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Next week our final year students will be sitting their Situational Judgement Tests (SJTs). This article
from KUMEC is supplementary to and consistent with the advice and support provided by the School
to final year students and is intended for students in all years who might be curious about the tests
and want to know how to prepare in advance.
As the SJTs potentially count for as much as your medical degree, your intercalated degree, that
paper you published AND the presentation you gave at that national conference last year, you might
find it comforting to know that SJTs are actually well thought of and there are some very convincing
arguments about the validity and quality of these tests. They are supposed to be rather like
intelligence tests and be impossible to be coached for or to fake. That doesnt mean you cant
prepare for them.
Although this is a high stakes test, it is helpful to remember that most people, regardless of their
ranking, get offered an F1 post somewhere, and depending on the competition ratio for the post you
are applying for (see the application handbook available at www.foudationprogramme.nhs.uk) you
may not need to score brilliantly.
So how do I prepare?
1. Firstly, have a look at the SJT monograph which describes what they are and the attributes
that the foundation programme is looking for. Remember they are testing how you would
behave as an F1.
2. Have a go at a few questions on the practice paper on the Foundation Programme website
which includes answers and rationales so that you get an idea of how they intend to test
whether you have (or at least understand) the attributes that they are looking for.
3. Read, and re-read (including all the sub links and references) the GMC guidance on Good
Medical Practice. You may find it helpful to use the online version which has hyperlinks to all
the references and explanatory guidance rather than the paper version.
4. Deeply embed yourself into the culture and practices of the medical teams on each of your
rotations and learn from your F1 colleagues. What do they do in these situations? If their
consultant is consistently late for work, are they the best person to address it? If not, who
might they talk to?
5. Have another go at the rest of the practice paper on the Foundation Programme website
do you have a better grasp of how to answer? If yes great. If not dont ignore this. If the
rationales given dont make sense to you, ask a friendly F1 to talk you through a few
questions and ask them to explain their thought processes.
Were they late only once with a reasonable excuse? (not a problem)
Are they late consistently leaving you and the team with too many jobs to get through in the
afternoon? (annoying but not putting patients at risk, a communication/negotiation issue)
Are they consistently late, arriving smelling of alcohol, and sitting alone in the doctors office
leaving their registrar to make all the decisions but available for advice (possible mental
health and dependency issue, needs addressing, patient care may suffer)
Arrives late only once but smells of alcohol and behaves erratically, and insists on personally
putting a chest drain into the first patient you see (patients at immediate risk).
In the last instance, where a patients life is at immediate risk, it would be wrong to delay in anyway.
I would probably gather forces with whoever was at hand (e.g. charge nurse, other junior doctors,
registrar) and guide the consultant into a side room, staying with them until a senior colleague could
be brought in to address the more serious implications.
Relying entirely on crammer books for the SJTs
At some point you are likely Google the words SJT, and be bombarded with books or online courses
promising excellent results and fool-proof systems. It has been shown that students that apply these
systems rigidly, rather than applying their own genuine common sense and deeper thought
processes, do worse on average. By all means buy them and read them, but then put them away and
make sure you use your own deep thought processes.
Reading the wrong books on SJTs
SJTs are common tests in medicine: for example they are part of the selection process for application
to medical school and for applying for a GP training post. If you revise from the wrong books, the
answers may be pitched at the wrong level for example it might be more appropriate for a more
senior doctor to discuss mental health/dependency issues with a senior colleague.
Finally
Dont panic. You will get a placement somewhere (probably). Anyone with special circumstances will
get a placement in the area they live in. If worst comes to worst, you might want to put an option
with a low competition ratio as one of your choices, so that you have a pretty good idea of where
you are likely to be sent if you dont score as highly as you had hoped; and be confident that the
time you spend as an embedded apprentice in your final year should give you a head start in these
tests.
Dr Kathleen Leedham-Green
KUMEC lead years 1&2