| Psychometric assessment products exist in great
variety and quantity. Businesses employ assessments to
support their recruitment, retention, development and
succession planning strategies. Unfortunately, few seem
aware of the U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL) position
regarding the use of tests and assessments in areas of
employment. It may surprise some to learn the DOL
actually supports the use of a sound testing and
assessment strategy. In their publication, “Testing and
Assessment: An Employer’s Guide to Good Practices,” the
DOL acknowledges, “employers face the challenge of
attracting, developing and retaining the best
employees.” They go on to say a solid assessment
strategy can “maximize chances for getting the right fit
between jobs and employees.”
The DOL provides 13 basic principles that employers
should follow when selecting an assessment initiative.
The principles are summarized here:
Use assessment tools in a purposeful manner.
Assessments are most beneficial when used properly and
for the purpose for which they are designed. Misuse or
improper use could be harmful or possibly illegal.
Use the whole-person approach to testing. No test is
perfect. Complex behaviors are at work. Use a test, or
combination of tests, that give as much information as
possible about behaviors most important to your
business.
Use tests that are unbiased and fair to all groups.
Tests that deliberately or inadvertently discriminate
prevent the employer from achieving a qualified and
diverse work group and may fuel legal challenges.
Use tests that are reliable. Will the same person
produce the same results each time they take the test?
Reliability (“r”) is expressed as a statistical
coefficient between 0.0 and 1.0. r = 0.90 or above is
excellent: 0.80 – 0.89 is good: 0.70 – 0.79 is adequate.
0.69 or below is questionable.
Ensure that assessments are valid for the specific
purpose for which they are used. Validity is the most
important criterion for selection of a proper
instrument. Validity is an appraisal of the assessment’s
ability to measure the target characteristics at a level
that can be useful. It is expressed as a statistical
coefficient. A v-score of .35 or higher means the test
is “very beneficial” in determining the presence of
desired characteristics. 0.21 – 0.34 means the test “is
likely to be useful” to the employer. A v-score of
0.11-0.20 means the usefulness of the information
derived will “depend on the circumstances” under which
the test is being used. A test is “unlikely to be
useful” under any circumstances when v= 0.11 or less.
Tests must be appropriate for the target population.
An assessment designed to assess nurse practitioners is
likely to be inappropriate when applied to the
construction trades.
Instructions and other documentation must be
comprehensive and easy to understand. The person taking
the assessment must understand the directions and the
questions. The person administering the assessment must
also understand the directions and the other
documentation. Reliability and validity statistics
should be readily available.
If the test requires proctoring and/or
administration, those performing this function must be
properly trained. Some instruments require an extensive
certification process to administer, proctor or score
tests.
Provide consistent and uniform testing conditions to
obtain consistent results. Classrooms, conference rooms
or other facilities may be necessary to isolate test
takers from other distractions to assure the integrity
of test results.
Provide reasonable accommodations for people with
disabilities. No group should be disadvantaged by the
test or the conditions under which the tests are taken.
Test security must be maintained if the results are
to be useful. Tests and their scoring should never be
accessible to the general population. (This is
impossible with “public domain” assessments, like many
of the popular type indicators, which are inappropriate
for hiring.)
Test results must be maintained in a confidential
manner. Tests taken over the Internet or other computer
based methods that require usernames and passwords are
often most effective at preserving the confidentiality
of the results.
Accurate interpretation of results is necessary. It
does little good to interpret good data poorly. Ensure
that all test reports are easy to understand.
A well-conceived assessment strategy, when combined
with other decision-making tools, can provide employers
a higher level of precision than is otherwise available.
Application of the Department of Labor’s Guidelines for
selecting assessments will make the employer a wiser
consumer and provide the highest return on the testing
and payroll investment. In today’s litigious society, it
may also pay high returns in providing a structure for
legal defense of the employer’s practices.
We invite you to make a copy of this article and hang
it in your office where you will see it often. Check and
review your practices frequently, referring to these
basic principles. Your assessment programs will rest on
firm ground and return on your investment in assessments
will remain at a maximum. |