Predicting performance on a situational judgement test: the role of communication skills, listening skills, and expertise
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Predicting performance on a situational judgement test: the role of communication skills, listening skills, and expertise |
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Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Strahan, Jeanne (Author), Fogarty, Gerard J. (Author) and Machin, M. Anthony (Author) |
Editors | Katsikitis, Mary |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Proceedings of the 40th Australian Pysychological Society Annual Conference: Past Reflections, Future Directions |
Number of Pages | 5 |
Year | 2005 |
Place of Publication | Melbourne, Australia |
ISBN | 0909881278 |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | http://www.psychology.org.au/SiteMap.aspx?ID=1304 |
Conference/Event | 40th Australian Psychological Society Annual Conference 2005 |
Event Details | 40th Australian Psychological Society Annual Conference 2005 Event Date 28 Sep 2005 to end of 02 Oct 2005 Event Location Melbourne, Australia |
Abstract | [Abstract]: Situational judgement tests (SJTs) present scenarios drawn from a work context and ask respondents to select the most appropriate response from among a range of options. They therefore attempt to assess aspects of social cognition that are not often measured in traditional selection batteries. The present study asked participants to complete a high-fidelity SJT constructed by staff at ETS to assess communication skills in a medical context and also to complete three self-report instruments assessing listening skills, communication skills, and personality. A total of 107 participants completed the computer-administered test battery. Results indicated that listening skills, communication skills, and the agreeableness personality dimension combined to predict 22% of the variance in performance on the SJT. An expert group of doctors and nurses performed better on the SJT than a group drawn from occupations outside the health area. However, problems were noted with internal consistency reliability estimates for the SJT, suggesting that the effects noted above are underestimates of the true relationships. We conclude that if these problems can be overcome, SJTs have the potential to contribute to the selection of health professionals. |
Keywords | situational judgement tests, communication skills, listening skills, personality, expertise, health professionals, selection |
Public Notes | Deposited according to Publisher's requirements:'This is an electronic version of an article published in Katsikitis, Mary (Ed.)(2005). Proceedings of the 40th Australian Psychological Society Annual Conference (pp. 323-327). Melbourne, Australia: Australian Psychological Society. ISBN 0-909881-27-8.' |
Byline Affiliations | Department of Psychology |
Book Title | Proceedings of the 40th Australian Psychological Society Annual Conference |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/9xq70/predicting-performance-on-a-situational-judgement-test-the-role-of-communication-skills-listening-skills-and-expertise
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