Title: Phillip W. Boswell MA, B.Ed, RRP
1Common Tools in Vocational Evaluation for
Marginalized Client Populations
- Phillip W. Boswell MA, B.Ed, RRP
- R. Stephen Russell, MA. Sc, P. Eng
2Learning Objectives
- Introduction
- Identify the difference between vocational
assessment and vocational evaluation - Recognize the three levels of vocational
assessment - Ascertain the factors involved in the appraisal
of clients - Identify useful voc assessment/evaluation
resources - Develop a working knowledge of common tools used
in vocational evaluations - Work samples
3Assessment - Defined
- Systematic procedures to obtain information from
a variety of sources to draw inferences about
people - (Standards for Educational and Psychological
Testing, 1999)
4Five Phases of Vocational Rehabilitation
- Same job with the same employer.
- Same employer, modified job (light duties)
- Different employer, similar or closely related
job - Different employer, alternative employment in the
same or related industry - Development of new occupational skills
5What can be assessed?
- Functional skills (basic skills functional
capacity) - Interest
- Achievement
- Aptitude
- Intelligence
- Learning style
- Work Samples
- Personality
- Assistive technology
- Neuropsychological
- Sensory impairments
- Career Assessments
- Dexterity
Career maturity, competency, employment barriers,
emotional and multiple intelligence, job
readiness, personal factors, personal style,
prior learning and values
6Factors in Appraisal of the Individual
7Vocational Evaluation Tools
8Individual Appraisal/Tools
9Vocational Assessment - Defined
- A general term for the process of identifying and
appraising an individuals level of functioning
in relation to vocational preparation and
employment decision making
10Why Vocational Assessment?
- Clients often do not have precise occupational
goals and aspirations. They frequently have
insufficient or inaccurate information on the
labour market and limited self-knowledge of their
own interests and abilities.
11Purpose of Vocational Assessment
- Plan a course of action
- Enhance client self-knowledge and vocational
decision-making abilities - Predict realistic employment outcomes that result
in successful client vocational rehabilitation
12Role of the Rehabilitation Professional
- Collect enough information or data about the
client to diagnose and make predictive statements
about his/her potential to obtain a successful
rehabilitation outcome
13Levels of Vocational Assessment
Level 1 Screening/Needs Assessment
Level 2 Clinical or Exploratory
Level 3 Comprehensive Vocational Evaluation
14Level 1 Screening/Needs Assessment
- Initial Process
- Needs Assessment
- Determine what is necessary to develop a plan of
action (e.g. vocational plan)
15Level 1 Screening/Needs Assessment
- Includes
- Interview with client
- Collect routine background information
(demographics) - Reliance on subjective consumer statements
- Vocational choice/interest
- Self-estimates of competence
- Reported work history
- Functional Assessment (e.g. personal capacity
questionnaire) - Limited, if any, standardized testing (e.g.
interest)
16Level 2 Clinical or Exploratory
- Intermediate process
- In depth exploration or case study approach to
the client and - vocationally related circumstances. Builds on
level 1 information - through the use of
- Additional interviews
- Collect/analyze documents (schools records,
medical records, etc.) - Career exploration
- Vocational and/or adjustment counselling
- Psychometric/standardized testing
- Transferable skills analysis
- Computerized job matching
- Job Analysis and/or environmental assessment
- Assistive technology considerations
17Level 3 Vocational Evaluation
- Final Process
- Comprehensive individualized holistic process of
assessment that utilizes specific instruments,
procedures, and behavioural observation - Designed to measure, observe, and document
interests, values, temperaments, work-related
behaviours, aptitudes, skills, and physical
capacities, in order to predict viable employment
and/or training outcomes - Used when more in depth information about the
client is necessary and not available from
information in level 1 and 2
18Level 3 Vocational Evaluation
- Real or simulated work used as the focal point of
the evaluation - Systematic observation and recording of work
behaviour performance - Occurs over time and uses multiple methods and
techniques to validate finds. Some combination of
the following methods are used - Work samples, job samples
- Situational assessments, community based
assessments - Standardized testing
- Interview
- Transferable skills, job matching
- Analysis of background information
- Career exploration/job shadow
- Assistive technology considerations
- Prescriptive recommendations
19Distinction Between VA VE
- VE is holistic considers disability/medical,
psychological, social, vocational, educational,
cultural and economic issues - Ideally conducted by a certified vocational
evaluator (CVE) - VE occurs over time (days/week )
- evaluated over time with varying work-related
demands and environments - Systematic Behaviour Observation and Recording
- Work performance
- Work behaviour
- Adaptive and/or transferable skills are
questionable or unknown - Work is the specific focus of VE
- Work samples
- Situational assessments
- Community-based assessments
- Occupational resources
- Career exploration
20If we are facing in the right direction, all we
have to do is keep on walking
21Vocational evaluation identifies.
