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Week 6 - Utility

The document discusses utility analysis which evaluates the costs and benefits of tests used for employee selection. It covers factors that affect a test's utility like validity and selection ratios. Methods for conducting utility analysis include Taylor-Russell tables and the Brogden-Cronbach-Gleser utility formula. Practical considerations in utility analysis include the applicant pool, job complexity, and cut scores. Common methods for setting cut scores are also outlined.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views

Week 6 - Utility

The document discusses utility analysis which evaluates the costs and benefits of tests used for employee selection. It covers factors that affect a test's utility like validity and selection ratios. Methods for conducting utility analysis include Taylor-Russell tables and the Brogden-Cronbach-Gleser utility formula. Practical considerations in utility analysis include the applicant pool, job complexity, and cut scores. Common methods for setting cut scores are also outlined.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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What is Utility?

Utility Analysis

Utility Utility Analysis


Index of Utility


FACTORS THAT AFFECT A TEST’S UTILITY →

Psychometric Soundness




Cost

➢ Economic
HOW IS A UTILITY ANALYSIS CONDUCTED?

➢ Noneconomic
Expectancy Data

Benefits


Taylor-Russell Tables



Test’s Validity

concurrent validation
Selection Ratio procedures

Brogden-Cronbach-Gleser Utility Formula


E.g., If there are 50 positions and 100
applicants, then the selection ratio is 50/100,
or .50.
Base Rate ➢

E.g., If a firm employs 25 computer ➢


programmers and 20 are considered
successful, the base rate would be .80.

Naylor-Shine Tables


𝐒𝐚𝐯𝐢𝐧𝐠 = (n)(t)(r)(SDy )(m)
𝐂𝐨𝐬𝐭 𝐨𝐟 𝐭𝐞𝐬𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠 = (# of applicants × cost per applicant)
Savings – Cost of Testing
E.g., Suppose we hire 10 auditors per year, the average person in
→ this position stays two years, the validity coefficient is .30, and the
average annual salary for the position is $30,000, and we have 50
applicants for 10 openings. Thus,
n = 10; t = 2; r = .30; SDy = $30,000 x .40 = $12,000
m = 10/50 = .20 = 1.40 (converted using standardized table)
➢ cost of testing = 50 applicants x $10

(10) (2) (.30) (12,000) (1.40) – (50) (10) = $100,300 of savings


Decision Theory and Test Utility SOME PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS

The Pool of Job Applicants.

The Complexity of the Job.

Base Rate

The Cut Score in Use.

Hit Rate
Reference Point or Cut Score

→ Relative or Norm-Referenced Cute Score

→ Fixed or Absolute Cut Score

Miss Rate

→ False Negative Multiple Cut Scores

→ False Positive

Multistage or Multiple Hurdle


→ →


Compensatory Model of Selection IRT-BASED METHODS

IRT-Based Methods



Methods for Setting Cut Scores

ANGOFF METHOD

Angoff Method

Item-Mapping Method

→ →



Disadvantages.

KNOWN GROUPS METHOD


Bookmark Method
Known Groups Method or Method of Contrasting Groups

Disadvantage.

OTHER METHODS

Method of Predictive Yield

Discriminant Analysis

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