TY - JOUR
T1 - Examining Preparatory Testing and Other Factors Associated With Performance on the Multistate Pharmacy Jurisprudence Examination
AU - Havrda, Dawn E.
AU - Hall, Elizabeth A.
AU - Spivey, Christina A.
AU - Biliter, Lauren T.
AU - Barenie, Rachel E.
AU - Chisholm-Burns, Marie A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/10/1
Y1 - 2022/10/1
N2 - Objective. To evaluate whether the score on the Pre-Multistate Pharmacy Jurisprudence Examination (Pre-MPJE) predicts pharmacy students’ performance on the MPJE, and to determine whether demographics, pre-pharmacy school factors, or pharmacy school factors affect MPJE outcomes. Methods. We performed a retrospective review of pharmacy school graduates’ (N 5 156) MPJE scores, Pre-MPJE scores, demographics, pre-pharmacy school academic performance factors, and pharmacy school academic performance factors. Bivariate and correlational analyses were conducted along with multiple linear regression models to determine the influence of variables on the MPJE total scaled score. Results. A total of 136 pharmacy school graduates were included, with most being female (59%) and non-Hispanic White students (75%). The score on the Pre-MPJE was not significantly correlated with students’ first-attempt MPJE pass-fail outcome or total scaled score. Factors that were correlated with passing the MPJE were a younger age at graduation, a higher pharmacy law course grade, Pharmacy Curriculum Outcomes Assessment (PCOA) examination scores, specifically scaled total scores and scaled scores for content areas 1-4 and final pharmacy school grade point average (GPA). The MPJE total scaled score was correlated with a higher pre–pharmacy school GPA, pharmacy law course grade, PCOA total and content area 1-4 scaled scores, and final pharmacy school GPA. However, regression models found that the greatest variance in MPJE total scaled score was contributed by the pharmacy law course grade. The total scaled score on the PCOA contributed to some variance for all MPJE takers, but only the pharmacy law course grade significantly influenced the in-state MPJE total scaled score. Conclusion. The findings did not show that the Pre-MPJE score was a predictor for passing the MPJE or for the MPJE total scaled score. The most important determinant of the MPJE total scaled score was a student’s performance in the pharmacy law course.
AB - Objective. To evaluate whether the score on the Pre-Multistate Pharmacy Jurisprudence Examination (Pre-MPJE) predicts pharmacy students’ performance on the MPJE, and to determine whether demographics, pre-pharmacy school factors, or pharmacy school factors affect MPJE outcomes. Methods. We performed a retrospective review of pharmacy school graduates’ (N 5 156) MPJE scores, Pre-MPJE scores, demographics, pre-pharmacy school academic performance factors, and pharmacy school academic performance factors. Bivariate and correlational analyses were conducted along with multiple linear regression models to determine the influence of variables on the MPJE total scaled score. Results. A total of 136 pharmacy school graduates were included, with most being female (59%) and non-Hispanic White students (75%). The score on the Pre-MPJE was not significantly correlated with students’ first-attempt MPJE pass-fail outcome or total scaled score. Factors that were correlated with passing the MPJE were a younger age at graduation, a higher pharmacy law course grade, Pharmacy Curriculum Outcomes Assessment (PCOA) examination scores, specifically scaled total scores and scaled scores for content areas 1-4 and final pharmacy school grade point average (GPA). The MPJE total scaled score was correlated with a higher pre–pharmacy school GPA, pharmacy law course grade, PCOA total and content area 1-4 scaled scores, and final pharmacy school GPA. However, regression models found that the greatest variance in MPJE total scaled score was contributed by the pharmacy law course grade. The total scaled score on the PCOA contributed to some variance for all MPJE takers, but only the pharmacy law course grade significantly influenced the in-state MPJE total scaled score. Conclusion. The findings did not show that the Pre-MPJE score was a predictor for passing the MPJE or for the MPJE total scaled score. The most important determinant of the MPJE total scaled score was a student’s performance in the pharmacy law course.
KW - MPJE
KW - Pre-MPJE
KW - student characteristics
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U2 - 10.5688/ajpe8774
DO - 10.5688/ajpe8774
M3 - Article
C2 - 34785499
AN - SCOPUS:85139466044
SN - 0002-9459
VL - 86
SP - 866
EP - 875
JO - American journal of pharmaceutical education
JF - American journal of pharmaceutical education
IS - 7
M1 - 8774
ER -