- Transferable skills
- Vocational Interests
- Worker Characteristics and Behaviours
- Academic Abilities and Potential
- Learning Styles
- Work Aptitudes and Abilities
- Suitable Employment Alternatives
22Evaluating Assessments
- When assessing an individual, the first question
is alwaysShould we use tests at all? - Testing may not always be appropriate
- Extreme anxiety
- Sensory impairments
- Minimal education
- Limited language abilities
23Questions to ask
- Is the test reliable (repeatable) and valid (does
it measure what its suppose to?) - Does my client meet the reading level required by
the test? - Is my client disadvantaged in any way by
completing this test? - Will the test provide the information that I am
looking for?
24Questions to ask
- Can the test administration procedures be
modified to accommodate the client? - Can clients answer the question on the test form
rather than a separate score sheet? - Are all the questions relevant and correct for my
client?
25Questions to ask
- Are there relevant norms/criteria to compare my
clients performance? - Issue in rehabilitation is the lack of
representation of marginalized individuals in
sample populations - Marginalized client interested in competitive
employment is better served using general
working population norms rather than disabled
norms
26Transferable Skills
- Can be achieved through formal or informal
training - Is work related
- Should have a measurable component
- Should have the capacity to be matched to
other/alternative work options
27Vocational Interests
- Subjective measure of an individuals preferences
in work activities - Can add validity by incorporating variety of
surveys with similar outcomes - Does not confirm that skills exist
28Worker Characteristics and Behaviours
- Vocational Evaluation relies heavily on the
observational skills of the Counsellor - The Counsellor takes on different roles
throughout the evaluation - Allows the inclusion of subjective information in
the process
29Academic Abilities and Potential
- Understanding current skills
- Can evaluate need for upgrading
- To competitively seek employment
- To pursue further training
- Can predict potential
- Timed vs. untimed testing
- Needed to insure proper skill profile is created
30Learning Styles
- Generally subjective in nature
- Can be helpful in identifying training
environment - Can be helpful in identifying suitable work
environment
31Work Aptitudes and Abilities
- Computerized assessment
- Work Samples
- Academic Achievement
- Aptitude testing (paper/pencil)
- Work history (transferable skills)
- All are used to create a composite profile
32Worker Qualification Profile
- General Education Development (GED)
- Reasoning Math Language
- Aptitudes
- General Learning, Verbal Aptitude, Numerical
Aptitude, Spatial Aptitude, Form Perception,
Clerical Perception, Motor Co-ordination, Finger
Dexterity, Manual Dexterity, Eye-Hand-Foot
Co-ordination, Colour Discrimination
33General Education Development-GED
- Embraces those aspects of education (formal or
informal) which contribute to a a workers
reasoning development and ability to follow
instructions and, the acquisition of tool
knowledge such as language and mathematical
skills. (Revised Handbook for Analyzing Jobs -
1991)
34GED FACTORS
- Reasoning Development
- Math Development
- Language Development
- 1 to 6 scale
- 1 Low 6 High
35Aptitudes
- The capacity to acquire proficiency in and
activity with a given amount of formal or
informal training - Aptitudes may be general, such as learning
aptitude or special, such as mechanical aptitude
(Pruitt, 1986)
36Aptitudes
- General Learning
- Verbal Aptitude
- Numerical Aptitude
- Spatial Aptitude
- Form Perception
- Clerical Perception
- Motor Co-ordination
- Finger Dexterity
- Manual Dexterity
- Eye-Hand-Foot Co-ordination
- Colour Discrimination
- 1-5 scale
- 1High 5Low
37The Tools of Vocational Evaluation
- Interest Surveys
- Academic Achievement and Aptitude Testing
- Computerized Assessment
- Work Samples
- Observation
- Other Surveys
38Interest Surveys
- Strong Interest inventory (SII)
- Canadian Work Preference Inventory (CWPI)
- Jackson Vocational Interest Survey (JVIS)
- Career Occupational Preference System Interest
Inventory (COPS) - Reading Free Vocational Interest Inventory 2
(R-FVII2) - Career Assessment Inventory (CAI)
39AbilityAchievementAptitude
- Achievement Tests - What a person has already
done! - Canadian Academic Achievement Test (CAAT)
- Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT-4)
- Aptitude Tests What a person has the potential
to do! - General Aptitude Test Battery (GATB)
- Differential Aptitude Test (DAT)
40Work Samples
- Simulated work activity
- Criterion Referenced Test (CRT)
- Method Time Measurement (MTM)
- Standardized tasks
- Directly related to aptitude factors
- Valpar has over 30 work samples for functional
and job specific assessments
41Valpar Work Samples
- VCWS03 Numerical Sorting
- VCWS06 Independent Problem Solving
- VCWS07 Multi-Level Sorting
42Norm-Referenced test scores
- Compares the evaluees performance to the
performance of members of a particular norm group - Selected norm group population should be well
defined, relatively current and appropriate to
the evaluees goal - Results are reported in terms of percentile
rankings
43Norms
- Frequently referred to as moving targets as an
individuals relative rank can shift
significantly depending on the norm group -
- Pearl scored at the 87th percentile in
arithmetic (grade 4 students) - Pearl scored at the 11th percentile in
arithmetic (grade 10 students)
44When norms are not enough
- The world of work expects people to be able to
perform some job tasks based on criterion of
success or precision rather than compared only to
how well others perform - Expect airline pilots to take off and land an
airplane with 100 level of success, not just a
little better than their pilot classmates!
