Affiliation:
1. Department of Family Practice and Community Health, University of Minnesota
Abstract
Much has been written on graduate medical education and its evaluation. Seldom, however, are mentioned the uses made or the benefits of such evaluations. Drawing on current models for increasing the use of information from external evaluations, the authors offer a usercentered approach for increasing the use of results from internal evaluations, the more typical form of evaluation in graduate medical education. The overriding emphasis of the user-centered approach to evaluation is the utility of the resultant data. Three features characterize user-centered evaluation: an ordered set of steps with usefulness as the primary concern at each step; delineation of evaluator and decision-maker roles; and attention to the general communication aspects of evaluation. This article describes these three characteristics, concluding with two fundamental points: (1) A user-centered approach to evaluation will help evaluation do what it is supposed to do: provide information that gets used to increase the effectiveness of everyday decisions. (2) A user-centered evaluation accomplishes this, first, by having a pervasive attitude of utility and, second, by carefully attending to the three characteristic features of this approach to evaluation.
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. User-design: A case application in health care training;Educational Technology Research and Development;1998-12
2. The Nature of Explanation in Qualitative Evaluation;Evaluation & the Health Professions;1985-06