Lecture 11: Selection Decision Making Flashcards
(18 cards)
Exam =
- 50 Halberstadt (Lectures + Labs)
- 50 this section (Lectures, Labs, Readings)
- Questions include issues NOT covered in lecture
- Learning objectives covers most things in exam
- Sample questions on BB
Methods of Selection:
- Selecting right personnel is critical
- CV and interviews most widely used tools
- Tests (personality and cognitive) used by minority
- Graphology (handwriting) and astrology used in France
Researching the Interview (Reliability, Validity, Results)
- Reliability:
When you repeat the measurement, the results are the same (agreement between different interviewers on ratings of sam candidate) - Validity:
Correlation between interview ratings and job performance - Results:
Reliability: Generally Low
Validity: Ranges from 0 - 0.25
Findings about interviews:
- Decisions reached early (
Interviews amount to beauty contests in which narcissists have a heavy advantage…people get hired on the basis of their charm not….competence or talent
- (End quote)
SURPRISE - most bosses are incompetent:
- Up to 10% of workplaces have psychopaths
- Appear charming, outgoing, a good time
- BUT not really
Management Incompetence
- Majority (60 - 75%) are incompetent
- All selected by interview performance
- Job performance affected by ‘dark side’
Key Issues of Selection Decision Making:
- Can the interview be improved?
- What does the widespread use of an invalid tool tell us about human judgement
Adding structure to Interviews:
- Unstructured Interview: Convo covers various topics - Structured Interview: Predetermined sequence of questions like a test Much greater reliability Validity increases: .3 - .5
Why do we still have interviews?
- Practical (esp for small firms)
- Efficient (allows organisation to ‘sell’ itself’)
- Attractive (employers like to pick people they like) –> discriminatory though
- Illusory (employers are subject to the “illusion of validity”)
The Illusion of Validity:
- Step 1: You believe in your ability to pick successful applicants
- Step 2: You select the ‘best’ interviewees
- Step 3: You only see the performance of those you hire
- Step 4: Your ‘experience’ serves to reinforce your initial belief and you grow more confident
Key Concepts in Selection:
- Selection Ratio:
Proportion of applicants who are selected e.g. if only 1% selected, selection ratio is low (Google, Air NZ) - Job Performance:
Commonly measured by supervisor ratings
Elliptical Medium-Ratio:
Low Ratio:
- Job performance vs. Test Score
- Proportion of hits increases for Low Ratio (google)
Treatment Effect in Normal Selection:
- Selected people naturally become better because of better resources, alongside really good people, amplification etc.
Famous Rejects:
- J.K Rowling
- The Beatles
- Fawlty Towers
- Flight of the Conchords
Learning from experience:
- Normally, half the information required to form a valid judgement is missing
- The information that is available can be distorted by:
Selection Ratios + Treatment Effects
Conclusion:
- “One does not necessarily learn from experience, and indeed, often cannot”
- Illusory Feedback
Final Words:
- “….and that’s what science is…rechecking by new direct experience, and not necessarily trusting authority figured, and experiences from the past. That is my best definition”