45Criterion references tests scores
- Criterion-referenced tests have a predetermined
external standard or criterion - Work related criterion generally come from
industry standards - Number of widgets assembled per hour
- Keyboarding speed 60 wpm 0 errors
- MTM (Valpar)
- Measures a specific knowledge, skill, or trait
and compares persons performance against the
criterion - Focus and importance of on performance rather
than relative rank of how others performed
46Norm vs criterion
- The Standards for Educational and Psychological
Testing provide a basis on which to evaluate
tests. established by APA, National Council on
Measurement in Education, American Education
Research Association - The samples used for test validation and norming
must be of adequate size and must be sufficiently
representative to substantiate validity
statements, to establish appropriate norms, and
to support conclusions regarding the use of the
instrument for the intended purpose
47A Huge Issue---Norm vs. Criterion
- Most norm referenced tests do not use
representative norm samples that include
individuals with disabilities - This often results in labels of disability and
the identification of weakness - Important to note that in some instances it is
helpful to understand how an individual is
functioning compared to the average population
when assessing for competitive employment
48 Norms Criterion
- Competitive compares people to other people
- Relative skills reported
- Content difficulty fixed
- High scores inferred from high performance on
tasks with lower scores
- Non-competitive compares people directly to jobs
- Actual skills reported
- Content difficulty adjusts to evaluees skills
- Scores measured directly at corresponding content
difficulty
49 Norms Criterion
- Validity depends on appropriateness of norm group
- Strictly valid only for members of the norm group
- Translation from percentiles by traditional
methods distorts DOT levels
- Validated by Method Time Measurement (MTM). No
norm groups - Accuracy verified by data from over thousands of
assessments - Measures DOT levels directly no translation
required
50Best Norm Group (when available)
- Norm to the environment you are predicting to
- e.g. employed workers, general working
population, general - population, education, training norms
- 62nd percentile Form Spatial GATB (GWP)
- 12th percentile MN Paper Form Board (employed
drafting technicians) - Obviously, criterion-referenced tests are better
indicators of performance, so if you have a
choice between a norm referenced and criterion
referenced measure choose criterion-referenced.
51Computerized Assessment
- Bridges Ability Profile Multi-Aptitude
Assessment - Bridges Interest Profiler
- Career Cruising - Career Matchmaker
- Valpar Professional (PRO 3000)
- (Magellan and Aviator)
-
52PRO3000
- System Manager
- Computerized Assessment (COMPASS) with 3
specialized work samples - DOT Descriptions and database
- Work History for transferable skills analysis
- Pictorial/Audio Interest Survey
- Spatial/Non-verbal
- PET Survey
- Norm Referenced Test Conversion (TECO)
53Suitable Employment Alternatives
- Counsellor directed selection of vocational
options - Objective listing based on testing results
- Can be combined with career exploration
54The Client Perspective
- Generally 3 to 6 hours
- Includes intake session
- Pre-screening
- Academic achievement testing
- Interest / Aptitude Testing
- Discussion of test results
55VALPAR International
- Started in 1973 in Tucson, Arizona
- Product Developer with over 6000 customers
world wide - Component Work Samples Series (VCWS)
- JOULE Functional Capacity Evaluation
- PRO3000 Professional Vocational Assessment
- MAGELLAN Career Self Assessment/Explorer
- AVIATOR Aptitude Interest Assessment
- SIGI PLUS Values-Based Career Planning
56Career Systems Canada Limited
- Steve Russell
- P. O. Box 255
- Buckhorn, ON. K0L1J0
- tel 705 657-8646
- fax 705 657-1572
- cell 416.721.5759
- steverussell_at_necicom.net
- www.valparint.com
57P.W. Boswell Associates
- Phil Boswell
- 9534 Riverbend Road
- Black Creek, BC V9J 1E8
- tel 250.337.5087
- fax 250.337.5867
- toll 877.790.7074
- info_at_employment-training.org
- www.employment-training.org