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. 2015 Dec;15(6):566. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.15-6-566

UK medical selection: lottery or meritocracy?

Benjamin HL Harris, Jason L Walsh, Simon Lammy
PMCID: PMC4953262  PMID: 26621949

Clinical Medicine 2015;15:40-6.

A correction to Box 1 was missed under ‘Most likely score if guessed’. The corrected box is printed below.

Box 1.

Why guessing pays dividends.

Format:
SJT paper = 70 questions in 2 hours 20 minutes 60 questions are ‘live’ and 10 ‘pilot’ questions are not included in the participant's final score
Approximately two-thirds of questions are ranking questions and one-third are ‘select three from eight’ MCQs.
Job application score scaling method:
SJT converted score = (SJT raw scoreA × 0.154) − 90.1
  Formula from the UK Foundation Programme Office
Ranking question:
  • Maximum raw score per question = 20/20 marks
    • − (20 × 0.154) = 3.08 job application marks
  • Most likely score if guessed = 12/20
    • − (12 × 0.154) = 1.848 job application marks
  • No attempt = 0 job application marks

‘Select three from eight’ MCQs:
  • Maximum raw score per question = 12/12 marks
    • − (12 × 0.154) = 1.848 job application marks
  • Average raw score if guessed = 4.5/12
    • − (4.5 × 0.154) = 0.693 job application marks
  • Minimum score per attempt/no attempt = 0/12

AStrictly test equated raw score across sittings.
Available online at www.foundationprogramme.nhs.uk/pages/home/how-to-apply/SJT-FAQs#answer379K
MCQ = multiple choice questions; SJT = situational judgement test.

Articles from Clinical Medicine are provided here courtesy of Royal College of Physicians

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