2. What are Psychometric Tests?
Psycho = Mind
Metric = To Measure
any standardized procedure for measuring sensitivity or
memory or intelligence or aptitude or personality etc….
Source : www.thefreedictionary.com
3. Psychometrics
Field of study about technique of measuring and mapping the
psychological makeup of a human being.
Includes the measurement of knowledge, abilities, attitudes, and
personality traits.
Aims to provide employers with a reliable method of selecting the
most suitable job applicants or devising career progression.
4. Psychometric Tests
1 There is no “pass-or-fail” in Psychometric Test
2 It’s about “job-fit”
3 There is a job for everyone, HR’s task is to find the right candidate to fit
in the role/job
4 Psychometric Test are based on the assumption “Past behaviour is the
best predictor of future behaviour”
5. What do psychometric tests measure?
How well you work with other people
How well you handle stress
Whether you will be able to cope with the intellectual demands of the job
Your personality, preferences and abilities
Most do not analyze your emotional or psychological stability
Best match of individual to occupation and working environment
6. Kinds of Performance
Maximum performance
Have right and wrong answers
Tests here relate to our capacity or capability to do certain things. They
include tests of intelligence, aptitude or ability
Measure the ability of achievement under strict
conditions
Involve a certain level of difficulty to enable
comparison from person to person
7. Habitual performance
Are self-descriptive
Tests attempts to measure characteristics way of behaving. Also involves a
consideration of how we perceive the world, and of attitudes, values and
interests. Also called as ‘typical performance’
Indicate the most typical behaviour or
preferences
Don’t involve right or wrong answers
Kinds of Performance
9. Ability & Aptitude Tests (usually verbal,
numerical and diagrammatic)
Personality Inventories (questionnaires)
Types of Tests
Intelligence Tests
Achievement Tests
Creativity Tests
Interest Inventories
Behavioural Tests
Neuropsychological Tests
Assess capability
Assess traits
Assess intelligence
Assess degree of accomplishment
Assess capacity for novelty
Assess preference for activities
Measure behaviours and their
antecedents/consequences
Measure cognitive, sensory,
perceptual, or motor functions
10. Why do Employers use them?
1 Fair and objective measure of a skill/ability or the potential to acquire it
2 Gives a more rounded picture of suitability for a role
3
Objectively compares candidates’ performance with ‘norm’ levels for a
similar ‘population’
4
Reliable predictor of how well someone is likely to perform in a given
job
5 Measuring potential rather than attainment
6 Free from cultural bias
11. Integrated Selection Strategy
Job Performance
criteria
Performance
prediction system
Test
Selection
Job
Analysis
Performance
appraisal
VALIDATION
12. Personality tests
Tests that use projective techniques and trait inventories to measure
basic aspects of an applicant’s personality, such as introversion, stability,
and motivation.
Disadvantage
• Personality tests—particularly the projective type—are the most
difficult tests to evaluate and use.
Advantage
• Tests have been used successfully to predict dysfunctional job
behaviors and identify successful candidates for overseas
assignments.
Measuring Personality and Interests
13. Types of Personality Tests
16 PF
MBTI
Big Five
Thomas Personal Profiling System
FIRO-B
14. The “Big Five”
Extraversion
The tendency to be sociable, assertive, active, and to experience positive effects,
such as energy and zeal.
Emotional stability/neuroticism
The tendency to exhibit poor emotional adjustment and experience negative effects,
such as anxiety, insecurity, and hostility.
Openness to experience
The disposition to be imaginative, nonconforming, unconventional, and
autonomous.
Agreeableness
The tendency to be trusting, compliant, caring, and gentle.
Conscientiousness
Is comprised of two related facets: achievement and dependability.
15. The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator(MBTI)
Based on theories of Gustav Jung
Most widely-used questionnaire
based test
Uses four bi-polar dimensions
Sensing –Intuition (SN)
Thinking – Feeling (TF)
Extraversion-Introversion (E-I)
Judging-Perceiving (J-P)
To create 16 ‘Personality Types’
16. MBTI is used for:
Individual development
Management and leadership
development
Team building and development
Organizational change
Improving communication
Education and career counseling
Relationship counseling
17. 16 Personality Factor model (16PF)
Developed in the 1940s and refined in the 60s
Attempts to define the basic underlying personality
Questionnaire based
Analysis using 16 personality factors
16 PF is used for:
Selection
Development
Executive coaching
Teambuilding
18.
19. The 16 factors with their
word descriptors of each
scale
20. The DISC Personality Model
Developed in 1920s to understand ‘why people do what they do’
Simple questionnaire based
Uses four categories of human behavioral styles
– "D" for Dominance-Drive-Direct,
– "I" for Influence
– "S" for Steadiness or Stability
– "C" for Compliant, Conscientious, or Cautious
Direct, Influencing, Steady and Compliant behaviors.
22. DISC is used for:
As a learning tool
For career development
Training, coaching and mentoring
Organisational development and performance
23. FIRO-B:
Devised by American psychologist, Will Schutz, in the 1950's
Helps people to understand themselves and their
relationships with others
Based on a 2-hour, 54-question questionnaire
Describes interpersonal behavior in terms of three primary
dimensions:
1. Need for Inclusion
2. Need for Control
3. Need for Affection
FUNDAMENTAL INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIP ORIENTATION-BEHAVIOUR
24. FIRO-B is used for
Team building and team development
Individual development and executive coaching
Conflict resolution
Selection and placement
Management and leadership development
Relationship counselling
25. Selecting and Testing Items
Validity Reliability
A test is valid if it
measures what it says
it measures
A test is reliable if it is self-consistent
It should also give the same score for
each subject when they are re-tested,
this is called re-test reliability
26. Selecting and Testing Items
Types of Validity
The extent to which the test appears to the user to
test the attribute in the question. Its main value is in
gaining co-operation from test takers
The question here is whether the test fully
describes the variable being measured
Face Validity
Construct Validity
27. Selecting and Testing Items
Types of Validity
This answers the question ‘Does this test
measure all aspects of the variable in question?’
Content Validity
This establishes the predictive value of the test; whether it can predict some
measured, real-world criterion
Criterion-related Validity
29. A psychometric test should be:
Objective: The score must not affected by the testers' beliefs or values
Standardized: Must be administered under controlled conditions
Reliable: Must minimize and quantify any intrinsic errors
Predictive: Must make an accurate prediction of performance
Non Discriminatory: Must not disadvantage any group on the basis of
gender, culture, ethnicity, etc.
30. Testing Program Guidelines
1 Use tests as supplements
2 Validate the tests
3 Monitor your testing/selection program
4 Keep accurate records
5 Use a certified psychologist
6 Manage test conditions
7 Revalidate periodically