful alert that the test might be trivial, and require improvement before implementation.So, if I used their method, and received a cut-score of 40%, that may alert me to the fact that my test is flawed because I am examining a high proportion of unimportant material, and I may wish to alter by test by including more important material (and, if my test matches the learning objectives, then the warning extends to the curriculum).Because it certainly is important for students to be examined on the important material, and setting a test that is both trivial and easy to pass seems to be highly problematic.The authors do address this obliquely with: "Naturally, the more essential content there is in an assessment the higher the cutscore will be.This highlights the need to have the assessment content aligned to the syllabus and aims of the curriculum."I would, however, like to see an awareness of the dangers of low cut-scores resulting from trivial questions.One smaller issue:The opening paragraph is, well, my goodness .What a wall of text.Please don't do that kind of thing to your reader -I suspect that many readers would simply give up at this stage.:-(.So, an interesting paper, but I would like to see a Version 2 in which the implications of a very low cut-score are discussed.Even if the authors are unmoved on their argument of its importance, they should acknowledge that a too low cut-score may be a warning that something is wrong with the test (and, perhaps, the curriculum/learning objectives).Just what is to be considered a too low cut-score is, however, a difficult point).
Competing Interests: No conflicts of interest were disclosed.

Barbara Jennings Norwich Medical School
This review has been migrated.The reviewer awarded 4 stars out of 5 I think this article about standard setting will be of great interest to all assessment leads for undergraduate medical degrees because (as the authors explain) the Angoff approach is the most widely used criterion standard setting (SS) method used in medical schools -and yet I have not found that it is universally loved!The approach is time consuming for the faculty who engage -and it can be hard to get engagement because the underlying philosophy can seem opaque or counter-intuitive to some (in my experience).The authors cite a lot of primary literature in the introduction that may be useful to novice medical educators, and they make a strong argument for the trial that they conducted.The authors propose that Angoff SS can be considered conceptually flawed and describe their rationale for a cross over trial that compares a new SS method designed to emphasise the importance of a performance standard for ALL candidates with the Angoff SS method.The research governance for the study is interesting because all participants in the study, making SS judgements -are also co-authors alongside those responsible for the data analysis.I wonder if the ethics committee chair should have requested a full review & approval to provide better protection and support for researchers and their institutions.The clear rationale for the study and methodology descriptions are definitely strengths e.g.matching of participants in test groups and the well-spaced cross over trial design coupled with a meeting to capture qualitative data that complements the quantitative analyses.One quantitative analysis was for confidence scores about the cut score judgements.The authors' new alternative method resulted in significantly greater confidence ratings by the participants.Unfortunately,I don't have the mathematical competence to comment on the validity of the cut-score used in the standard setting methods (perhaps other reviewers will appraise this) but all methods sections are explicitly and clearly described -as are the tabulated results.The authors do not conclude that the new method is statistically better than the Angoff SS, but do show good inter and intra-assessor reliability; they also present findings that suggest it is a philosophically more acceptable and an easier method to apply.The discussion provides a useful account For example, rating an item a '1' may indicate the knowledge is intended to stretch candidates (what they could know); '2' may indicate the knowledge is important (what they should know); and '3' may indicate the knowledge is essential (what they would know).

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Schematic representation of the study design

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Equation to calculate cutscores* *Cutscore for each judge, j, where n is the number of items, i.

Table 1 .
Overall Phase One and Phase Two cut-scores* *Overall Phase One (individual ratings) and Phase Two (after a moderation meeting) cut-scores derived using the Angoff and alternative methods (n=15 judges).

Table 2 .
Cut-scores by Group, Test, and Phase* Cut-scores (%) by Group, Test, and Phase, including difference in cut-scores between methods at each phase and between phases for each method (n=7 judges in Group A, and 8 judges in Group B). *

Table 3 .
Pearson correlation coefficients for the correlations between item ratings* *Pearson correlation coefficients(and p-values)for the correlations between item ratings (averaged across Judges) derived from each method at each phase.

Table 4 .
Intra-class Correlation Coefficients of agreement between item judgements* *Intra-class Correlation Coefficients (two-way random model) of agreement between item judgements within Groups and Tests by Method and Phase.All statistically significant at p<0.001.

Table 5 .
Mean confidence ratings (out of 3) by Group and Test across methods (Phase 1) , as it focusses on importance irrespective of difficulty.With the Angoff method, larger numbers of more difficult items reduces the cut-score (as borderline candidates find it more difficult)(Bed-David, 2000).In contrast, with the alternative method, larger numbers of low-importance items reduces the cut-score.It follows that a high Angoff cutscore reflects a greater number of less difficult items, and a higher alternative cut-score reflects a greater number of highimportance items.Including more low-importance items reduces the cut-score, but this does not necessarily mean the assessment is easier to pass as we don't know what the item difficulty is.How easy it is does not matter; what matters is whether candidates can do what is required, i.e. whether they know what is important.This paradigm shift is the crux of the conceptual difficulty in describing one method in terms of the other, and the associated interpretation of the resultant cut-score.The Angoff method provides a measure of the difficulty of the test items, and what the borderline candidates would know.The alternative method provides a measure of the importance of the content assessed by the test items, and what all candidates should know. difficulty Steven A Burr is a Professor in Medical Education at Peninsula Medical School, Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth, UK.ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0222-605XTheresa Martin (nee Compton) is a Lecturer in Biomedical Sciences at Peninsula Medical School, Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth, UK.The case for compromise in educational selection and grading.in: Anderson, SB, Helminck, JS (eds) On Educational Testing.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.pp.109-127.Karcher, C. (2019) The Angoff method in the written exam of the college of intensive care medicine of Australia and New Zealand: Setting a new standard.Critical Care and Resuscitation.21(1), pp.6-8 Marcham, C. (2019) Value of Certification: The Occupational Safety and Health Professional.Retrieved from: Reference Source Neve, H., Gilbert, K. and Lloyd, H. (2019) PBL as Learning Vehicle, Threshold Concept or Capability? in Savin-Baden, M. and Tombs, G. (eds) Threshold concepts in problem-based learning.Brill Sense, pp.49-64.This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Kerry Gilbert is an Associate Professor of Medical Education and Medical Sciences at Peninsula Medical School, Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth, UK.Christian P Gray is a Senior Lecturer, St Lucia Clinical Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Australia, and was previously a Lecturer at Peninsula Medical School., Park, Y.S., Lineberry, M., Knox, A., et al. (2015) Setting mastery learning standards.Academic Medicine.90(11), pp.1495-5000.Reference Source Yudkowsky, R., Tumuluru, S., Casey, P., Herlich, N., et al. (2014) A patient safety approach to setting pass/fail standards for basic procedural skills checklists.Simulation in Healthcare.9(5), pp.277-282.
This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.