Title: Human Resource Management
1Human Resource Management
- Recruitment Selection Lecture
- Tessa Owens
- Module Leader
2HRMLearning Outcomes
- To be able to produce job descriptions and
specifications and distinguish between them. - Understand the importance of effective
Recruitment and Selection - Analyse some of the methods used in this field in
the UK and elsewhere - Identify the requirements of an interview,
typical interviewer errors and how to avoid them - Examine the need for feedback and evaluation of
this process
3Job Description
- This is a written description of the job
containing the title, reporting relationships,
purpose and main tasks and duties
4Purposes of Job Descriptions
- to assist in the evaluation of the job
- to illustrate the job and its many duties as a
training tool for new incumbents - to be used to determine appraisal criteria
- to be the basis of the contract of employment
- to provide the information required to produce
person specifications
5Job Specifications
- A job (or person, or personnel) specification
sets out the education, qualifications, training,
experience, personal attributes and competences a
job holder requires to perform the job
satisfactorily. - Within this some requirements may be described as
essential/desirable/ or contra
6Models of Job Specifications
- See Rodger (1952) Seven Point Plan
- Physical make-up
- Attainments
- General intelligence
- Special aptitudes
- Interests
- Disposition
- Circumstances
- Munro-Fraser (1954) Five fold grading system.
- Impact on others
- Acquired qualifications
- Innate abilities
- Motivation
- Adjustment
7Shortlisting An assessment matrix
- Categorise candidates as probable, possible or
unsuitable, by comparing c.v against pre
determined criteria. An assessment matrix can
aid objectivity.
Qualifications Experience Evidence of leadership ability Evidence of reliability
Candidate 1 8/10 2/10 0/10 4/10
Candidate 2 4/10 9/10 7/10 7/10
Candidate 3 8/10 8/10 7/10 10/10
8Subjective?
- Watson (1994) believed that the use of person
specification frameworks may provide a - cloak for improper discrimination (p.189)
- Why might this be true?
9Selection Methods
- Many methods of selection exist
- Application forms / C.Vs
- Initial telephone interviews (CIPD 2001, cited
Beardwell et al 2004) - One-to-one interviews
- Panel interviews
- Psychometric tests
- Assessment Centres
- Testing
- In tray exercise
- Presentation
- Trial Project
10Activity
- What are the strengths and weaknesses of the
selection methods used?
11Making the right choice
- The cost of the selection process itself,
including the use of various selection
instruments - The future cost of inducting and training staff
- The cost of turnover if the selected staff are
not retained.
12Reliable Valid Selection?
- Reliability and Validity are 2 statistical
concepts which are important in selection - Reliability refers to the extent to which a
selection technique achieves consistency in what
it is measuring over repeated use, e.g. what
matters is how an individual is being measured
not by who. - Validity refers to the extent to which a
selection technique actually measures what it
sets out to measure. For example where the
selection methods adopted have been used before,
did the organisation get the right employees?
13The trouble with interviews
- Research suggests that traditional interviews
dont appear to be reliable or valid! - Pre-selection can take place where implicit
discrimination is formed (on the grounds of
gender, race, educational qualifications etc) - First impressions and early decisions, which
the interviewer may then look to support with
their questioning. - Stereotyping interviewers with little skill can
quickly label individuals
14Trouble with interviews 2
- The contrast effect interviewers are
influenced by the order in which applicants are
interviewed. An average candidate following a
poor candidate can appear to be better than
they are. Interviewers may compare applicants
against each other rather than objective
criteria. - Attraction interviewers may be biased towards
applicants they like.
15International Selection Methods
- use of popular selection methods
- Interviews still most popular from 97 (France)
to 84 (Israel) - References and Recommendations from 74 (UK) to
23 (Germany) - Others include Graphology (France 52,
Netherlands 24) Astrology (France 6, Israel
1)
16Activity Common interviewer errors
- What do you think are the common interviewer
errors which occur? - What would you do to overcome them?
17Poor Interviewer Skills
- Not having a structure
- Welcome, introductions, description of process,
questions, follow-up questions, discussion,
summary, what happens next..etc! - Asking multiple, leading, embarrassing,
provocative questions - Poor listening skills this is as important as
questioning skill! - Interviewer may have poor recall of information
discussed, or may have difficulty interpreting
what they were told and what that means for
whether the applicant can do the job on offer.
So make notes! - and/or use a Scoring System to help make more
objective evaluations.
18Training for interviewers
- Will typically include
- Questioning techniques
- Understanding of Equal Opportunities legislation.
You should research (see Learnwise for
resources) - Sex and Race discrimination
- Disability discrimination
- Age discrimination
- Employment of people with criminal records
- Human Rights Act 1998, e.g. questioning someone
on what they do in their leisure time could
infringe their right to privacy.
19Questioning Techniques
- Closed Questions
- Leading Questions
- Open Questions
- Probing questions
- Two types of questions have been shown to improve
the validity and reliability of interviews - Situational questions
- Patterned behaviour description questions
20Reliable Valid Questions
- Arvey and Champion (1982) found that panel
interviews were more reliable and valid when
conducted by a panel and based on job analysis
and information. - Latham et al (1980) found situational interviews
reliable and valid where interview questions are
derived from systematic job analysis based on a
critical incident technique, i.e. what an
applicant would do in a variety of situations.
21Reliable Valid Questions 2
- Pulakos and Schmitt (1995) compared situational
questioning against experience-based or
behavioural questions. - They found behavioural questions to be more
predicatively valid as the behavioural question
is asking - What have you done in a similar situation?
compared to - What would you do in the situation?
22Evaluation
- Once the recruitment and selection event is
complete an evaluation should be conducted. - Unless this evaluation occurs then the
organisation will not fully understand whether
the methods they are currently using to select
someone for employment are worthwhile and whether
these methods are getting them the sort of people
they need for their organisations long term
health and sustainability.
23Bibliography
- Armstrong, M (1999) A handbook of Human Resource
Management Practice 7th edition, Kogan Page - Arvey, R D Champion, J E (1982) The employment
interview a summary of recent research.
Personnel Psychology, 35, 281-322. - Beardwell, I Holden, L, Clayton, T (2004) Human
Resource Management 4th edition, Pitman
Publishing - Bratton, J Gold, J (2003) Human Resource
Management Theory and Practice 3rd Edition,
Palgrave. - Carling, C (1995) How to run a Voluntary Group
How to books, Plymouth - Carter, S Jones, D (2000) Enterprise and Small
Business Principles Practice and Policy Financial
Times , Prentice Hall - Foot, M Hook, C (1999) Introducing Human
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content of the psychological contract. British
Journal of Management, 8(2)151-62 - Legge, K (1995) Human Resource Management.
Rhetorics and Realities Macmillan Business - Pulakos, E D Schmitt, N (1995) Experience-
based and situational questions studies of
validity. Personnel Psychology, 48, 289-309. - Scott, M et al (1989) Management and Industrial
Relations in small firms Research Paper No. 70,
London Dept of Employment - Sparrow, P Hiltrop, J M (1994) European Human
Resource Management in Transition. New York
Prentice Hall - Torrington, D Hall, L (1998) Human Resource
Management 4th Edition, Prentice Hall - Watson, T (1994) Recruitment and selection. In
Sisson, K (ed.), Personnel Management. Oxford
Blackwell.