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Psychometric Assessment: Tests, test use and preparation. 13 th July 2017 Loughborough University. Overview. Part 1: A quick recap on psychometrics Employers’ use of tests Helping students prepare Part 2: New developments Future trends. Psychometric tests.
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Psychometric Assessment: Tests, test use and preparation 13th July 2017 Loughborough University
Overview • Part 1: • A quick recap on psychometrics • Employers’ use of tests • Helping students prepare • Part 2: • New developments • Future trends
Psychometric tests • “an objective and standardised measure of a sample of behaviour” Anastasi and Urbina (1997) • ‘psycho’ = mind • ‘metric’ = measurement
Psychometric tests • administered in a standardised way • scored and interpreted in a standardised way • reliable – meaning they are accurate • valid – meaning they are appropriate for purpose • rigorously developed according to best practice standards
Types of tests & assessment • Cognitive tests – learning, reasoning, capacity (what) • Personality – style, preferences (how) • Motivation – drive, energy, engagement (why) • SJTs / simulations – judgement, practical knowledge, ‘common sense’ (what & how)
Cognitive tests • Focus of much of today as they are the most… • widely used • widely researched • open to preparation • feared! • They cover tests of ability, aptitude and attainment
Verbal ability Abstract ability ‘g’ or general ability Numerical ability Types of cognitive test • Ability tests • Assess what a person is capable of doing • Typically involve ‘reasoning’ or problem-solving • May assess general or specific abilities
Types of cognitive test • Attainment tests • Assess what a person has learnt • e.g. educational qualifications, accountancy exams • Influenced by ability, so association • Aptitude tests • Abilities related to acquiring specific skills • Future-oriented, i.e. used to predict • In practice, often similar to ability tests
Personality and motivation • Self-report measures • No(?) ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ answers • Assess typical behaviours • Personality - distinction between ‘trait’ and ‘type’ • Motivation related to drives and values – increasing emphasis, especially on fit
SJTs • Can assess behaviours, skills, competencies • Based on understanding and responding to scenarios • Provide ‘low fidelity simulations’ • Relatively distinct from other assessments
Structured interviews Astrology Unstructured interviews Graphology SJTs Ability tests Assessment centres References 0 Effectiveness 1 Self-assessment Personality assessments Why are tests used? • Validity • ‘Level playing field’ • Objectivity • Accuracy
Graduate population Employer’s local norm General population Test score How good is good enough?
Popularity • CIPD Resourcing and Talent (2017) • Competency-based interviews – 78% • Interviews on contents of CV / app form 74% • General ability tests – 41% • Assessment centres – 39% • Personality / aptitude questionnaires – 35% • Online tests – 23% • Gamification – 2% Based on 1068 UK organisations
Popularity • Over 95% of FTSE100 companies • c70% of SMEs • Tendency for greater use in private sector than public or voluntary sectors
Popularity – Gartner (formerly SHL) • Assessed more than 5 million people in over 160 countries in the last 12 months • Worked with 10,000 customers • More than 60% of the Fortune Global 500 used SHL: • 80% of Technology companies • 80% of Food and Beverage companies • 70% of Financial Services companies • More than 80% of the FTSE 100 used SHL, including every Telecommunications company • Current estimate of 25 – 30 million tests per year
Research on test preparation • Almost exclusively on cognitive tests and ‘exams’ • Partial and incomplete • Assumptions and ambiguities
Purpose of testing - employers • Efficiency • Managing risk • Creating a ‘level playing field’ • Fairness • Understanding potential • Finding the right fit • Attraction
Purpose of testing – job seekers • To ‘show myself off’ – it’s an opportunity • Do I have the right knowledge / skills / abilities? • Will I fit in? • Do I want this job enough?
Purpose of testing • It’s a two-way thing… • …though loaded in favour of the employer • It helps if it is seen as an opportunity, not a threat
What the research tells us - ability • ‘Familiarisation’ vs ‘coaching’ • Re-test effect, c0.5 standard deviations • Research during the 1980s by ETS • Test-specific familiarisation – modest effect • Coaching – variable, not as big as claimed • Numerical more susceptible than verbal • Effect of test complexity • Well designed prep, c4 hours, as effective as coaching courses
What the research tells us – personality & motivation • Less coachable than ability – job specific • Natural changes under assessment conditions • ‘Gaming’ the assessment • Fit • Validation through interview
What the research tells us - SJTs • Very little good research available • Re-test effects similar to cognitive tests • Familiarity is likely to be important – variation in question formats • Know the company – what do they want? • Typical behaviour and fit
Action Exploration Reflection Creation Helping students prepare
Action • What do I know about tests? • What tests am I being asked to take? • Get some practice
Reflection • Key questions to ask: • How did I do? • Did I understand the instructions properly? • How did I feel – confidence vs anxiety? • Did I manage speed vs accurately well? • What skills do I need to develop?
Reflection Speed Optimum performance Accuracy
Creation • Use Reflection points to set targets: • Know the test and its requirements • Confident and positive • Develop speed and accuracy • Brush-up on knowledge / skills assessed by test • Identify gaps in current knowledge
Exploration • Put it into practice • Practice tests • Information • Use feedback to inform approach
Action • Get some practice… • … and apply what I now know / can do
Test-taking skills Test performance Low High Ability Test-taking skills Weak Strong
Trends in Psychometric Assessment 13th July 2017 Loughborough University
Overview • Developments with current tests • Strengths-based assessment • Game-based assessment • Looking further ahead
Developments with current tests • More tests at all stages of recruitment • Technology is everywhere, increasing accessibility • Testing earlier on in recruitment process • Ability tests • High use • Online, unsupervised • Validation? • Item banks and adaptive testing
Developments with current tests • Personality assessment • Increasingly used as a screening tool • Bespoke versions, focus on key attributes • Can be used to derive competencies • SJTs • Typically used as an early filter • Most likely to be bespoke to organisation • Vary in terms of ‘fidelity’ • Most advanced ones are ‘game-like’
Going mobile • 45% of job seekers use their mobile to search for jobs daily • 89% believe a mobile device is an important tool for job searching • 48% think mobile will be the most common way to search for jobs in two years or less • 90% of the Fortune 500 company career sites do not support a mobile applications (Glassdoor surveys, 2014)
Strengths-based assessment • Identifies individual strengths, interests, motivators • May be an assessment or interview • Part of a wider recruitment process • Predictive of fit and retention • Open to preparation?
Game-based assessment • Some definitions • Games • Gamification • Game-based assessments • Attractive • Equitable? • Valid?
Looking further ahead • Diversity vs validity • Diversity is increasingly important to organisations • Traditional tests, esp ability, are not great here • Personality, simulations, GBAs are better here… • … but are they equally valid? • AI / natural language processing • Digital footprint analysis • Up to 90% of employers review candidates’ social media profiles • Rise of companies offering social media reports
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