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Apply the data collection skills you
have refined in practice to the summative evaluation process.
Be guided by the objectives you and the student have established
and the course objectives and evaluation criteria which the faculty
supply. Collect objective and subjective data that give
evidence of the student's performance in relation to the evaluation
framework.
To supplement your subjective data
collection, apply the concept of 3600 evaluation.
The 3600 evaluation approach takes into account the
perspective of all persons with whom the subject of performance
valuation interacts. Visualize the student at the
center of a circle, surrounded by the persons with whom he or she
interacts during the practicum: patients, patients'
significant others, physicians, other health professionals, support
staff, and others. Obviously, it would not be practical or
appropriate to collect formal ratings or testimonials from these
persons. However, the perceptions of others can provide
useful data.
If you ask how the student is doing,
you probably will not obtain much more than "She did okay," or "He
did a great job." Or someone may say, "Good, considering
she's just learning." Most people sympathize with the student
role, or feel reluctant to offer criticism. You will obtain
more useful feedback if you ask open-ended questions based on
objectives, or based on perceptions of your own for which you are
seeking validation. For example, you observe that the student
sometimes fails to explain self-care thoroughly, or validate that
the patient has understood instructions. Ask the patient what
instructions the student gave and how the patient plans to follow
them. When collecting data from colleagues, refer to a
specific situation and ask a general question. For example,
you might ask a physician colleague for feedback by saying, "Sally
told me that she went over Mr. Jones' medications with you.
How did that go?"
Perceptions of others can guide your
observations toward particular aspects of the student's
practice. In this way you can validate the perceptions of
others. When reporting another's perceptions to the student
or faculty member identify the source (at least as "a patient," or
"a colleague")
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