Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development (Mar 2022)

Medical Student Portfolios: A Systematic Scoping Review

  • Rei Tan,
  • Jacquelin Jia Qi Ting,
  • Daniel Zhihao Hong,
  • Annabelle Jia Sing Lim,
  • Yun Ting Ong,
  • Anushka Pisupati,
  • Eleanor Jia Xin Chong,
  • Min Chiam MSc (Medical Humanities),
  • Alexia Sze Inn Lee BSc (Psychological Science),
  • Laura Hui Shuen Tan MBBS,
  • Annelissa Mien Chew Chin MSc (Info & Lit),
  • Limin Wijaya MBBS (Melbourne), MRCP (UK), DTM&H (Liverpool),
  • Warren Fong MBBS, MRCP, FAMS,
  • Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna MD, MBChB, FRCP, FAMS, MA (Medical Education), MA (Medical Ethics), PhD (Medical Ethics)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23821205221076022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Phenomenon Medical Student Portfolios (MSP)s allow medical students to reflect and better appreciate their clinical, research and academic experiences which promotes their individual personal and professional development. However, differences in adoption rate, content design and practice setting create significant variability in their employ. With MSPs increasingly used to evaluate professional competencies and the student's professional identity formation (PIF), this has become an area of concern. Approach We adopt Krishna’s Systematic Evidence-Based Approach to carry out a Systematic Scoping Review (SSR in SEBA) on MSPs. The structured search process of six databases, concurrent use of thematic and content analysis in the Split Approach and comparisons of the themes and categories with the tabulated summaries of included articles in the Jigsaw Perspective and Funnelling Process offers enhanced transparency and reproducibility to this review. Findings The research team retrieved 14501 abstracts, reviewed 779 full-text articles and included 96 articles. Similarities between the themes, categories and tabulated summaries allowed the identification of the following funnelled domains: Purpose of MSPs, Content and structure of MSPs, Strengths and limitations of MSPs, Methods to improve MSPs, and Use of E-portfolios. Insights Variability in the employ of MSPs arise as a result of a failure to recognise its different roles and uses. Here we propose additional roles of MSPs, in particular, building on a consistent set of content materials and assessments of milestones called micro-competencies. Whislt generalised micro-competencies assess achievement of general milestones expected of all medical students, personalised micro-competencies record attainment of particular skills, knowledge and attitudes balanced against the medical student’s abilities, context and needs. This combination of micro-competencies in a consistent framework promises a holistic, authentic and longitudinal perspective of the medical student’s development and maturing PIF.