The Association Between a Holistic Review in Admissions Workshop and the Diversity of Accepted Applicants and Students Matriculating to Medical School.

Acad Med

D. Grbic is lead research analyst for medical education research, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC. E. Morrison was director of policy research studies, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC, at the time of this study. H.M. Sondheimer is professor emeritus, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado. S.S. Conrad is director, Advancing Holistic Review Initiative, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC. J.F. Milem is dean of education and professor, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated whether holistic review workshops in medical school admissions led to greater diversity among accepted applicants and matriculants.
  • Data from 134 accredited medical schools from 2006-2016 showed that schools with these workshops had higher diversity metrics, including first-generation college students and racial/ethnic minorities, after the workshop.
  • The findings suggest that implementing holistic review workshops is linked to significant and sustained increases in diversity at medical schools that participated in them.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The authors tested for an association between the Association of American Medical Colleges' holistic review in admissions (HRA) workshop and the compositional diversity of medical school accepted applicants and matriculants in schools that held workshops compared with those that did not.

Method: The authors examined school-level data from 134 medical schools accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education for the years 2006-2016 using information from the American Medical College Application Service. They used a fixed-effects regression to examine the within-school association between an HRA workshop and four measures of diversity: percent first-generation college student, percent black/African American, percent Hispanic, and overall level of racial/ethnic diversity as measured by a diversity index.

Results: For schools that held an HRA workshop, descriptive statistics showed higher mean values across all four measures of diversity for the post-HRA workshop period (the HRA implementation period) compared with the preworkshop period (accepted applicants: d = 0.34-0.79; matriculants: d = 0.29-0.73). Analyzing data for all schools, including those that did not hold a workshop, regression models showed that the HRA implementation period was associated with a significant and sustained increase in all four measures of diversity. These findings were consistent for both accepted applicants (P < .01) and matriculants (P < .01).

Conclusions: The significant increases in all four measures of diversity following an HRA workshop support the conclusion that this workshop was associated with increased compositional diversity at the participating medical schools.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000002446DOI Listing

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