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Formative evaluation is a process of
ongoing feedback on performance. The purposes are to identify
aspects of performance that need to improve and to offer corrective
suggestions. Be generous with formative evaluation.
Share your observations and perceptions with the student. You
might simply share your observation and then ask the student if
(s)he can think of a better approach for the next time.
Formative evaluation need not make a judgment. When giving
formative feedback, offer some alternatives to the student, e.g.,
"That procedure will be more comfortable for the patient if
you?." If you observe unsafe or questionable practices,
address those directly and immediately with the student.
Use the student's patient management
documentation as well as your observations of performance to offer
formative evaluation. The student's charting reveals
organizational skills, priorities, thought process, and
judgment. Over the duration of the student's experience with
you, point out improvement to the student.
Summative evaluation is a process of
identifying larger patterns and trends in performance and judging
these summary statements against criteria to obtain performance
ratings. The faculty assumes responsibility for completing
the summative evaluation at the end of the course. However,
faculty rely upon your evidence and perceptions to justify
ratings.
The table below compares formative
and summative evaluation according to the kind of information
provided and the timing.
| |
Formative Evaluation |
Summative Evaluation |
| What information |
Specific description of daily events |
General trends based on specific
descriptions |
| |
Organizational
skills |
Overall
attitude |
| |
Needs
assessment |
Comparison with
evaluation tool |
| When to
give |
At the time of
the incident |
Mid-point in the
course |
| |
End of the
day |
End of the
course |
| |
Weekly re:
progress |
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Give both formative and summative
evaluation to the student in private as a general rule.
However, formative evaluation is needed if safety concerns arise in
a student's practice while with a patient. Also, at times you
will lose a learning opportunity if you do not give the student a
chance to practice an alternative approach at the time, but reserve
your suggestions for a later conversation. Use your judgment
and employ tact and sensitivity to avoid embarrassing the
student.
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