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Chapter 15 Using Tests in Organizational Settings

Chapter 15 Using Tests in Organizational Settings. History. Walter Dill Scott (1915) “The Scientific Selection of Salesmen” – proposed that employers use group tests for personnel selection. Scott’s influence led to Army Alpha & Beta testing during WW I. Those were discontinued following WWI.

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Chapter 15 Using Tests in Organizational Settings

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  1. Chapter 15Using Tests in Organizational Settings

  2. History • Walter Dill Scott (1915) “The Scientific Selection of Salesmen” – proposed that employers use group tests for personnel selection. • Scott’s influence led to Army Alpha & Beta testing during WW I. Those were discontinued following WWI. • Employment testing, however, continued when Millicent Pond (1927) studied the selection and placement of apprentice metal workers. • Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory originated from this early work. • The Psychological Corporation organized by J. McKeen Cattell began.

  3. History (continued) • WW II: Army General Classification Test (AGCT) developed by Bingham (chief psychologist of War Dept.). • Multiple commercial applications have since been developed. • 1964 Civil Rights Act stimulated interest in insuring that tests were valid and fair. • 1978 – Uniform Guidelines for Employee Selection were developed.

  4. Pre-employment Testing The Employment Interview Traditional – “getting to know you function.” …Biased by sex, age, race, and physical attractiveness. -This bias has been attributed more to the interviewer than to the process.

  5. Pre-employment Testing (cont.) The Employment Interview Structured – standardized, allows scoring. Higher inter-rater reliability, internal consistency, and concurrent validity. • Focus on behavior – what you have done or can do rather than how you feel about… • Each candidate receives the same questions in the same order. • The questions require a job analysis covering important job functions and duties (content validity); therefore job related. • E.g, Human Resources Professional Job Interview

  6. Performance Tests • High-fidelitytests replicate the job setting as realistically as possible; e.g., flight simulator. • Assessment Centers – large scale replications of the job that require candidates to solve typical job problems by role playing or demonstrating proficiency. • Low-fidelity tests simulate the job task using a written, verbal, or visual description. • Video tests – candidates are shown typical job situations and asked to choose his/her response from multiple choice format. • Validity of performance tests in predicting job performance =.54 • Have high content validity, and are job related.

  7. Tests for Specific Types of Jobs E.g.,

  8. Personality Inventories • Examine traits found useful in predicting job success: conscientiousness, extraversion, emotional stability, etc. E.g., The 16PF Questionnaire (developed by Raymond Cattell) gives a profile. • Poor predictors of job success generally.

  9. Five-factor Model of Personality(NEO Personality Inventory) • NEUROTICISM • EXTRAVERSION • OPENNESS TO EXPERIENCE • AGREEABLENESS • CONSCIENTIOUSNESS

  10. The Hogan Personality Inventory (HPI) • Adjustment • Ambition • Sociability • Likeability • Prudence • Intellectance • School success (Validity key to detect careless or random responding.)

  11. The Hogan Personality Inventory Predictive Validity: • Sociability predicts sales revenue (r=.51) • Prudence predicts supervisors’ ratings of conscientiousness (r=.22) • School Success predicts training performance (r=.34-.55)

  12. Integrity Testing Two categories: • Physiological measures • Paper-and-pencil tests • Physiological – polygraph tests - problem with false positives (mistakenly classifying innocent takers as guilty) and poor predictive validity. • The Employee Polygraph Protection Act lf 1988 forbids the use of the polygraph as an employment test. Interestingly, employers providing security services and government agencies are exempt from this law! • Paper-and-pencil integrity tests predict counterproductive behaviors (.29-.39). • But highly susceptible to faking.

  13. Legal Constraints • 1978 Uniform Guidelines for Employee Selection catalog “best practices” to promote fairness and legal defensibility of employment practices. (Note: Congress did not pass the Guidelines and therefore they are not federal law.) • Any process that is used to make a hiring decision is defined as a “test.” Includes application forms, reference checks, letters of reference and tests. • All employment tests must be job-related and based on a job analysis. • “Adverse impact” is the exclusion of a disproportionate number of persons belonging to a protected class based on race, gender, age, etc. In these cases, alternative methods for assessing job candidates must be found.

  14. Performance Impairment Tests • An alternative to chemical analysis for the presence of drugs. • Can use a simulation to detect impairment in motor skills or hand-eye coordination (similar to a video game). • Compare to the individual’s baseline. • Can be done quickly and easily in the workplace as opposed to taking the employee off the work site for drug testing.

  15. Performance Appraisal • Ranking employees (best to worst) • Forced distribution to get a normal curve, using categories such as “outstanding,” “above average,” etc. – prevents the ranker from assigning all people to one category. • Rating employees • graphic rating scale- each of the scales represents a dimension, such as quality or quantity of work. Guided by anchors. • Behaviorally anchored rating scales (BARS) use on-the-job behaviors as anchors for the rating scale. • Behavioral checklist - rating frequency of important behaviors.

  16. Performance Appraisal • Rating Errors • Leniency errors – giving all employees better ratings than they deserve. • Severity errors – giving all employees worse ratings than they deserve. • Central-tendency errors – using only the middle of the rating scale and ignoring highest and lowest scale categories. • Halo effect – when raters let their judgment on one dimension influence judgments on other dimensions (ie.,giving low rating on quality and quantity of work when employee met standards for quantity of work) • 3600 feedback: ratings from supervisors, peers, subordinates, or customers.

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