Sunday, May 13, 2007


From BMC Medicine:
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Performance in the MRCP(UK) Examination 2003-4: Analysis of pass rates of UK graduates in relation to self-declared ethnicity and gender:

Abstract (provisional)

Background

Male students and students from ethnic minorities have been reported to underperform in undergraduate medical examinations. We examined the effects of ethnicity and gender on pass rates in UK medical graduates sitting the Membership of the Royal Colleges of Physicians in the United Kingdom [MRCP(UK)] examination in 2003-4.

Methods

Pass rates for each Part of the Examination were analysed for differences between graduate groupings based on self-declared ethnicity and gender.

Results

All candidates declared their gender, and 84-90% declared their ethnicity. In all three parts of the examination, white candidates performed better than other ethnic groups (P < p =" 0.011)," p =" 0.176)." p =" 0.151).">

Conclusions

The cause of these differences is most likely to be multifactorial, but cannot be readily explained in terms of previous educational experience or differential performance on particular parts of the examination. Potential examiner prejudice, significant only in the cases where there were two non-white examiners and the candidate was non-white, might indicate different cultural interpretations of the judgements being made.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

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