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  Vol. 152 No. 4, April 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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A Comparison of Performance Between Third-Year Students Completing a Pediatric Ambulatory Rotation on Campus vs in the Community

Michael H. Malloy, MD, MS; Alice Speer, MD

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 1998;152:397-401.

Objective  To compare the performance of third-year medical students who completed the ambulatory component of their pediatric rotation in a community setting with the performance of third-year medical students who had their ambulatory experience on campus.

Methods  As part of a pilot project to implement a third-year Multidisciplinary Ambulatory Clerkship, 61 third-year medical students spent 12 weeks rotating through the primary care disciplines of family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatric practitioners' offices at sites distant from the university campus while 127 students remained on campus for their ambulatory experiences in these disciplines. The components of the overall pediatric grade consisted of a clinical performance evaluation in the ambulatory setting (4 weeks), a clinical performance evaluation on a 4-week inpatient rotation, and a grade from a multiple-choice final examination.

Results  The overall mean±SD final pediatric grade of students receiving their ambulatory pediatrics experience in the Multidisciplinary Ambulatory Clerkship was 86.5±3.4 compared with 88.0±3.4 for students receiving their ambulatory experience on campus (P<.007). This difference was accounted for by performance on the written final examination. Multidisciplinary Ambulatory Clerkship students had a mean±SD score of 78.9±8.3 and a failure rate of 18% compared with a mean score of 83.7±8.1 and failure rate of 3.9% for students who remained on campus for their ambulatory experience (P<.001 for both comparisons). No differences were noted between the 2 groups on their clinical performance evaluations for their ambulatory or inpatient experiences.

Conclusions  These data suggest a difference in the learning experience between students receiving their pediatric ambulatory experience in the community vs on campus. Differences in exposure to structured learning experiences that occurred more frequently on campus might account for some of the difference in final examination results. Development of a standardized, structured learning experience across community sites would seem to be an appropriate means of enhancing learning in the community setting.


From the Departments of Pediatrics (Dr Malloy) and Internal Medicine (Dr Speer), University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston.



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

The Relationship Between Pediatric Residency Program Size and Inpatient Illness Severity and Diversity
Jennings et al.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2003;157:676-680.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Pediatric Clerkship Experience and Performance in the Nebraska Education Consortium: A Community vs University Comparison
McCurdy et al.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1999;153:989-994.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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