Publication | Closed Access
The Correlation of Student Performance in Preclinical and Clinical Prosthodontic Assessments
75
Citations
21
References
2007
Year
Student OutcomeIntraoral ScannerStudent AssessmentClinical Prosthodontic AssessmentsStudent PerformanceCompetency ExamFull Veneer CrownEducationSpecial EducationSurgeryEducational EvaluationEducational AssessmentClinical Competency ExamMedicineClinical DentistryOrthopaedic Surgery
Tracking student performance in preclinical and clinical courses can be helpful in developing and refining a curriculum. Our objective was to correlate student performance on three fixed prosthodontic examinations taken by eighty junior dental students. Examinations included a knowledge-based objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), a manual skills exercise completed on a typodont (Typodont), and a competency casting exam (Casting CE) on a patient. Multiple regression analysis indicated that the OSCE and Typodont exam scores, as independent variables, were not statistically significant predictors (P=0.07; P=0.87, respectively) of Casting CE exam performance, which was the dependent variable. Correlations were weak for the OSCE (r=0.21) and nearly nonexistent for the Typodont exam(r=0.03) when compared to the Casting CE. Our results indicate a weak correlation between an OSCE-based knowledge exam measuring students' knowledge of critical errors in preparations and castings and a competency exam involving the preparation of a full veneer crown. Results also indicate virtually no correlation between a typodont preparation examination designed to provide a measure of students' clinical skill and a clinical competency exam involving the preparation of a full crown.
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