File(s) not publicly available
Validation of the Australian Midwifery Standards Assessment Tool (AMSAT): A tool to assess midwifery competence
journal contribution
posted on 2021-04-13, 04:20 authored by Linda Sweet, Maryam Bazargan, Lois McKellar, Joanne Gray, Amanda HendersonAmanda HendersonBackground: There is no current validated clinical assessment tool to measure the attainment of midwifery student competence in the midwifery practice setting. The lack of a valid assessment tool has led to a proliferation of tools and inconsistency in assessment of, and feedback on student learning. Objective: This research aimed to develop and validate a tool to assess competence of midwifery students in practice-based settings. Design: A mixed-methods approach was used and the study implemented in two phases. Phase one involved the development of the AMSAT tool with qualitative feedback from midwifery academics, midwife assessors of students, and midwifery students. In phase two the newly developed AMSAT tool was piloted across a range of midwifery practice settings and ANOVA was used to compare scores across year levels, with feedback being obtained from assessors. Findings: Analysis of 150 AMSAT forms indicate the AMSAT as: reliable (Cronbach alpha greater than 0.9); valid—data extraction loaded predominantly onto one factor; and sensitivity scores indicating level of proficiency increased across the three years. Feedback evaluation forms (n = 83) suggest acceptance of this tool for the purpose of both assessing and providing feedback on midwifery student's practice performance and competence. Conclusion: The AMSAT is a valid, reliable and acceptable midwifery assessment tool enables consistent assessment of midwifery student competence. This assists benchmarking across midwifery education programs. © 2017 Australian College of Midwives
History
Volume
31Issue
1Start Page
59End Page
68Number of Pages
10eISSN
1878-1799ISSN
1871-5192Location
NetherlandsPublisher
ElsevierPublisher DOI
Language
engPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2017-06-16External Author Affiliations
Flinders University; University of South Australia; University of Technology SydneyEra Eligible
- Yes
Medium
Print-ElectronicJournal
Women and BirthUsage metrics
Keywords
Clinical assessmentMidwifery educationValidationCompetenceProfessional standardsPractice-based learningAdultAustraliaClinical CompetenceEducation, NursingEducational MeasurementFemaleHumansMidwiferyNursing Education ResearchPregnancyReproducibility of ResultsStudents, NursingObstetrics & Reproductive MedicineMedicine, Nursing and Health Curriculum and PedagogyNursing not elsewhere classified
Licence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC