Skip to main page content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Access keys NCBI Homepage MyNCBI Homepage Main Content Main Navigation
. 2025 Apr 1;100(4):419-424.
doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005973. Epub 2024 Jan 16.

The Shadow Economy of Effort: Unintended Consequences of Pass/Fail Grading on Medical Students' Clinical Education and Patient Care Skills

The Shadow Economy of Effort: Unintended Consequences of Pass/Fail Grading on Medical Students' Clinical Education and Patient Care Skills

Eric Warm et al. Acad Med. .

Abstract

The shift to pass/fail grading in undergraduate medical education was designed to reduce medical students' stress. However, this change has given rise to a "shadow economy of effort," as students move away from traditional didactic and clinical learning to engage in increasing numbers of research, volunteer, and work experiences to enhance their residency applications. These extracurricular efforts to secure a residency position are subphenomena of the hidden curriculum. Medical schools do not officially require all the activities students need to be most competitive for residency selection; therefore, students, as rational actors, participate in the activities they think will most help them succeed.Here, the authors frame residency application and selection as a complex adaptive system (CAS), which self-organizes without centralized control or hierarchical intent. Individuals in a CAS operate in environments marked by volatility, randomness, and uncertainty-all of which are abundant in the residency selection process. Outcomes in such systems, like the development of a shadow economy, are novel, emergent, and cannot always be anticipated. To address these challenges, the authors suggest the need for deep understanding of the system's elements, interrelationships, and dynamics, including feedback loops and emergent properties. Optimizing the results of a CAS requires incentivizing outcomes over activities, ensuring open information flow, and engaging in continuous monitoring and evaluation.The current pass/fail era and resultant shadow economy of effort risk creating a triple harm by devaluing clinical excellence, burning out medical students, and potentially producing superficial or, worse, inauthentic academic and community work. Medical educators must optimize residency application and selection for cooperative outcomes and design incentives to ensure the outputs of medical education align student, institutional, patient, and societal goals. Without a set of predictive "answers," the authors suggest a process of determining actions to advance this ultimate aim and reduce harm.

PubMed Disclaimer

Similar articles

Cited by

References

    1. Bastiat F. Essays on Political Economy, translated by Patrick Jame Stirling. London, England: Provost and Co; 1873.
    1. Bullock J, Hauer KE. Healing a Broken Clerkship Grading System. AAMCNews. Published February 20, 2020. https://www.aamc.org/news/healing-broken-clerkship-grading-system . Accessed November 26, 2024.
    1. Rohe DE, Barrier PA, Clark MM, Cook DA, Vickers KS, Decker PA. The benefits of pass-fail grading on stress, mood, and group cohesion in medical students. Mayo Clin Proc. 2006;81:1443–1448.
    1. Bloodgood RA, Short JG, Jackson JM, Martindale JR. A change to pass/fail grading in the first two years at one medical school results in improved psychological well-being. Acad Med. 2009;84:655–662.
    1. Cain J, Medina M, Romanelli F, Persky A. Deficiencies of traditional grading systems and recommendations for the future. Am J Pharm Educ. 2022;86:8850.

MeSH terms

LinkOut - more resources