BMC Medical Education (Oct 2024)

Medical student use of practice questions in their studies: a qualitative study

  • Ryan Sheehy,
  • Devin Scott,
  • Diveena Davis,
  • Marissa Roffler,
  • Trevor Sweatman,
  • Eric Nemec

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-024-06168-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Practice questions are highly sought out for use as a study tool among medical students in undergraduate medical education. At the same time, it remains unknown how medical students use and incorporate practice questions and their rationales into their studies. To explore this heavily relied upon study strategy, semi-structured interviews were conducted with second-year medical students to assess how they approach using practice questions. Qualitative thematic analysis revealed several recurrent themes: (1) Medical students use practice questions for primary learning, (2) Medical students place more importance on the rationale of a practice question versus selecting the right answer, and (3) Medical students view practice questions as being designed to be used once or having a single-use. Together, these themes provide insight into how medical students use practice questions to study, which may guide medical educators in their creation of practice questions with appropriate rationales and provide foundational data for future mixed methods analyses seeking to generalize these findings.

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