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# Thursday, November 12, 2009
The Merit Systems Protection Board, a federal agency charged with ascertaining that other federal agencies carry out personnel-related activities in compliance with the law, recently released a report on the use of job simulations in assessing job candidates.  While written specifically for the federal context, it is a good source of information to anyone interested in the topic.

For those who may not be familiar, a job simulation presents a realistic work situation and assesses how an applicant responds to it. When you think about it, the set of tasks that might be considered job simulations is rather broad to include things like having welders demonstrate their skills on standard tasks, having pilots demonstrate their skills in a flight simulator, or a store manager asking applicants how they might respond to specific customer inquiries. While they may differ in terms of fidelity to actual work tasks, job simulations often provide good information about a job candidate’s skill level with a high degree of face validity.  The MSPB report discusses the different types job simulations, their relative benefits and weakness, as well as how to create and conduct them. The document also goes on to detail how simulations might be more broadly used by federal government. Some very useful information at the right price...

Reid Klion

Thursday, November 12, 2009 5:07:38 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments -
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