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Wiley InterScience

Medical Education

Medical Education

Volume 42 Issue 10, Pages 999 - 1006

Published Online: 15 Sep 2008

© 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd



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admissions
Establishing the criterion validity of the Graduate Medical School Admissions Test (GAMSAT)
Hamish Coates
Australian Council for Educational Research, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Correspondence to Dr Hamish Coates, Australian Council for Educational Research, Private Bag 55, Camberwell, Melbourne, Victoria 3124, Australia. Tel: 00 61 3 9835 7487; Fax: 00 61 3 9835 7433; E-mail: coatesh@acer.edu.au
Copyright © 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
validation studies [publication type] • multicentre study [publication type] • *school admission criteria • *education, medical, graduate • *school, medical • humans • male • female • adult • middle-aged • educational status

ABSTRACT

Context This paper examines the criterion validity of the Graduate Medical School Admissions Test (GAMSAT), which has been used since 1996 in Australia and more recently in the UK and Ireland. The study provides evidence on the extent to which GAMSAT, in combination with grade point average (GPA) and interview scores, adds value to determining an individual's capability for medical study. The study responds to increasing demand for information on the validity of selection processes. Criterion validity is important because it helps to empirically situate selection tests within their broader contexts by, for instance, providing an assurance to educators and the public that test results are valid and add value to selection decisions.

Methods After introducing the rationale and focus of the study, the paper summarises the data and research methods, presents statistical results and draws conclusions that advance current insight into medical school admissions processes. The results are based on data from six institutions and 351 students.

Results Analyses of GAMSAT, interview and GPA scores show, in summary, that: there are fairly high levels of divergence between these three measures; that relationships between the measures and Year 1 marks vary across institutions, and that a combination of GAMSAT and GPA scores provides the best means of predicting Year 1 performance.


Received 7 November 2007; editorial comments to author 9 January 2008, 18 March 2008; accepted for publication 23 April 2008

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03154.x About DOI

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