HR CH 6
Decision Making Strategies
Clinical Approach Statistical Approach
Initial Screening Methods
Cover Letters and Resume Internet Checks and Phone Screening Application Forms
Preemployment Tests
Job Knowledge Tests Work Sample Tests Assessment Center Tests Cognitive Ability Tests Biographical Data (Biodata) Tests Personality and Interest Inventories Polygraph Tests Honest and Integrity Tests Physical Ability Tests Medical Examinations Drug Tests
Types of Interviews
Nondirective Structured Situational Behavioral Description Sequential Panel
Post-Interview Screening
Reference Checks Background Checks Criminal Records Checks Credit Checks
Selection Process
Submission of Resume Completion of Application Interviews Reference and Background Checks Pre-Employment Tests Medical Exam/ Drug Test Hiring Decision
Sequential Interview
a format in which a candidate is interviewed by multiple people, one right after another
Assessment Center Test
a process by which managerial candidates are evaluated at an assessment center as they participate in a series of situations that resemble what they might need to handle on the job
Compensatory Model
a selection decision model in which a high score in one area can make up for a low score in another area
Multiple Cutoff Model
a selection decision model that requires an applicant to achieve some minimum level of proficiency on all selection dimensions
Multiple Hurdle Model
a sequential strategy in which only the applicants with the highest scores at an initial test stage go on to subsequent stages
Panel Interview
an interview in which a board of interviewers questions and observes a single candidate1
Structured Interview
an interview in which a set of standardized questions having an established set of answers is used
Behavioral Description Interview (BDI)
an interview in which an applicant is asked questions about what he or she actually did in a given situation
Situational Interview
an interview in which an applicant is given a hypothetical incident and asked how he or she would respond to it
Nondirective Interview
an interview in which the applicant is allowed the maximum amount of freedom in determining the course of the discussion, while the interviewer carefully refrains from influencing the applicant's remarks
Preemploymnet Test
an objective and standardized measure of a sample of behavior that is used to gauge a person's knowledge, skills, abilities, and other characteristics (KSAOs) relative to other individuals. A process by which individuals are evaluated as they participate in a series of situations that resemble what they might need to handle on the job
Video Interviews
interviews conducted via videoconferencing or over the web
Computer-Administered (automated) Interview
interviews in which the questions are administered to applicants via computers. The interviews can be conducted at a firm's facilities, using kiosks, online or via phone
Statistical Approach
more objective, identifying the most valid predictors and weighting them using statistical methods
Clinical Approach
review all the data on the applicants, on the basis of their understanding of the job and the individuals who have been successful in that job
Video Resumes
short video clips that highlight applicants' qualifications beyond what they can communicate on their resumes
Validity
the degree to which a test or selection procedure measures a person's attributes
Reliability
the degree to which interviews, tests, and other selection procedures yield comparable data over time and alternative measures
Content Validity
the extent to which a selection instrument, such as a test, adequately samples the knowledge and skills needed to perform a particular job
Construct Validity
the extent to which a selection tool measures a theoretical construct or traitq
Criterion-Related Validity
the extent to which a selection tool predicts, or significantly correlates with, important elements of work behavior
Predictive Validity
the extent to which applicants' test scores match criterion data obtained from those applicants/employees after they have been on the job for some indefinite
Concurrent Validity
the extent to which the test scores of current employees correlate with job performance
Negligent Hiring
the failure of an organization to discover, via due diligence, that an employee it hired had the propensity to do harm to others
Selection Ratio
the number of applicants compared with the number of people to be hired
Selection
the process of choosing individuals who have relevant qualifications to fill existing or projected job openings
Cross-Validation
verifying the results obtained from a validation study by administering a test or test battery to a different sample (drawn from the same population)