Chapter 5
Chapter 5
- Extraneous Factors. The fourth problem with letters of recommendation concerns extraneous factors that affect
their writing and evaluation.
- That letters that contained specific examples were rated higher than letters that contained generalities.
- That even though most letters of recommendation are positive, letters written by references who like
applicants are longer than those written by references who do not.
- That the longer the recommendation letter, the more positively the letter was perceived.
- A promising approach to increasing the validity of references is to increase the structure of the reference
check. This can be done by conducting a job analysis and then creating a reference checklist that is tied
directly to the job analysis results.
- As this discussion illustrates, references and letters of recommendation often are not great predictors of
performance.
ETHICAL ISSUES
- First, explicitly state your relationship with the person you are recommending.
That is, are you the applicant's professor, boss, coworker, friend, relative, or some combination of the
fiveft.
This is important because people often have dual roles: A person may be a supervisor as well as a good
friend.
- Second, be honest in providing details.
- Finally, let the applicant see your reference before sending it, and give him the chance to decline to use it.
PERCEPTUAL ABILITY
- Perceptual ability consists of vision (near, far, night, peripheral), color discrimination, depth perception, glare
sensitivity, speech (clarity, recognition), and hearing (sensitivity, auditory attention, sound localization). Abilities
from this dimension are useful for such occupations as machinist, cabinet maker, die setter, and tool and die
maker.
- Perceptual ability Measure of facility with such processes as spatial relations and form perception.
PSYCHOMOTOR ABILITY
- Psychomotor ability includes finger dexterity, manual dexterity, control precision, multilimb coordination, response
control, reaction time, arm-hand steadiness, wrist-finger speed, and speed-of-limb.
- Psychomotor abilities are useful for such jobs as carpenter, police officer, sewing-machine operator, post office
clerk, and truck driver.
PHYSICAL ABILITY
- Physical ability tests are often used for jobs that require physical strength and stamina, such as police officer,
firefighter, and lifeguard. Physical ability is measured in one of two ways: job simulations and physical agility tests.
With a job simulation, applicants actually demonstrate job-related physical behaviors. These are the Tests that
measure an applicant's level of physical ability required for a job.
- Though job simulations are highly content valid, from a financial or safety perspective they are often impractical.
- Job analyses consistently indicate that the physical requirements of police officers can be divided into two
categories: athletic and defensive. Athletic requirements are easy to simulate because they involve such
behaviors as running, crawling, and pulling. Defensive requirements, however, are difficult to safely and
accurately simulate because they involve such behaviors as applying restraining holds, kicking, and fending off
attackers.
- Because of the difficulty in using simulations to measure these last types of behaviors, physical ability tests are
used. Instead of simulating defensive behaviors, tests are developed that measure the basic abilities needed to
perform these behaviors.
- Tests commonly used to measure the abilities needed to perform defensive behaviors include push-ups, sit-ups,
and grip strength.
- Because physical ability tests have tremendous adverse impact against women, they have been criticized on
three major points: job relatedness, passing scores, and the time at which they should be required.
JOB RELATEDNESS
- Though few people would disagree that it is better for a police officer to be strong and fit than weak and out of
shape, many argue whether it is necessary to be physically fit.
- Currently, many police officers are overweight, slow, and out of shape, yet they perform safely and at high levels.
- Thus, critics argue that physical agility is not an essential part of the job. This is especially true due to
technological advances in policing.
PASSING SCORES
- A second problem with physical ability tests is determining passing scores; that is, how fast must an applicant run
or how much weight must be lifted to pass a physical ability testft Passing scores for physical ability tests are set
based on one of two types of standards: relative or absolute. Relative standards indicate how well an individual
scores compared with others in a group such as women, police applicants, or current police officers.
- The advantage to using relative standards is that adverse impact is eliminated because men are compared with
men and women with women. The problem with relative scales, however, is that a female applicant might be
strong compared with other women, yet not strong enough to perform the job. Furthermore, relative standards
based on protected classes (e.g., sex, race) were made illegal by the 1991 Civil Rights Act. In contrast, absolute
passing scores are set at the minimum level needed to perform a job.
WORK SAMPLES
- With a work sample, the applicant performs actual job- related tasks. For example, an applicant for a job as
automotive mechanic might be asked to fix a torn fan belt.
- Work samples are excellent selection tools for several reasons.
First, because they are directly related to job tasks, they have excellent content validity.
Second, scores from work samples tend to predict actual work performance and thus have excellent
criterion validity.
Third, because job applicants are able to see the connection between the job sample and the work
performed on the job, the samples have excellent face validity and thus are challenged less often in civil
service appeals or in court cases.
Finally, work samples have lower racial differences in test scores than do written cognitive ability tests.
- The main reason for not using work samples is that they
- can be expensive to both construct and administer. For
- this reason, work samples are best used for well-paying jobs for which many employees will be hired.
