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Journal article

Curated Collections for Educators: Five Key Papers about Program Evaluation

Abstract

The evaluation of educational programs has become an expected part of medical education. At some point, all medical educators will need to critically evaluate the programs that they deliver. However, the evaluation of educational programs requires a very different skillset than teaching. In this article, we aim to identify and summarize key papers that would be helpful for faculty members interested in exploring program evaluation. In November of 2016, the 2015-2016 Academic life in emergency medicine (ALiEM) Faculty Incubator program highlighted key papers in a discussion of program evaluation. This list of papers was augmented with suggestions by guest experts and by an open call on Twitter. This resulted in a list of 30 papers on program evaluation. Our authorship group then engaged in a process akin to a Delphi study to build consensus on the most important papers about program evaluation for medical education faculty. We present our group's top five most highly rated papers on program evaluation. We also summarize these papers with respect to their relevance to junior medical education faculty members and faculty developers. Program evaluation is challenging. The described papers will be informative for junior faculty members as they aim to design literature-informed evaluations for their educational programs.

Authors

Thoma B; Gottlieb M; Boysen-Osborn M; King A; Quinn A; Krzyzaniak S; Pineda N; Yarris LM; Chan T; Krzyzaniak SM

Journal

Cureus, Vol. 9, No. 5,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

May 4, 2017

DOI

10.7759/cureus.1224

ISSN

2168-8184
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