Chapter 9
Chapter 9
Chapter 9
Staffing Activities:
Selection
Chapter 9:
External Selection II
Staffing Organizations Model
Organization
Mission
Goals and Objectives
•Substantive
assessment methods
•Determining who
among the minimally
qualified will likely be
the best performers
on the job
9-5
Overview of Personality Tests
• Current role of personality tests e.g., role of Big Five
• Describe behavioral, not emotional or cognitive traits
• May capture up to 75% of an individual’s personality
• Big Five factors (Personality Characteristics Inventory etc.)
• Emotional stability-calm, optimistic, and well adjusted
• Extraversion-sociable, assertive, active, upbeat, and talkative
• Openness to experience-imaginative, attentive to inner feelings,
have intellectual curiosity and independence of judgment
• Agreeableness-altruistic, trusting, sympathetic, and cooperative
• Conscientiousness-purposeful, determined, dependable, and
attentive to detail
• Roughly 50% of the variance in the Big Five traits appears to be inherited
9-6
Ex. 9.1 Sample Items from the
Personal Characteristics Inventory
• Conscientiousness
• I can always be counted on to get the job done.
• I am a very persistent worker.
• I almost always plan things in advance of work.
• Extraversion
• Meeting new people is enjoyable to me.
• I like to stir up excitement if things get boring.
• I am a “take-charge” type of person.
9-7
Ex. 9.1 Sample Items from the
Personal Characteristics Inventory
• Agreeableness
• I like to help others who are down on their luck.
• I usually see the good side of people.
• I forgive others easily.
• Emotional Stability
• I can become annoyed at people quite easily (reverse-scored).
• At times I don’t care about much of anything (reverse-scored).
• My feelings tend to be easily hurt (reverse-scored).
• Openness to Experience
• I like to work with difficult concepts and ideas.
• I enjoy trying new and different things.
• I tend to enjoy art, music, or literature. 9-8
Ex. 9.2 Implications of Big Five
Personality Traits at Work
9-9
Criticisms of Personality Tests
• Trivial validities
• Correlations for any individual trait with job performance are
typically low (around r=.23)
• However, when all traits are used simultaneously, correlations
are higher
• Faking
• Individuals answer in a dishonest way
• However, tests still have some validity, and it may be that being
able to “act” conscientiously may be related to real job
performance
• Negative applicant reactions
• Applicants, in general, believe personality tests are less valid
predictors of job performance
9-10
Exhibit 9.3 The Core Self-
Evaluations Scale
9-11
Overview of Ability Tests
9-12
Overview of Ability Tests
• Four classes of ability tests
• Cognitive: perception, memory, reasoning,
verbal, math, expression
• Psychomotor: thought/body movement
coordination
• Physical: strength, endurance, movement
quality
• Sensory/perceptual: detection & recognition
of stimuli 9-13
Exhibit 9.4 Sample Cognitive
Ability Test Items
9-14
Evaluation of Cognitive Ability Tests
• Validity approaches .50
• Research findings
• Among the most valid methods of selection
• Often generalizes across organizations, job types, and
types of applicants
• Can produce large economic gains for organizations
and provide major competitive advantage
• Validity is particularly high for jobs of medium and
high complexity but also exists for simple jobs
• A simple explanation for validity: those with higher
cognitive ability acquire and use greater knowledge
9-15
Limitations of Cognitive Ability
Tests
• Concern over adverse impact and fairness of tests
• Equally accurate predictors of job performance for
various racial & ethnic groups
• Blacks and Hispanics score lower than whites
• This gap is narrowing somewhat over time
• Alternative presentation formats (e.g., verbal tests)
decrease differences in scores dramatically while
producing nearly equivalent scores
• Applicants’ perceptions
• Reactions to concrete vs. abstract test items
9-16
Other Types of Ability Tests
9-18
Emotional Intelligence
9-19
Performance Tests and Work Samples
9-21
Ex. 9.7: Example of Situational
Judgment Test Item
9-22
Integrity Tests
• Two types (Exhibit 9.8)
• Clear purpose / overt
• Do you think most people would cheat if they thought they could
get away with it?
• Do you believe a person has a right to steal from an employer if he
or she is unfairly treated?
• Personality-based/veiled purpose
• Would you rather go to a party than read a newspaper?
• How often do you blush?
• Scores appear to reflect conscientiousness, agreeableness, and emotional
stability
9-23
Integrity Tests
9-24
Interest, Values, and Preference
Inventories
• Assess activities individuals prefer to do on & off the job; do not
attempt to assess ability to do these
• Not often used in selection
• Can be useful for self-selection into job types
• Types of tests
• Strong Vocational Interest Blank (SVIB)
• Myers-Briggs Type Inventory (MBTI)
• Evaluation
• Unlikely to predict job performance directly
• May help assess person-organization fit & subsequent job
satisfaction, commitment & turnover
9-25
Typical Unstructured Interviews
9-28
Constructing a Structured Interview
• Types of teams
• Problem-solving teams
• Self-managed work teams
• Cross-functional teams
• Virtual teams
• Establish steps for selection in team-based
environments
• Who should make the hiring decision?
• Critical to ensure proper context is in place
9-30
Selection for Team Environments
• Interpersonal KSAs
• Conflict-Resolution KSAs
• Collaborative Problem-Solving KSAs
• Communication KSAs
• Self-management KSAs
• Goal-Setting and Performance Management
KSAs
• Planning and Task-Coordination KSAs
9-31
Exhibit 9.14 Evaluation of
Substantive Assessment Methods
9-32
Discretionary Assessment
Methods
• Used to separate people who receive job offers
from list of finalists (assumes each finalist is considered
fully qualified for position)
• Often very subjective, relying heavily on intuition
of decision maker
• Factors other than KSAOs are evaluated
• Assess person/organization match
• Assess motivation level
• Assess people on relevant organizational
citizenship behaviors
• Should involve organization’s staffing philosophy
regarding EEO/AA commitments 9-33
Contingent Assessment Methods
9-36
Features of an effective drug testing
program
• Emphasize drug testing in safety-sensitive jobs
• Use only reputable testing laboratories, and ensure that
strict chain of custody is maintained.
• Ask applicants for their consent, and inform them of test
results
• Use retesting to validate positive samples from the initial
screening test
• Ensure that proper procedures are followed to maintain
the applicant’s right to privacy
• Review the program and validate the results against
relevant criteria (accidents, absenteeism, turnover, job
9-37
performance); conduct a cost-benefit analysis
Medical Exams
• Identify potential health risks in job candidates
• Must ensure medical exams are required only when a
compelling reason exists
• Ensures people with disabilities unrelated to job
performance are not screened out
• Use is strictly regulated by ADA to ensure disabilities not
job related are not screened out
• Usually lack validity as procedures vary by doctor
• Not always job related
• Often emphasize short- rather than long-term health
• New job-related medical standards are specific, job
related, and valid 9-38
Legal Issues: Uniform Guidelines on
Employee Selection Procedures (UGESP)
• General principles
• Technical standards
• Documentation of impact and
validity evidence
• Definitions
• Makes substantial demands of a staffing system
• Ensures awareness of possibility of adverse impact
in employment decisions
• If adverse impact is found, mechanisms provided
to cope with it
9-39
Legal Issues: ADA and Drug Testing