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1.7C Problem 2 Summary

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1.7 Problem 2
Selective Selection
Three domains of job performance:
1. Task performance- proficiency with which employees perform key activities
relevant to the job
Divided into: individual performance; work-team performance
2. Contextual performance- contributions of employee to organisational, social,
psychological environment to help accomplish organisations goals
3. Counterproductive work behaviours- intentional behaviour of employee
viewed by organisation as contrary to its legitimate interested
Divided into: interpersonal (eg. bullying); organisational (eg. theft, absence)
Two main principles underlying personnel selection and assessment procedures:
1. Individual differences in peoples skill, abilities, characteristics
 Not all equally suited to jobs, so matching people to jobs can be important
2. Future behaviour is partly predictable: goal of selection/assessment activities=
match people to jobs and predict future job performance of individuals
When choosing selection process, look at validity, reliability, and adverse impact

Validation Process
Predictors- pieces of evidence concerning current or past performance of candidates
used to decide whether to offer the job
Criterion- what your trying to predict using the predictors
This process is to find out the effectiveness of parts of the selection process
Criterion-Related Validity
Criterion-related validity- strength of the relationship between predictor and criterion
Eg. how well a personality test result predicted that an individual was outstanding
in their job
High validity= high predictor score + high criterion score
High validity= low predictor score + low criterion score
Predictive validity- how much a score on a test/measure predicts scores on
criterion measure
Concurrent validity- how much results of a test correlate to previously used
measures for the same construct
Performance measures
Recruiters decide on non-compensatory approach (to selection)- applicant must score
highly on all assessment criteria or compensatory approach- high scores on some
criteria can make up for low scores on another
Other Validity Types
Faith validity- belief that a selection method is valid because it is sold by a reputable
company, packaged in an expensive looking manner
X- Cook: money spent on looks may mean less money spent on research/development on
instrument: look into supporting data of instrument before accepting validity
Content validity- tests based on logic as opposed to technical statistical procedures
Eg. Sailor tested on all sailing skills/boat knowledge= high content validity
Face validity- when selection tests/procedures “look right”
Eg. asking artist candidate for portfolio as opposed to an IQ test
- Candidate likelier to think selection is fair if believe that selection process
seems relevant to job role
Construct validity- identifying psychological characteristics that underlie successful
performance of the specific job (eg. intelligence, emotional stability)
 Must be measured by indirect means, often comparing new construct-measure
with long-standing construct measure of same thing. Eg. new construct-measure
of neuroticism should have same results for an individual as long-standing
construct-measure of neuroticism
Convergent validity- how much two measures of constructs theoretically related
are actually related
Discriminant validity- whether concepts that are not supposed to be related are
actually related

, Incremental validity- how much adding another predictor increases the predictive
power of the selection process
Eg. is the process greatly improved adding a psychometrics test?
 Allows for cost benefit analysis

Reliability
Selection instrument reliability- extent to which the instrument measures
consistently under varying conditions
Types of reliability:
External reliability:
Test-retest reliability- participants are administered same test on two
separate occasions with significant time lag between administrations, but
test results are similar on both
o Construct being measured is stable and testing conditions same on
both occasions
Interrater reliability- different people rate the test the same eg. both
interviewers have the same opinion on a person
Parallel forms- test developers design two tests of equivalent difficulty
and similar content
Eg. 50 questions, use 25 Qu’s in test A, 25 Qu’s in test B
o External reliability between scales
Internal reliability:
o Statistical methods/formulae
o How much different parts of same measure produce results consistent with
each other
Cronbach’s coefficient alpha- 0.7 or above
Split Half method- examine association between scores on two halves of
a test
KR20- used for question with right or wrong answers

Adverse impact
Adverse impact- potential systematic differences in the assessments of candidates
belonging to protected-by-law group during hiring process or employment practices that
appear neutral but have discriminatory effect on a protected group
 Some tests are valid yet biased against some subgroups eg. if relationship
between test score and job performance isn’t consistent between two subgroups
Unfair direct discrimination- selection process treats individual less favourably
because of their gender or ethnic group
 Indirect discrimination often unintended and difficult to prove
o Eg. Employer applies requirement that’s harder for one group to comply
with
Differential item functioning- significant different in difficulty level across different
ethnic groups
Studies shown, significant ethnic subgroup differences in cognitive ability tests: favour
White candidates over Black and Hispanics candidates
 Assessment centres using many selection methods minimises impact of bias in
one component

Job Analysis
Produce info about jobs to be used in job description for job role
Many techniques/procedures:
o Job-oriented J.A. procedures- focused on the work itself, describing equipment
used, end results/purpose of job, resources, and materials used
o Worker-oriented J.A. procedures- focus on psychological/behavioural
requirements of job
o Task oriented J.A.- task, equipment and end result of the job
o Future-oriented J.A.- used in newly created job roles with no pre-existing job
descriptions: focus on knowledge, skills, abilities associated with these new roles
o Traditional J.A. in personnel- fitting person to the job: becoming outdated

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Nice concise summary. Hits all the main points of the problem and is really clear!!

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