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E MPLOYEE T ESTING, S ELECTION & I NTERVIEWING C ANDIDATES Week 6.

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Presentation on theme: "E MPLOYEE T ESTING, S ELECTION & I NTERVIEWING C ANDIDATES Week 6."— Presentation transcript:

1 E MPLOYEE T ESTING, S ELECTION & I NTERVIEWING C ANDIDATES Week 6

2 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Why Careful Selection is Important Organizational Performance Legal Obligations and Liability The Importance of Selecting the Right Employees Costs of Recruiting and Hiring

3 Avoiding Negligent Hiring Claims  Carefully scrutinize information on employment applications.  Get written authorization for reference checks, and check references.  Save all records and information about the applicant.  Reject applicants for false statements or conviction records for offenses related to the job.  Balance the applicant’s privacy rights with others’ “need to know.”  Take immediate disciplinary action if problems arise.

4 Basic Testing Concepts  Reliability Consistency of scores obtained by the same person when retested with identical or equivalent tests. Are test results stable over time?  Validity Indicates whether a test is measuring what it is supposed to be measuring. Does the test actually measure what it is intended to measure?

5 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Sample Picture Card from Thematic Apperception Test Source: Reprinted by permission of the publishers from Henry A. Murray, THEMATIC APPERCEPTION TEST, Plate 12F, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1943.

6 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Types of Validity Criterion Validity Content Validity Test Validity Face Validity

7 www.slideshare.com/natriumz How to Validate a Test 1 Relate Your Test Scores and Criteria: scores versus actual performance Choose the Tests: test battery or single test Steps in Test Validation Analyze the Job: predictors and criteria Administer the Tests: concurrent or predictive validation 234 Cross-Validate and Revalidate: repeat Steps 3 and 4 with a different sample 5

8 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Testing Program Guidelines 1.Use tests as supplements. 2.Validate the tests. 3.Monitor your testing/selection program. 4.Keep accurate records. 5.Use a certified psychologist. 6.Manage test conditions. 7.Revalidate periodically.

9 Legal Privacy Issues  Defamation Libeling or slandering of employees or former employees by an employer.  Avoiding Employee Defamation Suits 1.Train supervisors regarding the importance of employee confidentiality. 2.Adopt a “need to know” policy. 3.Disclose procedures impacting confidentially of information to employees.

10 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Sample Test Source: Courtesy of NYT Permissions.

11 Using Tests at Work  Major Types of Tests Basic skills tests Job skills tests Psychological tests  Why Use Testing? Increased work demands = more testing Screen out bad or dishonest employees Reduce turnover by personality profiling

12 Computerized and Online Testing  Online tests Telephone prescreening Offline computer tests Virtual “inbox” tests Online problem-solving tests  Types of Tests Specialized work sample tests Numerical ability tests Reading comprehension tests Clerical comparing and checking tests

13 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Types of Tests Cognitive (Mental) Abilities Achievement Motor and Physical Abilities Personality and Interests What Tests Measure

14 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Type of Question Applicant Might Expect on a Test of Mechanical Comprehension

15 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Sample Personality Test Items Source: Elaine Pulakos, Selection Assessment Methods, SHRM Foundation, 2005, p. 9. Reprinted by permission of Society for Human Resource Management via Copyright Clearance Center.

16 www.slideshare.com/natriumz The “Big Five” Extraversion Emotional Stability/ Neuroticism Agreeableness Openness to Experience Conscientiousness

17 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Work Samples and Simulations Work Samples Miniature Job Training and Evaluation Management Assessment Centers Video-Based Situational Testing Measuring Work Performance Directly

18 Background Investigations and Reference Checks  Investigations and Checks Reference checks Background employment checks Criminal records Driving records Credit checks  Why? To verify factual information provided by applicants. To uncover damaging information.

19 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Reference Checking Form Source: Society for Human Resource Management, © 2004. Reproduced with permission of Society for Human Resource Management in the Format Textbook via Copyright Clearance Center.

20 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Background Investigations and Reference Checks (cont’d) Former Employers Current Supervisors Written References Social Networking Sites Commercial Credit Rating Companies Sources of Information

21 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Limitations on Background Investigations and Reference Checks Background Investigations and Reference Checks Supervisor Reluctance Employer Guidelines Legal Issues: Privacy Legal Issues: Defamation

22 Making Background Checks More Useful 1.Include on the application form a statement for applicants to sign explicitly authorizing a background check. 2.Use telephone references if possible. 3.Be persistent in obtaining information. 4.Use references provided by the candidate as a source for other references. 5.Ask open-ended questions to elicit more information from references.