ASSESSMENT CENTERS
- An assessment center is a selection technique characterized by the use of multiple assessment methods that
allow multiple assessors to actually observe applicants perform simulated job tasks. Its major advantages are that
assessment methods are all job-related and multiple trained assessors help to guard against many (but not all)
types of selection bias. It is a method of selecting employees in which applicants participate in several job-related
activities, at least one of which must be a simulation, and are rated by several trained evaluators.
For a selection technique to be considered an assessment center, it must meet the following requirements:
The assessment center activities must be based on the results of a thorough job analysis.
Behaviors displayed by participants must be classified into meaningful and relevant categories such as
behavioral dimensions, attributes, characteristics, aptitudes, qualities, skills, abilities, competencies, or
knowledge.
At least one of the assessment techniques must be a job simulation.
Multiple trained assessors must be used.
Behavioral observations must be documented applicant behavior is observed.
Assessors must prepare a report of their observations.
The overall judgment of an applicant must be based on a combination of information from the
multiple assessors and multiple techniques.
Experience Rating
- In giving credit for experience, one must consider the amount of experience, the level of performance
demonstrated during the previous experience, and how related the experience is to the current job.
Biodata
- Biodata is a selection method that considers an applicant’s life, school, military, community, and work experience.
- Meta-analyses have shown that biodata is a good predictor of job performance, as well as the best predictor of
future employee tenure.
Criticisms of Biodata
- Even though biodata does a good job of predicting future employee behavior, it has been criticized on two major
points.
- The first holds that the validity of biodata may not be stable—that is, its ability to predict employee behavior
decreases with time.
- The second criticism is that some biodata items may not meet the legal requirements stated in the federal Uniform
Guidelines, which establish fair hiring method.
- To make biodata instruments less disagreeable to critics, Gandy and Dye (1989) developed four standards to
consider for each potential item:
1) The item must deal with events under a person’s control (e.g., a person would have no control over birth order but
would have control over the number of speeding tickets she received).
2) The item must be job-related.
3) The answer to the item must be verifiable (e.g., a question about how many jobs an applicant has had is
verifiable, but a question about the applicant’s favorite type of book is not).
4) The item must not invade an applicant’s privacy (asking why an applicant quit a job is permissible; asking about
an applicant’s sex life is usually not).
Predicting Performance Using Personality, Interest, and Character
Personality Inventories
- are becoming increasingly popular as an employee selection method, in part because they predict performance
better than was once thought, and in part because they result in less adverse impact than do ability tests.
- Personality inventories fall into one of two categories based on their intended purpose: measurement of types of
normal personality or measurement of psychopathology (abnormal personality).
Tests of Normal Personality - measure the traits exhibited by normal individuals in everyday life. Examples of such traits
are extraversion, shyness, assertiveness, and friendliness.
- Determination of the number and type of personality dimensions measured by an inventory can usually be (1)
based on a theory, (2) statistically based, or (3) empirically based.
- Theory-based test is identical to the number postulated by a well-known theorist.
- Statistically based test is determined through a statistical process called factor analysis.
- An empirical based test is determined by grouping answers given by people known to possess a certain
characteristic.
- Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory—2 (MMPI-2), hundreds of items were administered to groups of
psychologically healthy people and to people known to have certain psychological problems such as paranoia.
- Although there are hundreds of personality inventories that measure hundreds of traits, there is general
agreement that most personality traits can be placed into one of five broad personality dimensions. Popularly
known as the “Big Five” or the five-factor model, these dimensions are;
openness to experience (bright, inquisitive);
conscientiousness (reliable, dependable);
extraversion (outgoing, friendly);
agreeableness (works well with others, a team player);
and emotional stability (not anxious, tense).
- That objective personality inventories are useful in predicting performance in the United States and Europe is
indicated in meta-analyses. Though there is some disagreement across the various meta-analyses, probably the
best interpretation is that;
personality can predict performance at low but statistically significant levels;
personality inventories can add incremental validity to the use of other selection tests;
conscientiousness is the best predictor in most occupations and for most criteria;
and the validity of the other four personality dimensions is dependent on the type of job and criterion for
which the test is being validated.
One of the concerns about using personality inventories for employee selection is that, because they are
self-reports, they are relatively easy to fake.
Tests of Psychopathology - Tests of psychopathology (abnormal behavior) determine whether individuals have serious
psychological problems such as depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia.
- Tests of psychopathology are generally scored in one of two ways: objectively or projectively.
- Projective tests provide the respondent with unstructured tasks such as describing ink blots and drawing
pictures.
Rorschach Inkblot Test
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- Objective tests are structured so that the respondent is limited to a few answers that will be scored by
standardized keys.
Interest Inventories
- These tests are designed to tap vocational interests.
- The most commonly used interest inventory is the Strong Interest Inventory (SII), which asks individuals to
indicate whether they like or dislike 325 items such as bargaining, repairing electrical wiring, and taking
responsibilityThe theory behind these tests is that an individual with interests similar to those of people in a
particular field will more likely be satisfied in that field than in a field composed of people whose interests are
dissimilar.
