1 / 11

Lecture 10: Workplace Application – Skills & Abilities Testing

Lecture 10: Workplace Application – Skills & Abilities Testing. PSY 605. The Workplace Applications - Overview. Workplace Application – Skills & Abilities Testing. In selection contexts… Tests of cognitive ability Tests of job-related skills In performance appraisal & management contexts…

wright
Download Presentation

Lecture 10: Workplace Application – Skills & Abilities Testing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 10: Workplace Application – Skills & Abilities Testing PSY 605

  2. The Workplace Applications - Overview

  3. Workplace Application – Skills & Abilities Testing • In selection contexts… • Tests of cognitive ability • Tests of job-related skills • In performance appraisal & management contexts… • Tests of job performance • Tests of ‘potential’

  4. Cognitive Ability Testing • General cognitive ability (g) long considered the strongest single predictor of performance across jobs (Hunter & Hunter, 1984) • Coefficients, after corrections for unreliability, reported in meta as .51 (performance ratings) and .56 (training performance) (Schmidt & Hunter, 1998) • Though traditional tests of g are not without controversy… (Murphy et al., 2003) • Diversity issues

  5. Not-so-general Cognitive Ability Testing “Thinking critically is the primary responsibility of any manager, in any organization, and a leader’s capacity to engage in this process is largely determined by his or her intelligence.” (p.102, Menkes, 2005) • The validity findings on g are based on general cog. ability tests; however validity can be even stronger when more targeted assessment tools are used • Example: the ‘executive intelligence interview’ presented in Menkes (2005)

  6. Job-related Skills Testing • Work Sample Testing: applicant performs set of tasks that are physically and/or psychologically similar to those on job (Ployhart, 2005; Roth, Bobko, & McFarland, 2005) • Examples for managerial jobs: the Leaderless Group Discussion; In-Basket technique • Assessment Centers (e.g., Arthur et al., 2003; Thornton & Gibbons, 2009) • Conceptually, multi-dimensional work sample testing • Tests that most closely mimic job performance will (in general) be the best predictors of future job performance • Tend to hold up well in court – easy to demonstrate job-relatedness, most applicants view as fair

  7. Tests of Performance • Performance appraisal = • Formal process used to evaluate what individual workers do at work (Brannick, Levine, & Morgeson, 2007) • Systematic description of job-relevant strengths & weaknesses within & between employees or groups (Cascio & Aguinis, 2010) • Performance Appraisal tools: • Various methods of performance rating systems – validity of tool depends on its foundation (must begin with sound job analysis!) • BARS: Behaviorally-anchored rating scales • BOS: Behavioral Observation Scales

  8. BARS Example

  9. BOS Example

  10. How well can performance be captured? • Objectively… • Very rarely are objective indicators even available • When they are available, they never capture full construct domain (limiting validity from the start) • Subjectively… • Performance ratings are only weak predictors of true performance (e.g., Murphy, 2008) • Ratings impacted by many sources of error (some random, most systematic), including motivations of rater

  11. What’s a psychometrically trained I/O psychologist to do? 1) Define performance: • Start with the foundational best practices of measurement: Define your construct and testing purpose (use job analysis to define job performance) 2) Develop behaviorally-based Tool • BARS or BOS best options 3) ID Sources of error • Identify any sources of error in performance appraisal 4) Attack Sources of Error • Provide raters with incentives, tools, and opportunities to observe & recall performance accurately & honestly 5) Know your Limits • Limit inferences to those supported by validation of your tool

More Related