23 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Using Pre-employment Information Services 1 Notice of adverse action to applicant/employee Employer certification to reporting agency Acquisition and Use of Background Information Disclosure to and authorization by applicant/employee Providing copies of reports to applicant/employee 234

24 The Polygraph and Honesty Testing  Employee Polygraph Protection Act of 1988 Generally prohibits polygraph examinations by all private employers unless: The employer has suffered an economic loss or injury. The employee in question had access to the property. There is a reasonable prior suspicion. The employee is told the details of the investigation, as well as questions to be asked on the polygraph test itself. Exceptions: Private security employees Employees with access to drugs National defense and security (FBI, DOE, and DOJ)

25 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Handwriting Exhibit Used by Graphologist Source: Kathryn Sackhein, Handwriting Analysis and the Employee Selection Process (New York: Quorum Books, 1990), p. 45. Reproduced with permission of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.

26 Honesty Testing Programs: What Employers Can Do  Antitheft Screening Procedure: Ask blunt questions. Listen, rather than talk. Do a credit check. Check all employment and personal references. Use paper-and-pencil honesty tests and psychological tests. Test for drugs. Establish a search-and-seizure policy and conduct searches.

27 Physical Examination  Reasons for preemployment medical examinations: To verify that the applicant meets the physical requirements of the position. To discover any medical limitations to be taken into account in placing the applicant. To establish a record and baseline of the applicant’s health for future insurance or compensation claims. To reduce absenteeism and accidents. To detect communicable diseases that may be unknown to the applicant.

28 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Substance Abuse Screening (cont’d) Safety: Impairment vs. Presence Recreational Use vs. Addiction Americans with Disabilities Act Drug Free Workplace Act of 1988 Intrusiveness of Procedures Accuracy of Tests Ethical and Legal Issues

29 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Basic Features of Interviews Interview Structure Interview Administration Selection Interviews Interview Content

30 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Types of Interviews Selection Interview Appraisal Interview Exit Interview Types of Interviews

31 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Interview Formats Unstructured or Nondirective Interview Interview Formats Structured or Directive Interview

32 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Officer Programs Applicant Interview Form Source: Adapted from http://www.uscg.mil/jobs/dc/DCPr ograms/OProgramForms/PDFS/D CA/Interview%20CG-5527.pdf. Accessed May 9, 2007.

33 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Officer Programs Applicant Interview Form (cont’d) Source: Adapted from http://www.uscg.mil/jobs/dc/DCPr ograms/OProgramForms/PDFS/D CA/Interview%20CG-5527.pdf. Accessed May 9, 2007.

34 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Interview Content Situational Interview Stress Interview Behavioral Interview Job-Related Interview Types of Questions

35 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Administering the Interview Unstructured Sequential Interview Structured Sequential Interview Panel Interview Mass Interview Phone and Video Interviews Computerized Interviews Web-Assisted Interviews Ways in Which Interviews Can Be Conducted

36 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Panel Interview www.themegallery.com

37 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Mass Interview www.themegallery.com

38 www.slideshare.com/natriumz What Can Undermine An Interview’s Usefulness? Nonverbal Behavior and Impression Management Applicant’s Personal Characteristics Interviewer Behavior Factors Affecting Interviews First Impressions (Snap Judgments) Interviewer’s Misunderstanding of the Job Candidate-Order (Contrast) Error and Pressure to Hire

39 Designing and Conducting An Effective Interview  The Structured Situational Interview Use either situational questions or behavioral questions that yield high criteria-related validities. Step 1: Job Analysis Step 2: Rate the Job’s Main Duties Step 3: Create Interview Questions Step 4: Create Benchmark Answers Step 5: Appoint the Interview Panel and Conduct Interviews

40 www.slideshare.com/natriumz How to Conduct a More Effective Interview 12 345 Suggestions: Prepare for the Interview Structure Your Interview Establish Rapport Ask Questions Close the Interview 6 Review the Interview

41 Effective Interviews  Structure the Interview: 1.Base questions on actual job duties. 2.Use job knowledge, situational or behavioral questions, and objective criteria to evaluate interviewee’s responses. 3.Train interviewers. 4.Use the same questions with all candidates. 5.Use descriptive rating scales (excellent, fair, poor) to rate answers. 6.Use multiple interviewers or panel interviews. 7.If possible, use a standardized interview form. 8.Take control of the interview. 9.Take brief, unobtrusive notes during the interview.

42 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Interview Evaluation Form Source: Reprinted from www.HR.BLR.com with permission of the publisher Business and Legal Reports Inc. 141 Mill Rock Road East, Old Saybrook, CT © 2004.

43 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Structured Interview Guide Source: Copyright 1992. The Dartnell Corporation, Chicago, IL. Adapted with permission.

44 www.slideshare.com/natriumz Structured Interview Guide (cont’d)

45 www.slideshare.com/natriumz 6–45 Structured Interview Guide (cont’d)


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