BACKGROUND: In varied educational settings, narrative evaluations have revealed systematic and deleterious differences in language describing women and those underrepresented in their fields. In medicine, limited qualitative studies show differences in narrative language by gender and under-represented minority (URM) status. OBJECTIVE: To identify and enumerate text descriptors in a database of medical student evaluations using natural language processing, and identify differences by gender and URM status in descriptions. DESIGN: An observational study of core clerkship evaluations of third-year medical students, including data on student gender, URM status, clerkship grade, and specialty. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 87,922 clerkship evaluatio...
Background: The Medical Student Performance Evaluation (MSPE) is a primary source of information use...
BackgroundThe standardized letter of evaluation (SLOE) in emergency medicine (EM) is one of the most...
Abstract: This study was aimed at the difference between the second semester students’ writing achie...
BackgroundIn varied educational settings, narrative evaluations have revealed systematic and deleter...
Introduction: Prior research demonstrates gender differences in language used in letters of recommen...
Importance: Women studying medicine currently equal men in number, but evidence suggests that men an...
Introduction: Evidence suggests gender disparities in medical education assessment, including differ...
This article is a discussion and comment on: Isaac C, Chertoff J, Lee B, Carne M. Do students’ and a...
Medical Staff Affairs, Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center; assistant dean for clinical affairs
11 pagesGender and ethnicity biases are pervasive across many societal domains including politics, e...
Context Applicants to US residency training programmes are required to submit a personal statement, ...
Background: Teaching reflection and administering reflective writing assignments to students are wid...
BackgroundCompetency-based medical education relies on meaningful resident assessment. Implicit gend...
The analysis presented in this paper suggest that text analysis is a promising and relevant line of ...
Previous research has shown that evaluations of professors have had racial and gender biases based o...
Background: The Medical Student Performance Evaluation (MSPE) is a primary source of information use...
BackgroundThe standardized letter of evaluation (SLOE) in emergency medicine (EM) is one of the most...
Abstract: This study was aimed at the difference between the second semester students’ writing achie...
BackgroundIn varied educational settings, narrative evaluations have revealed systematic and deleter...
Introduction: Prior research demonstrates gender differences in language used in letters of recommen...
Importance: Women studying medicine currently equal men in number, but evidence suggests that men an...
Introduction: Evidence suggests gender disparities in medical education assessment, including differ...
This article is a discussion and comment on: Isaac C, Chertoff J, Lee B, Carne M. Do students’ and a...
Medical Staff Affairs, Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center; assistant dean for clinical affairs
11 pagesGender and ethnicity biases are pervasive across many societal domains including politics, e...
Context Applicants to US residency training programmes are required to submit a personal statement, ...
Background: Teaching reflection and administering reflective writing assignments to students are wid...
BackgroundCompetency-based medical education relies on meaningful resident assessment. Implicit gend...
The analysis presented in this paper suggest that text analysis is a promising and relevant line of ...
Previous research has shown that evaluations of professors have had racial and gender biases based o...
Background: The Medical Student Performance Evaluation (MSPE) is a primary source of information use...
BackgroundThe standardized letter of evaluation (SLOE) in emergency medicine (EM) is one of the most...
Abstract: This study was aimed at the difference between the second semester students’ writing achie...