There were 2 fundamental reasons why ASCP eliminated the practical part of the 
examination:
1- they got to the conclusion that there was no way to determine if the person 
sending the slides was the one who really made them, and
2- it was getting too costly to send the slides to review or to gather the 
reviewers to qualify the sections, so they decided to eliminate the practical 
and made the changes we have now (renewal and CEU).
René J.

--- On Thu, 2/19/09, Rittman, Barry R <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Rittman, Barry R <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Practical Exam
To: "Victor Tobias" <[email protected]>, "Histonet" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, February 19, 2009, 6:30 PM

Victor
I cannot believe that you have said this.
Although I did not think that the practical examination was the ultimate test
of skill ,  it did at least provide some uniformity.
With an extension of the logic that you use it is just as easy to allow the
pathologist to certify that the technician is qualified even without a written
examination. 
Without a somewhat standardized practical there is no guarantee that the
technician will have any practical knowledge outside their individual
laboratory.
Didactic without adequate practical knowledge is, as far as I am concerned,
useless.
What is really needed is a national standardized written and practical test
that is administered by NSH.
I am not holding my breath that this will happen.
Barry 

________________________________________
From: [email protected]
[[email protected]] On Behalf Of Victor Tobias
[[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2009 5:03 PM
To: Histonet
Subject: [Histonet] Practical Exam

There has been discussion regarding the removal of the practical exam.
To me it has not been removed, but the responsibility has shifted to
whomever signs off on the student. In the case of OJT, the pathologist
has verified that this student can cut and stain. Of course what is
acceptable to one pathologist may not be to another. Do they get tested
in the art of troubleshooting...... As far as the schools go, they
shouldn't be graduating anyone that can't cut, stain and troubleshoot.
So I don't really see a problem with the absence of the practical. It is
Friday somewhere.

Victor

--
Victor Tobias
Clinical Applications Analyst
University of Washington Medical Center
Dept of Pathology Room BB220
1959 NE Pacific
Seattle, WA 98195
[email protected]
206-598-2792
206-598-7659 Fax
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