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Socio-economic predictors of performance in the Undergraduate Medicine and Health Sciences Admission Test (UMAT)

机译:本科医学和健康科学入学考试(UMAT)中绩效的社会经济预测因子

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Background Entry from secondary school to Australian and New Zealand undergraduate medical schools has since the late 1990’s increasingly relied on the Undergraduate Medicine and Health Sciences Admission Test (UMAT) as one of the selection factors. The UMAT consists of 3 sections – logical reasoning and problem solving (UMAT-1), understanding people (UMAT-2) and non-verbal reasoning (UMAT-3). One of the goals of using this test has been to enhance equity in the selection of students with the anticipation of an increase in the socioeconomic diversity in student cohorts. However there has been limited assessment as to whether UMAT performance itself might be influenced by socioeconomic background. Methods Between 2000 and 2012, 158,909 UMAT assessments were completed. From these, 118,085 cases have been identified where an Australian candidate was sitting for the first time during that period. Predictors of the total UMAT score, UMAT-1, UMAT-2 and UMAT-3 scores were entered into regression models and included gender, age, school type, language used at home, deciles for the Index of Relative Socioeconomic Advantage and Disadvantage score, the Accessibility/Remoteness Index of Australia (ARIA), self-identification as being of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin (ATSI) and current Australian state or territory of abode. Results A lower UMAT score was predicted by living in an area of relatively higher social disadvantage and lower social advantage. Other socioeconomic indicators were consistent with this observation with lower scores in those who self-identified as being of ATSI origin and higher scores evident in those from fee-paying independent school backgrounds compared to government schools. Lower scores were seen with increasing age, female gender and speaking any language other than English at home. Divergent effects of rurality were observed, with increased scores for UMAT-1 and UMAT-2, but decreasing UMAT-3 scores with increasing ARIA score. Significant state-based differences largely reflected substantial socio-demographic differences across Australian states and territories. Conclusions Better performance by Australian candidates in the UMAT is linked to an increase in socio-economic advantage and reduced disadvantage.This observation provides a firm foundation for selection processes at medical schools in Australia that have incorporated affirmative action pathways to quarantine places for students from areas of socio-economic disadvantage.
机译:背景技术自1990年代末以来,从中学入学到澳大利亚和新西兰的本科医学学校已越来越多地依赖于本科医学和健康科学入学考试(UMAT)作为选择因素之一。 UMAT包含3个部分-逻辑推理和问题解决(UMAT-1),理解人(UMAT-2)和非语言推理(UMAT-3)。使用该测试的目标之一是提高学生选择的公平性,并期望增加学生群体的社会经济多样性。但是,关于UMAT表现本身是否可能受社会经济背景影响的评估有限。方法2000年至2012年,完成158,909次UMAT评估。从这些案件中,已经确定了118,085例澳大利亚候选人在此期间首次就座的案件。将UMAT总得分,UMAT-1,UMAT-2和UMAT-3得分的预测变量输入回归模型,其中包括性别,年龄,学校类型,家庭使用的语言,相对社会经济优势指数和劣势指数,澳大利亚的可及性/远程指数(ARIA),自识别为原住民或托雷斯海峡岛民血统(ATSI)以及澳大利亚当前居住州或领土。结果生活在社会地位相对较低而社会地位相对较低的地区,预测的UMAT分数较低。其他社会经济指标与该观察结果一致,与公立学校相比,那些自认为是ATSI起源的人得分较低,而有偿独立学校背景的人得分较高。随着年龄的增长,女性的性别增加以及在家里说英语以外的任何其他语言,分数都较低。观察到了农村地区的不同影响,UMAT-1和UMAT-2分数增加,但随ARIA分数增加,UMAT-3分数降低。基于州的显着差异在很大程度上反映了澳大利亚各州和地区的社会人口统计学差异。结论澳大利亚考生在UMAT中表现更好与社会经济优势的增加和劣势的减少有关,这一观察结果为澳大利亚医学院校的选拔程序奠定了坚实的基础,该程序已将平权行动路径纳入了该地区学生的检疫场所社会经济上的劣势。

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