ABSTRACT

The impetus for this volume came from the editors' belief that most current research and thinking about personnel selection and assessment in organizations considered only the perspective of the employer. The job applicant seeking to join the organization or the employee being considered for promotion or reassignment was typically given little attention from the designers of employment or assessment systems.

They believed that this imbalance had several negative implications:
1. Organizational selection and assessment appeared to be the principal area within work and organizational psychology that had forgotten a basic tenet of the profession of psychology, namely, that the welfare of the individual is paramount.
2. A lack of concern for the individuals who were being assessed could result in additional criticisms of psychological assessment in employment settings.
3. The acceptability of selection and assessment devices and systems may impact in (largely) unknown ways on the decisions of individuals to apply for jobs or transfers, thus affecting the selection ratio and potential utility of such systems.
4. Individual reactions to the characteristics of assessment and selection devices could affect the accuracy of the information obtained about those individuals, adversely affecting the reliability and validity of resulting personnel decisions.

Informally discussing these concerns with their professional colleagues, the editors found that others were similarly troubled. Their next response was to organize a three day conference bringing together a number of researchers in applied psychology to present papers and participate in discussions related to balancing individual and organizational needs in selection and assessment. Revisions of the papers presented at this conference form the core of this volume.

part I|63 pages

Individual Perceptions of Personnel Procedures

chapter 2|16 pages

Social Validity of Selection Situations

A Concept and Some Empircal Results

chapter 3|14 pages

When Recruitment Fails to Attract

Individual Expectations Meet Organizational Realities in Recruitment

part II|110 pages

Individual Reactions to Personnel Procedures

part III|81 pages

Influence of the Social Context on Selection and Assessment

chapter 12|22 pages

Employment Testing and Public Policy

The Case of the General Aptitude Test Battery

chapter 13|15 pages

Fairness in Selection and Assessment

A European Perspective

chapter 15|18 pages

Performance-Appraisal Accuracy

An Illusive or Sometimes Misguided Goal?

chapter 16|9 pages

The Prediction Paradigm