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TODAY’S JOURNEY

Nadia Brits Supervisor: Prof. Deon Meiring ACSG Conference 16 March 2011 EVOLUTION OF THE CONSTRUCT-VALIDITY DEBATE Department of Industrial Psychology University of Stellenbosch. TODAY’S JOURNEY. SACKETT & DREHER (1982). CONSEQUENCES OF INVALID CONSTRUCTS. DESIGN FIXES.

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TODAY’S JOURNEY

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  1. Nadia BritsSupervisor: Prof. Deon MeiringACSG Conference 16 March 2011EVOLUTION OF THE CONSTRUCT-VALIDITY DEBATEDepartment of Industrial PsychologyUniversity of Stellenbosch

  2. TODAY’S JOURNEY SACKETT & DREHER (1982) CONSEQUENCES OF INVALID CONSTRUCTS DESIGN FIXES DON’T TAKE AWAY MY DIMENSIONS ABANDON DIMENSIONS DESIGN FIXES: TRIED & TESTED EPIC OF THE CV DEBATE CRITICS OF LANCE (2008) ACs AT A CROSSROADS

  3. BACKGROUND • Sufficient evidence for CV exists (Arthur et al., 2000; Thornton & Gibbons, 2008) • The validity of ACs is questioned • CONSTRUCT VALIDITY PUZZLE (Lievens, Chasteen, Day & Christiansen, 2006) • CONSTRUCT-RELATED VALIDITY PARADOX (Arthur, Day & Woehr, 2008) • SO-CALLED CONSTRUCT VALIDITY PROBLEM (Howard, 1997)

  4. ORIGINS OF THE CONSTRUCT-VALIDITY DEBATE • Sackett & Dreher (1982) • Expectations: • CONVERGENT VALIDITY • DISCRIMINANT VALIDITY • ratings cluster according to DIMENSIONS, not exercises (which became known as EXERCISE EFFECT) • Similar research followed

  5. CONSEQUENCES OF INVALID CONSTRUCTS • SELECTION of applicants based on AC performance ratings • FEEDBACK based on AC results • WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY • Practitioners provide MISLEADING services to companies who appoint them to design and run ACs

  6. DESIGN FIXES • DEFINITION of dimensions • NUMBER of dimensions • TRANSPARENCY of dimensions to candidates • Behavioural CHECKLISTS • Type of SCORING METHOD • ASSESSOR training • TYPE of assessor (Lievens & Klimoski, 2001; Gaugler et al., 1987) • EXPERIENCED assessors (Kolk et al. 2002; Thornton & Rupp, 2005).

  7. DESIGN FIXES: TRIED AND TESTED • Design fixes show LITTLE, INSIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENT • Controlling assessor variance has only a MARGINAL EFFECTS on construct-validity • EXERCISE EFFECTS STILL DOMINATE • What else can we do?

  8. ABANDONING DIMENSIONS • Move from dimensions-based ACs to task-based AC • Why? • Recurring exercise effects • Exercise factors show positive correlations with external performance criteria

  9. DON’T TAKE AWAY MY DIMENSIONS • useless to learn a task that the participant might never encounter again • Human performance is multidimensional • cannot capture the full complexity of a real job (novel, non-repetitive tasks) • Only dimensions will allow generalisation of AC results • Research supports dimensions (Connelly et al., 2008; Melchers & Konig, 2008; Bowler & Woehr, 2006) • knowledge about exercise-based ACs still lacking(Lievens, 2008).

  10. RESULT : 3 LINES OF RESEARCH • EXERCISES and DIMENSIONS explained same amount of variance – 34%(Lievens & Conway, 2001) • EXERCISE EFFECT were larger than dimension effects – 52%(Lance et al., 2004) • EXERCISES explained most variance – 33%, DIMENSIONS ALSO explained substantial amount - 22% (Bowler & Woehr, 2006)

  11. EPIC OF THE HEATED DEBATE • LANCE (2008): “ACs do not work they way they are supposed to” • NOT SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE for 3 requirements of CV • Supports the EXERCISE-BASED MODEL • DISCARD DESIGN FIXES • Exercise effects represent cross-situational specificity in candidate performance, not method bias...TRUE VARIANCE

  12. COMMENTS/CRITICS TOWARDS LANCE (2008) • ignores evidence of both dimension and exercises account for variance in AC performance (Howard, 2008) • design fixes should continue to be investigated (Schleicher et al., 2008; Howard, 2008; Arthur, Day & Woehr, 2008; Melchers & König, 2008) • Lance received support for candidates’ inconsistent performance....true variance • individuals use set of stable skills and can adjust and adapt KSA’s according to the situation • Some people perform better than others in a specific exercise

  13. ACs AT A CROSSROADS • Persistent EXERCISE EFFECTS • performance variability: more situation-specific (57%) than situation-consistent (43%) (Hoeft and Schuler’s (2001) • Lack of consensus on solutions and future directions • Walter Mischel (1968) • Consistency in behaviour ONLY when situational factors are acknowledged and taken into account • TRAIT-ACTIVATION THEORY (TAT)

  14. TRAIT-ACTIVATION THEORY (TAT) • person-situation interaction to explain behaviour on the basis of responses to trait-relevant cues found in situations. • SITUATION STRENGTH: strong vs weak situations • SITUATION RELEVENCE: A situation is considered relevant to a trait if it provides cues for the expression of trait-relevant behaviour

  15. APPROACHES TO IMPLEMENT TAT • Adapting the CONTENT of the exercise • Influencing the INSTRUCTIONS of each exercise to guide participants what type of behaviour to show • training ROLEPLAYERS on how to interact in order to elicit certain behaviours from participants • LARGE NUMBER OF SHORTER EXERCISES to obtains samples of performance on a number of independent tasks

  16.  Halaand and Christiansen (2002) found stronger convergence of AC ratings • GAP IN RESEARCH about effectiveness of TAT

  17. TO SUMMARISE SACKETT & DREHER (1982) CONSEQUENCES OF INVALID CONSTRUCTS DESIGN FIXES DON’T TAKE AWAY MY DIMENSIONS ABANDON DIMENSIONS DESIGN FIXES: TRIED & TESTED EPIC OF THE CV DEBATE CRITICS OF LANCE (2008) ACs AT A CROSSROADS

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