Category of Work
Article
Publication Title
Philippine Journal of Physical Therapy
Abstract
Clinical education is the crucible in which physical therapy students integrate knowledge, skills, and professional judgment into safe, ethical, and person-centered practice. Yet globally, the assessment of clinical performance remains highly variable, shaped by disparate tools, rubrics, and levels of assessor preparation. While several countries have adopted nationally standardized approaches to clinical assessment, many contexts—including the Philippines—continue to rely on locally developed or institution-specific systems, resulting in inconsistent expectations, inequitable student experiences, and limited capacity for benchmarking, research, and quality improvement. This editorial argues that good intentions alone are insufficient and that the profession must move toward shared, trustworthy standards for assessing clinical competence. Drawing on international exemplars and the recently released Competency-Based Education in Physical Therapy (CBEPT) framework, we outline core principles for standardization that promote validity, reliability, fairness, and patient safety while preserving local contextual flexibility. A pragmatic national framework is proposed, incorporating competency mapping, workplace-based assessments, entrustable professional activities, shared rubrics, rater training, and continuous quality cycles. We conclude by positioning assessment standardization not as bureaucratic compliance, but as an ethical obligation to learners, educators, and the public, and we invite continued dialogue to advance clinical education locally and globally.
First Page
1
Last Page
5
DOI
https://doi.org/10.46409/002.QUJZ9284
Publication Date
12-26-2025
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Vitente, Arvie; Rafael, Carmina; and Lazaro, Rolando, "Standardizing assessment of clinical performance in physical therapy: From good intentions to shared standards" (2025). Rehabilitation Sciences Department Faculty Articles. 2.
https://digitalcommons.lewisu.edu/rehabilitation_facpubs/2