- Other popular interest inventories include the;
Minnesota Vocational Interest Inventory,
the Occupational Preference Inventory,
the Kuder Occupational Interest Survey,
the Kuder Preference Record,
and the California Occupational Preference System.
- Employees whose interest matched the nature of their jobs were more satisfied with their jobs and performed at
higher levels.
- Interest inventories are useful in vocational counseling (helping people find the careers for which they are best
suited).
Integrity Tests
- Integrity tests (also called honesty tests) tell an employer the probability that an applicant would steal money or
merchandise.
Paper-and-pencil integrity tests, which are either (1) overt or (2) personality-based.
Overt integrity tests are based on the premise that a person’s attitudes about theft as well as his previous theft
behavior will accurately predict his future honesty.
Personality-based integrity tests are more general in that they tap a variety of personality traits (e.g.,
conscientiousness, risk taking) thought to be related to a wide range of counterproductive behavior such as theft,
absenteeism, and violence.
Shrinkage - The amount of goods lost by an organization as a result of theft, breakage, or other loss
Credit History
- According to a survey by the Society for Human Resource Management, 47% of employers conduct credit checks
for at least some jobs (SHRM, 2012).
Credit checks are conducted for two reasons:
1) Employers believe that people who owe money might be more likely to steal or accept bribes, and
2) employees with good credit are more responsible and conscientious and thus will be better employees.
Graphology
- Graphology also called handwriting analysis, a method of measuring personality by looking at the way in which a
person writes.
- The idea behind handwriting analysis is that the way people write reveals their personality, which in turn should
indicate work performance. From these writing characteristics, information about temperament and mental, social,
work, and moral traits is obtained.
- To analyze a person’s handwriting, a graphologist looks at the size, slant, width, regularity, and pressure of a
writing sample.
- Graphology predicts best when the writing sample is autobiographical (the writer writes an essay about himself),
which means that graphologists are making their predictions more on the content of the writing than on the quality
of the handwriting (Simner & Goffin, 2003)
Psychological Exams
- In jobs involving public safety (e.g., law enforcement, nuclear power, transportation), it is common for employers
to give psychological exams to applicants after a conditional offer of hire has been made.
- Psychological exams usually consist of an interview by a clinical psychologist, an examination of the applicant’s
life history.
- It is important to keep in mind that psychological exams are not designed to predict employee performance.
Therefore, they should only be used to determine if a potential employee is a danger to himself or others
Medical Exams
- In jobs requiring physical exertion, many employers require that a medical exam be taken after a conditional
offer of hire has been made.
- In these exams, the physician is given a copy of the job description and asked to determine if there are any
medical conditions that will keep the employee from safely performing the job.
Comparison of Techniques
Validity
- It is clear that the unstructured interview, education, interest inventories, and some personality traits are not good
predictors of future employee performance for most jobs. It is also clear that ability, work samples, biodata, and
structured interviews do a fairly good job of predicting future employee performance.
- Though much more research is needed on this topic, it appears that the most valid selection battery includes a
cognitive ability test and either a work sample, an integrity test, or a structured interview (Schmidt & Hunter,
1998).
- Even though some selection techniques are better than others, all are potentially useful methods for selecting
employees
Legal Issues
- Cognitive ability and GPA will result in the highest levels of adverse impact, whereas integrity tests, references,
and personality inventories will result in the lowest levels.
- In terms of face validity, applicants perceive interviews, work samples/simulations, and résumés as being the
most job-related/fair, and they view graphology, integrity tests, and personality tests as being the least job
related/fair (Anderson et al., 2010).
Rejecting Applicants
- Once a decision has been made regarding which applicants will be hired, those who will not be hired must be
notified.
- Rejected applicants should be treated well because they are potential customers and potential applicants for other
positions that might become available in the organization.
- In fact, Aamodt and Peggans (1988) found that applicants who were rejected “properly” were more likely to
continue to be a customer at the organization and to apply for future job openings.
Rejection letter - A letter from an organization to an applicant informing the applicant that he or she will not receive a job
offer.
- Aamodt and Peggans (1988) found that rejection letters differ to the extent that they contain the following types of
responses:
A personally addressed and signed letter
The company’s appreciation to the applicant for applying for a position with the company
A compliment about the applicant’s qualifications
A comment about the high qualifications possessed by the other applicants
Information about the individual who was actually hired
A wish of good luck in future endeavors
A promise to keep the applicant’s résumé on file
Though research has not clearly identified the best way to write a rejection letter, the following guidelines
are probably a good place to start:
Send rejection letters or emails to applicants
Don’t send the rejection letter immediately
Be as personable and as specific as possible in the letter
Including a statement about the individual who received the job can increase applicant satisfaction with
both the selection process and the organization
Do not include the name of a contact person