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Schmidt, Frank L.; Hunter, John E. – Personnel Psychology, 1984
Empirically tests the prediction of the situational specificity hypothesis of personnel selection that states that if the situation is held constant, then validity findings will not vary. Results showed that variation in observed validities is due to statistical and measurement artifacts that are unrelated to situations and settings. (LLL)
Descriptors: Generalization, Occupational Tests, Personnel Selection, Test Validity
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Cascio, Wayne F.; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1988
Analyzes critically and integrates the legal, psychometric, and professional literature on the use and misuse of cutoff scores by managers to help make personnel decisions. Examines alternative methods in relation to legal precedents set by the courts, to psychometric principles, and to the various sets of professional guidelines. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: Decision Making, Occupational Tests, Personnel Evaluation, Personnel Policy
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Kleiman, Lawrence S.; Faley, Robert H. – Personnel Psychology, 1985
Reviewed court cases to assess implications of latest professional and legal guidelines for court deliberations regarding the criterion-related validity of tests with adverse impact. Among the findings were the heavy reliance placed on test development procedures and the reluctance of judges to accept recent reseach findings, which are…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Occupational Tests, Personnel Selection, Test Construction
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Holt, Thaddeus – Personnel Psychology, 1977
This paper was originally delivered in July of 1975, within a few weeks of the Supreme Court's decision in the case of "Albemarle Paper Company v. Moody". Its intent is to shed light on the interrelationship between the practice of industrial psychology and the judicial process in operation. (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Aptitude Tests, Employment Qualifications, Government Role, Guidelines
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Hirsh, Hannah Rothstein; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1986
Examined whether less experienced judges could also produce accurate estimates of the validity of cognitive tests. Shows that the estimates of less experienced judges contain less information than those of experts, but also that average of estimates of several less experienced judges are as accurate as those obtained from small-sample empirical…
Descriptors: Cognitive Tests, Educational Experience, Interrater Reliability, Judges
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Trattner, Marvin H. – Personnel Psychology, 1979
The U.S. Civil Service Commission conducted three criterion-related validity studies for its PACE Test. Three occupations were examined using a specially designed supervisory rating form, job information test, and work sample. A computer analyzed task inventory was the keystone of the study. (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Government Employees, Job Analysis, Occupational Tests, Personnel Selection
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Hirsh, Hannah Rothstein; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1986
Applied Schmidt-Hunter interactive validity generalization procedure to validity data for cognitive abilities tests for law enforcement occupations. Results indicated apparently lower validities and lesser generalizability for job criteria possibly due to low validity of the criterion and potential role of noncognitive factors. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Cognitive Tests, Generalizability Theory, Law Enforcement
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Sackett, Paul R.; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1989
Reviews recent developments in the use of commercially available written integrity tests for employee selection. Discusses legal issues related to the use of the polygraph and integrity tests, and reviews empirical research on the reliability, criterion-related validity, construct validity, fakeability, and adverse effects of integrity tests. (TE)
Descriptors: Ethics, Integrity, Occupational Tests, Personnel Evaluation
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Distefano, M. K., Jr.; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1980
Significant job-relatedness was found for a posttraining job knowledge test criterion. Content validity methods may be able to help solve the problem of criterion relevance in validation research by providing quantitative evidence of job-relatedness. (Author)
Descriptors: Employees, Job Training, Occupational Information, Occupational Tests
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Gordon, Michael E.; Kleiman, Lawrence S. – Personnel Psychology, 1976
The major purpose of the present investigation was to compare the validity of a work sample test and an intelligence test for the prediction of trainability. Several lines of evidence supported the hypothesis that samples of training behavior are the better predictors. (Author)
Descriptors: Criterion Referenced Tests, Job Training, Motivation, Occupational Tests
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Maier, Milton H. – Personnel Psychology, 1988
Validated aptitude tests used to help make personnel decisions about military recruits against hands-on tests of job performance in radio repairers and automotive mechanics. Data were filled with errors, reducing accuracy of validity coefficients. Discusses how validity coefficients can be made more accurate by exercising quality control during…
Descriptors: Aptitude Tests, Auto Mechanics, Job Performance, Military Personnel
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Schmidt, Frank L.; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1980
Results for employment tests indicated that differential validity occurs no more frequently than would be expected on the basis of chance plus the operation of various statistical artifacts. Similar results were obtained on educational tests. Tests are neither differentially valid for, nor unfair to, Hispanics. (Author)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Educational Testing, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Hispanic Americans
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Kesselman, Gerald A.; Lopez, Felix E. – Personnel Psychology, 1979
This study examined (1) the comparative validity of a written job knowledge test constructed on the basis of a systematic job analysis with that of a commercial employment test selected without prior job analysis and (2) the fairness of each test for minority and nonminority job applicants. (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Accountants, Culture Fair Tests, Job Analysis, Minority Groups
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Rosinger, George; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1982
Describes the development of a behaviorally based performance appraisal system for assessing the performance of highway patrol personnel. The items in the present scale were developed to describe proficiency levels of specific job tasks. This characteristic is expected to enhance the objectivity of the evaluation system. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Competence, Evaluation Methods, Job Performance
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Distefano, M. K., Jr.; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1976
Purpose of study was to assess validities of two general ability selection tests to predict job success. No evidence of differential validity related to race was found on either of the tests. (RW)
Descriptors: Hospital Personnel, Job Skills, Occupational Tests, On the Job Training
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