Examining the Impact of an Intervention Designed to Improve National Physical Therapy Examination Performance Among Physical Therapist Education Program Graduates.

Ryan Dombkowski, Steven Sullivan, Tricia Widenhoefer, Thomas Gus Almonroeder
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Abstract

Introduction: National Physical Therapy Examination (NPTE) first-time pass rates are trending downward in recent years. As a result, there is a need for programs to identify ways to promote improved NPTE performance among their graduates.

Review of literature: Previous studies have identified factors that can be used to predict an individual's chances of passing the NPTE. However, to our knowledge, there are no published studies describing interventions designed to improve NPTE performance. The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of a novel intervention, which involved providing students with an individualized predicted NPTE score combined with faculty advising to support their NPTE preparation.

Subjects: This study included members of 6 consecutive cohorts (190 total graduates) from an entry-level doctoral physical therapist education program.

Methods: The members of the first 3 cohorts served as historical controls, while the final 3 cohorts received the intervention (experimental cohorts). The intervention involved using a regression model to predict students' NPTE scores based on their prior academic performance. Faculty then shared these predicted scores with students and provided individualized advising to support their NPTE preparation. Regression analyses were conducted to compare NPTE performance for the control and experimental cohorts, while accounting for between-group differences in academic performance.

Results: On average, the experimental cohorts performed 25.9 points higher on the NPTE and had over 5 times greater odds of passing the NPTE, compared to those in the control cohorts, after accounting for the covariates within the regression models.

Discussion and conclusion: Our intervention, which combined providing students with their predicted NPTE scores and faculty advising to support students' NPTE preparation, was feasible to implement without requiring extensive additional resources. It appears that our novel intervention is a viable approach for promoting improved first-time NPTE performance.

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检验旨在提高国家物理治疗考试成绩的干预措施对物理治疗师教育计划毕业生的影响。
近年来,全国物理治疗考试(NPTE)的首次通过率呈下降趋势。因此,有必要制定计划,以确定促进毕业生NPTE绩效改善的方法。文献回顾:以前的研究已经确定了可以用来预测个人通过NPTE的机会的因素。然而,据我们所知,没有发表的研究描述旨在改善NPTE表现的干预措施。本研究的目的是检验一种新的干预措施的影响,该干预措施包括为学生提供个性化的预测NPTE分数,并结合教师的建议来支持他们的NPTE准备。对象:本研究包括6个连续队列的成员(190名毕业生),来自初级博士物理治疗师教育项目。方法:前3个队列作为历史对照,后3个队列进行干预(实验队列)。干预包括使用回归模型根据学生以前的学习成绩预测学生的NPTE分数。然后,教师与学生分享这些预测分数,并提供个性化的建议,以支持他们的NPTE准备。采用回归分析比较对照组和实验组的NPTE表现,同时考虑组间学习成绩的差异。结果:在考虑回归模型中的协变量后,平均而言,实验队列在NPTE上的表现高出25.9分,通过NPTE的几率是对照队列的5倍以上。讨论与结论:我们的干预措施结合了向学生提供他们预测的NPTE分数和教师建议来支持学生的NPTE准备,这是可行的,不需要大量的额外资源。看来,我们的新干预措施是一种可行的方法,以促进改善首次NPTE的表现。
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