Author
Listed:
- Vitor Rosa Ramos de Mendonça
- Bruno Bezerril Andrade
- Alessandro Almeida
- Manoel Barral-Netto
Abstract
Background: Basic courses in most medical schools assess students' performance by conferring scores. The objective of this work is to use a large score databank for the early identification of students with low performance and to identify course trends based on the mean of students' grades. Methodology/Principal Findings: We studied scores from 2,398 medical students registered in courses over a period of 10 years. Students in the first semester were grouped into those whose ratings remained in the lower quartile in two or more courses (low-performance) and students who had up to one course in the lower quartile (high-performance). ROC curves were built, aimed at the identification of a cut-off average score in the first semesters that would be able to predict low performances in future semesters. Moreover, to follow the long-term pattern of each course, the mean of all scores conferred in a semester was compared to the overall course mean obtained by averaging 10 years of data. Individuals in the low-performance group had a higher risk of being in the lower quartile of at least one course in the second semester (relative risk 3.907; 95% CI: 3.378–4.519) and in the eighth semester (relative risk 2.873; 95% CI: 2.495–3.308). The prediction analysis revealed that an average score of 7.188 in the first semester could identify students that presented scores below the lower quartiles in both the second and eighth semesters (p
Suggested Citation
Vitor Rosa Ramos de Mendonça & Bruno Bezerril Andrade & Alessandro Almeida & Manoel Barral-Netto, 2011.
"Can Score Databanks Help Teaching?,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 6(1), pages 1-6, January.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0015695
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015695
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