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Title

Challenges and potential improvements in the Accreditation Standards of the Korean Institute of Medical Education and Evaluation 2019 (ASK2019) derived through meta-evaluation: a cross-sectional study.

Authors

Yoonjung Lee; Min-jung Lee; Junmoo Ahn; Chungwon Ha; Ye Ji Kang; Cheol Woong Jung; Dong-Mi Yoo; Jihye Yu; Seung-Hee Lee

Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to identify challenges and potential improvements in Korea's medical education accreditation process according to the Accreditation Standards of the Korean Institute of Medical Education and Evaluation 2019 (ASK2019). Meta-evaluation was conducted to survey the experiences and perceptions of stakeholders, including self-assessment committee members, site visit committee members, administrative staff, and medical school professors. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted using surveys sent to 40 medical schools. The 332 participants included self-assessment committee members, site visit team members, administrative staff, and medical school professors. The t-test, one-way analysis of variance and the chi-square test were used to analyze and compare opinions on medical education accreditation between the categories of participants. Results: Site visit committee members placed greater importance on the necessity of accreditation than faculty members. A shared positive view on accreditation's role in improving educational quality was seen among self-evaluation committee members and professors. Administrative staff highly regarded the Korean Institute of Medical Education and Evaluation's reliability and objectivity, unlike the self-evaluation committee members. Site visit committee members positively perceived the clarity of accreditation standards, differing from self-assessment committee members. Administrative staff were most optimistic about implementing standards. However, the accreditation process encountered challenges, especially in duplicating content and preparing self-evaluation reports. Finally, perceptions regarding the accuracy of final site visit reports varied significantly between the self-evaluation committee members and the site visit committee members. Conclusion: This study revealed diverse views on medical education accreditation, highlighting the need for improved communication, expectation alignment, and stakeholder collaboration to refine the accreditation process and quality.

Subjects

SOUTH Korea; MEDICAL education standards; ACCREDITATION; CROSS-sectional method; MEDICAL school faculty; SELF-evaluation; MEDICAL education; EXECUTIVES; T-test (Statistics); RESEARCH funding; PILOT projects; CHI-squared test; COMMERCIAL product evaluation; MEDICAL schools; COLLEGE teacher attitudes; RESEARCH; ONE-way analysis of variance; QUALITY assurance; COMPARATIVE studies; STAKEHOLDER analysis; DATA analysis software; PSYCHOSOCIAL factors; COMMITTEES

Publication

Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions, 2024, Vol 21, p1

ISSN

1975-5937

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3352/jeehp.2024.21.8

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