Publication | Open Access
Intellectual aptitude tests and A levels for selecting UK school leaver entrants for medical school
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2005
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An extension of A level grades is the most promising alternative to intellectual aptitude tests for selecting students for medical school How to make the selection of medical students effective, fair, and open has been contentious for many years. w1 A levels are a major component of selection for entry of school-leavers into UK universities and medical schools, w2 but intellectual aptitude tests for the selection of medical students are burgeoning-they include the Oxford medicine admissions test 1 and the Australian graduate medical school admissions test 2 (table). Tests such as the thinking skills assessment w3 are being promoted for student selection generally. The reasons include a political climate in which government ministers are advocating alternatives to A levels, some support for them in the Schwartz report on admissions to higher education, 3 lobbying from organisations such as the Sutton Trust, w4 and the difficulty of distinguishing between the growing numbers of students achieving three A grades at A level. We examine the problems that intellectual aptitude tests are addressing, their drawbacks, any evidence that they are helpful, and alternatives.
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