Topics:
Quick
Overview
Consistent Application of Testing
Job-Related Assessments
Adverse Impact
Quality of the Instrument
Medical and Non Medical Tests
Final Comments
Quick
Overview
There
are many misunderstandings regarding the legal use of
testing and assessments in the business world. Certainly
there is a maze of federal and state regulations and
guidelines that can easily intimidate the average businessperson.
The media has all too often publicized some rather dramatic
misuses of testing, creating the impression that it
is an all but certain recipe for disaster. It is reminiscent
of a childhood memory of pleading for a BB gun for a
birthday present, and being told that a BB gun would
shoot out my eye, my friends' eyes, and even the eyes
of total strangers. Both of these are fantastic exaggerations
of a real, but manageable concern. The reality is that
the proper and consistent use of effective testing and
assessment systems can dramatically strengthen a company's
legal position. Job-related testing and assessments
are essentially the only way to document objective and
non-discriminatory hiring practices.
Consistent
Application of Testing
There
should be a standardized selection process for each
position or job category. All applicants for the same
position must take the same test or assessment at the
same point in the process. It is not necessary to test
everyone. It is not necessary to test everyone within
the same job category. It is necessary to test everyone
who reaches the same point in the process where tests
or assessments are used. It is also not necessary to
use testing for all positions within the company.
Job-Related
Assessments
Tests
and assessments are only valuable if they measure criteria
that are directly related to job performance. This is
necessary for legal compliance also. In the selection
process, the greatest advantage in using assessments
is using the information to predict the future performance
of applicants. The ability to do this is not an intrinsic
quality of any test. It is found in the relationship
of the test results to the results of job performance,
and this must
be demonstrated through validation research.
Adverse Impact
Under
the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures
(1978), a selection process must provide fair and equal
employment opportunities to all applicants. Testing
may be used:
- to
screen out those applicants who are not likely to
be able to perform the job successfully
- to
group applicants in accordance with the likelihood
of their successful performance
- to
rank applicants, selecting those with the highest
scores for employment
The
operative principle must always be to avoid any adverse
impact or non-performance related discrimination against
any minorities.
Quality
of the Instrument
It
is of critical importance that instruments used in a
selection process meet certain standards:
- The
instrument should be copyrighted no earlier than 1991.
Two pieces of legislation that have directly impacted
testing are the Civil Rights Act of 1991 and the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990. The provisions of both
of these acts must have been considered in the construction
of any psychometric instrument used in making business
decisions involving people.
- The
instrument must have been designed for use in a selection
process. Many instruments which were originally validated
for use in counseling and self-development are unfortunately
marketed as hiring tools. Validation is a major element
of compliance, and validation is dependent upon two
things. First, that the instrument has demonstrated
that it measures what it claims to measure, and secondly,
that it has demonstrated it under the same circumstances
in which it is being used (i.e. It is expected that
an instrument used in the business environment would
have used employed people in its psychometric studies).
- The
technical manual for the instrument must provide thorough
documentation of:
- the
development of the scales used
- the
development of the norms
- the
various validation studies
- the
diversity of the populations used in the studies,
representing a mixture of appropriate ages, sexes,
and races
- The
psychometric studies which generated the original
norms should be revisited approximately every three
years. This allows the instrument to adjust to changes
in demographics and social values and attitudes.
Medical
and Non Medical Tests
The
Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA") provides
that no company shall discriminate against a qualified
individual with a disability because of that disability
in regard to hiring, advancement, training, or other
elements of employment. In a court of law, it can be
assumed that if a company knew of a disability, that
knowledge prejudiced their decisions. The ADA therefore,
in Section 12112(d), prohibits medical examinations
or medical inquiries of a job applicant as to whether
the applicant is an individual with a disability or
as to the nature or severity of such disability. It
is important to understand that this prohibition only
refers to "medical examinations and inquiries".
This refers to actual "medical" examinations
regarding an applicant's "medical condition or
history" which is designed to establish whether
that individual is suffering from a physical or mental
illness.The ADA goes on in Section 12112(d) to address
acceptable inquiries, when it states that a company
"may make pre-employment inquiries into the ability
of an applicant to perform job-related functions".
This clearly permits the use of assessment instruments
such as job fit assessments and honesty tests when used
properly. The EEOC: Enforcement Guidelines on Pre-Employment
Inquiries Under the ADA (1994) outlines the following
critical points:
- The
purpose of the test—Instruments measuring
fundamental characteristics of cognitive abilities,
interests, personality, honesty and habits are providing
information that is directly related to the successful
performance of a job. Instruments which measure such
things as psychoses, neuroses, physical or mental
disabilities, or other pathological issues are prohibited
in the pre-offer stage of a selection process. Medically-oriented
tests may be given after a job offer has been made.
- Medical
or non-medical instruments—Psychometric
assessment instruments designed for medical purposes
are normed on populations of individuals with some
type of medical disorder (e.g. The Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory was originally normed on a population
of abnormal individuals who were under clinical care.
Using those norms, the MMPI can measure such factors
as paranoia, schizophrenia, and other psychopathology.).
Non-medical assessment instruments are normed on a
population of individuals that is consistent with
the population and purpose for which the instrument
is to be used (e.g. The Prevue Assessment was normed
on a broad based population of normal, working individuals.
Psychopathology was not a criterion of the population.
As a result, the Prevue can only measure traits, abilities,
and attitudes which are related to job performance.
It is blind to psychopathology.)
- Content
of items—While an instrument may not be
designed as a medical test or assessment, if it is
to be used at the pre-offer stage, it is important
to insure that none of the items (questions) within
the instrument constitute a "medical inquiry"
concerning the existence, nature, or severity of a
disability. (e.g. At times I have been so depressed,
I sought professional counseling.)
Final
Comments
Legal
concerns are a fact of every part of business life,
but they are manageable concerns. Armed with knowledge
and reasonable awareness, any business can take advantage
of the power of assessment and testing information,
and at the same time, strengthen its legal compliance.This
is a general outline of the major legal considerations.
It is not a substitute for professional legal advice.
The appropriate legal counsel should be consulted before
making any decisions of this kind.
Return
to top |