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ASSESSMENT CENTRES

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Why do employers use assessment centres? What happens at an assessment centre? ... Plus socialising with assessors, fellow-candidates and recent graduates ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ASSESSMENT CENTRES


1
ASSESSMENT CENTRES
  • Jenny Keaveney
  • Careers Advisory Service
  • 9th February 2012

2
  • What is an assessment centre?
  • Who uses assessment centres?
  • Why do employers use assessment centres?
  • What happens at an assessment centre?
  • How will you be assessed?
  • What are assessors looking for?
  • What happens after an assessment centre?
  • How can you prepare for assessment centres?
  • Further help and information

3
What is an assessment centre?
  • Good news! Normally only 5 of the original
    applicants will get this far
  • A series of exercises, carried out individually
    or in a small group over one or two days,
    designed to measure the competencies needed in
    graduate recruits
  • The final stage in the selection process

4
Who uses assessment centres?
  • Most large graduate recruiters including
  • The Civil Service
  • Local government the NHS
  • Manufacturing companies
  • Banks, chartered accountants
  • Advertising agencies
  • Consultancies
  • The armed forces, police etc

5
Why do employers use assessment centres?
  • They are one of the most reliable indicators of
    successful future job performance
  • They are a fair and objective selection method
  • They assess candidates across a number of
    dimensions

6
What happens at an assessment centre?
A number of different exercises, which are likely
to include
  • Group exercises
  • Discussions
  • Practical tasks
  • Role play
  • Individual exercises
  • Written tasks
  • In-tray exercises
  • Psychometric tests
  • Presentations
  • Interviews

Plus socialising with assessors,
fellow-candidates and recent graduates
7
The most frequently-used exercises at assessment
centres
  • Interview 97
  • Psychometric test 91
  • Group discussion 89
  • Personality test 79
  • Case study 71
  • Presentation 61
  • In-tray exercise 48

8
How will you be assessed?
  • By people with clipboards!
  • On a range of competencies that are important in
    the job you are applying for
  • By more than one person
  • On your own merits

9
What are assessors looking for?
  • Evidence of the competencies needed to perform
    well in the job
  • You have already been assessed on these on paper
    and at first interview
  • The assessment centre will look particularly at
    your ability to work with others, influence and
    persuade and how others respond to you

10
Group exercises
  • Discussions
  • Practical tasks
  • Role play

11
Group Discussions
  • Discussion of a general topic, e.g.
  • Should tolls be introduced on all motorways?
  • What can be done to improve the NHS?
  • How can the problems associated with excessive
    alcohol consumption be tackled?
  • Discussion of a scenario
  • Assessment of bids for lottery funding
  • Shipwreck/desert survival

12
Group Exercises
  • Practical tasks, e.g.
  • Constructing a Lego tower or paper chain
  • Creating an advertising campaign for a specific
    product
  • Crossing a shark-infested river

13
Role Play
  • Discussion of a given topic or problem
  • Each member of the group allocated a role, e.g.
    Marketing Manager/Finance Director
  • You will have information that other members of
    the group do not
  • Need to reach an agreement or produce a
    recommendation

14
What are assessors looking for in group
activities?
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Persuasiveness
  • Co-operation and teamwork
  • Analysis, judgement and decision-making
  • Initiative and creativity
  • Time management

15
Case Studies
  • May be one of the group exercises and
    discussions, often involving role-play ..
  • or an individual task
  • Will need to study the information you are
    presented with, pick out the key points and reach
    decisions
  • which you may need to write up in a report or
    to present verbally

16
Presentations
  • You may be given a topic in advance or allocated
    one on the day
  • Keep visual aids simple and relevant
  • You will be allowed to use notes small cards
    are best

17
In-Tray Exercises
  • Simulates the work you will be doing if selected
  • You will be given a number of messages plus
    attached documents that you might find in your
    inbox one morning
  • Need to sort, prioritise and take or recommend
    action
  • Time-limited new emails (and even phone
    calls) may keep coming in!

18
Interviews
  • Likely to be more challenging and probing than
    previous interviews
  • but will be with a different interviewer so be
    prepared for some of the same points to be
    covered
  • especially anything that has emerged as a weak
    point at previous interviews

19
The Social Side
  • May include coffee breaks/lunch with the
    assessors and/or meetings with recent graduates
  • Not part of the formal assessment
  • but anything you say or do could be
    remembered

20
What happens after the assessment centre?
A job offer!
or
Rejection
21
How you can prepare for assessment centres
  • You can practise for some exercises in advance
  • .. and keep up to date with current issues
  • Think back over your previous interviews with
    this organisation
  • Use the information sources coming up on the next
    slide!

22
Further help and information
  • At the Assessment Centre DVD (AgCAS)
    www.kent.ac.uk/careers-local/vid/ACIntro/assessme
    ntcentre.html
  • Book How to Succeed at an Assessment Centre
  • www.kent.ac.uk/careers/selection.htm

23
THE END . of this presentation
GOOD LUCK!
Careers Advisory Service http//www.kent.ac.uk/car
eers
At the end of Keynes driveway, Opening hours
9.00 am - 5.00 pm, Monday to Friday
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