The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study

© 2020 Australian Physiotherapy Association Questions: Do one or two factors best represent clinical performance scores obtained via the Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice (APP) and what is the nature of their characterisation? To what extent are the same number of factors and their interpreta...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reubenson, Alan, Ng, Leo, Gucciardi, Daniel
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: AUSTRALIAN PHYSIOTHERAPY ASSOC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80187
_version_ 1848764176148725760
author Reubenson, Alan
Ng, Leo
Gucciardi, Daniel
author_facet Reubenson, Alan
Ng, Leo
Gucciardi, Daniel
author_sort Reubenson, Alan
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2020 Australian Physiotherapy Association Questions: Do one or two factors best represent clinical performance scores obtained via the Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice (APP) and what is the nature of their characterisation? To what extent are the same number of factors and their interpretation, and item scaling captured equally over time and across contexts (eg, clinical subdisciplines) for assessments of clinical performance via the APP? Design: Archival and longitudinal study of undergraduate students’ clinical performances for each of four final-year clinical placements. Participants: A total of 561 undergraduate physiotherapy students from one Australian university who were enrolled to complete their final-year clinical placements between 2014 and 2017. Outcome measures: Clinical educators’ assessments of student performance across seven key domains of clinical practice: professional behaviour, communication, assessment, analysis and planning, intervention, evidence-based practice and risk management. Results: Factor analyses supported the superiority of a two-factor representation of the APP, including dimensions characterised by professional and clinical domains, when compared with a unidimensional structure of an overarching ‘clinical performance’ factor. It was also found that the two-factor representation and item scaling was consistent across four clinical placements covering typical areas of physiotherapy practice. In other words, the same constructs are being assessed equally well across context and time. Conclusions: The APP is the nationally adopted assessment tool that is used to evaluate clinical competence to practise as a physiotherapist in Australia and New Zealand. These findings provide new evidence for an updated scoring protocol in which clinical factors are distinguished from professional competencies.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:15:11Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-80187
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:15:11Z
publishDate 2020
publisher AUSTRALIAN PHYSIOTHERAPY ASSOC
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-801872021-01-05T08:07:08Z The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study Reubenson, Alan Ng, Leo Gucciardi, Daniel Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Orthopedics Rehabilitation Exploratory structural equation modelling Physical therapy Professional competence Psychometric Clinical education PRACTICE APP COMPETENCE INVARIANCE ALPHA © 2020 Australian Physiotherapy Association Questions: Do one or two factors best represent clinical performance scores obtained via the Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice (APP) and what is the nature of their characterisation? To what extent are the same number of factors and their interpretation, and item scaling captured equally over time and across contexts (eg, clinical subdisciplines) for assessments of clinical performance via the APP? Design: Archival and longitudinal study of undergraduate students’ clinical performances for each of four final-year clinical placements. Participants: A total of 561 undergraduate physiotherapy students from one Australian university who were enrolled to complete their final-year clinical placements between 2014 and 2017. Outcome measures: Clinical educators’ assessments of student performance across seven key domains of clinical practice: professional behaviour, communication, assessment, analysis and planning, intervention, evidence-based practice and risk management. Results: Factor analyses supported the superiority of a two-factor representation of the APP, including dimensions characterised by professional and clinical domains, when compared with a unidimensional structure of an overarching ‘clinical performance’ factor. It was also found that the two-factor representation and item scaling was consistent across four clinical placements covering typical areas of physiotherapy practice. In other words, the same constructs are being assessed equally well across context and time. Conclusions: The APP is the nationally adopted assessment tool that is used to evaluate clinical competence to practise as a physiotherapist in Australia and New Zealand. These findings provide new evidence for an updated scoring protocol in which clinical factors are distinguished from professional competencies. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80187 10.1016/j.jphys.2020.03.009 English http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ AUSTRALIAN PHYSIOTHERAPY ASSOC fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Orthopedics
Rehabilitation
Exploratory structural equation modelling
Physical therapy
Professional competence
Psychometric
Clinical education
PRACTICE APP
COMPETENCE
INVARIANCE
ALPHA
Reubenson, Alan
Ng, Leo
Gucciardi, Daniel
The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
title The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
title_full The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
title_fullStr The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
title_full_unstemmed The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
title_short The Assessment of Physiotherapy Practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
title_sort assessment of physiotherapy practice tool provides informative assessments of clinical and professional dimensions of student performance in undergraduate placements: a longitudinal validity and reliability study
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Orthopedics
Rehabilitation
Exploratory structural equation modelling
Physical therapy
Professional competence
Psychometric
Clinical education
PRACTICE APP
COMPETENCE
INVARIANCE
ALPHA
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80187