Title: VISION AND MISSION
1The Employment Interview Structure and Validity
Michael M. Woodward March 3rd, 2005
2Overview
- The Employment Interview
- The Structured Interview
- Validity of Structured Interviews
- Application of Structured Interviews
- Group Discussion
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3The Employment Interview
- A dialogue initiated by one or more persons to
gather information and evaluate the
qualifications of an applicant (Dipboye, 1992)
4The Employment Interview
- A two-way communication process that involves
(Cascio, 1998) - First Impressions
- Expectancies
- Verbal Cues
- Nonverbal Cues
- Stereotypes
- Use of Criteria
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5What is examined in interviews?
- Taxonomy of Interview Constructs (Huffcutt et al.
2001) - Personality Tendencies
- Applied Social Skills
- Mental Capability
- Knowledge and Skills
- Interests and Preferences
- Physical Attributes
- Organizational Fit
Account for about 60 of all rated characteristics
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6The Employment Interview
- A haphazard conversation between two or more
individuals with varying degrees of job
relatedness. - Minimally specified content
- Unsystematic execution and evaluation
7The Structured Interview
8What is a Structured Interview?
- A deliberate application of systematic and
predetermined rules for observation and
evaluation applied in the same way for all
applicants for a particular position (Motowidlo
et al., 1992, p. 571) - Any enhancement of the interview that is
intended to increase psychometric properties by
increasing standardization or otherwise assisting
the interviewer in determining what questions to
ask or how to evaluate responses (Campion et
al., 1997, p. 656)
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9Elements of Structure (Campion et al., 1997)
- Based on job analysis
- Standard questioning
- Limited prompting
- Control for ancillary information
- Limited questioning
- Systematic rating
- Anchored rating scales
- Multiple interviewers conduct interviews
- Detailed notes
10Structured Interviewing Process
- Structured Interviewing is a process that
involves three phases - Development
- Administration
- Evaluation
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11Development
- Job Analysis
- Examine critical incidents through interviews and
surveys - Include input from SMEs managers, supervisors,
job incumbents - Group incidents into dimensions and develop a
pool of questions - Question Type
- Use focused questions that are job relevant
- Future-oriented hypothetical situations
- Past-oriented relevant past behaviors
- Background experience, education,
qualifications - Job Knowledge descriptions or demonstrations of
knowledge - Avoid ambiguity or questions that focus on poorly
defined traits with uncertain links to
performance such as opinions, attitudes, goals,
aspirations, self-descriptions, self-evaluations - Training
- Train interviewers on administration and
evaluation processes to promote consistency and
efficiency
12Administration
- Standard questioning Consistent application
across candidates (same questions, order,
setting, time) - Limited prompting Controlling for leading
questions and limiting follow-up helps to
maintain consistency - Controls for ancillary information prevents
priming interviewer. - Limited questioning Only allow candidates to ask
clarification questions during interview. Reserve
candidate questions for the end. - Multiple interviewers conduct interviews
- Detailed notes record responses and any relevant
information.
13Evaluation
- Anchored Scales Use behavioral anchors to guide
raters - Systematic Rating Responses are rated
individually (not overall judgment) - Mechanical Scoring Combine scores (clinical
rating)
14Types of Structured Interviews
- Past-oriented (experience-based or behavioral)
- Tell me about the time when
- Future-oriented (situational/hypothetical)
- What would you do if
- Overall, there is no clear advantage of one
over the other because no significant differences
in reliability and validity have been found and
both are highly correlated to tests of cognitive
ability (Campion, 1994 Motowidlo, 1999)
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15What is Examined?
- Interviews with higher levels of structure tend
to measure areas typically considered to have
high job relevance - Job knowledge
- Interpersonal skills
- Organization fit
- Habitual behavior patterns
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16Validity of Structured Interviews
17Impact on Validity
- Structure is a major moderator of interview
validity (Brtek Motowidlo, 2002 Huffcutt
Arthur, 1994 Motowidlo, 1999) - Structured interviews can reach validity
comparable to mental ability tests (Campion,
1994 Huffcutt and Arthur, 1994) - The constructs that are more frequently rated in
structured interviews tend to be better
predictors of job performance (Huffcutt et al.
2001)
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18Application of Structured Interviews
19Local HR Practitioners (recent survey)
- Structural Elements
- 56 - job analysis
- 65 - standard questions
- 45 - train interviewers
- Unstructured Interview Questions
- 60 - candidate self evaluations
- 78 - opinions and attitudes
- 76 - goals and aspirations
20Local HR Practitioners (recent survey)
- Question Format
- 87 - Past-behavior
- 69 - Situational
- Structured Questions
- 96 - Job Knowledge
- 85 - Education/Qualifications
(Woodward Randall, 2005)
21Why are they not being used???
- According to van der Zee et al. (2002),
structured interviews are infrequently used for a
variety of reasons - Awareness and understanding of academic
literature - Need for autonomy
- Concerns over applicant reactions
- Time and expense
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22Group Discussion