ANALYSIS OF THE WORKER oI
ability is ended before he begins to make practical use of
so-called general tests of mental alertness, output of energy,
and the like. He will ordinarily find that the more specific
he makes his own tests, the closer they will predict ability
to do the work in question. But the varied samplings of
ability made by the standard intelligence tests undoubtedly
have their predictive value also. A worker who can do his
tasks well is nevertheless apt to become discontented and
restless if he is able to do work much more difficult and
exacting than his job requires. Dissatisfaction and labor
turnover traceable to such maladjustments are sometimes
predictable from intelligence test data. Ability to learn
certain kinds of occupational tasks is likewise significantly
correlated with intelligence test score. For these reasons the
investigator will not hesitate to include appropriate general
tests in his program of examinations, even though he may
be skeptical of the theory of the general common factor,
regarding which controversies still rage.
At the same time, no shrewd investigator will limit him-
self to any single test for an assumed general ability. If he
is interested in intelligence, he will use one test for intelli-
gence in manipulating mechanisms, another for intelligence
in dealing with people, a third for intelligence as applied to
ideas, words, concepts, written symbols. Indeed he will
choose his test according to the kind of mechanical con-
trivances to be manipulated, the social level or type of
situation in which social intelligence is to be demanded, or
the particular realms of abstract ideas in which clear, quick,
and accurate thinking is to be sought. He will go as far in
the direction of measuring specific abilities as the nature of
his problem permits.
RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF ABILITIES
Before attempting to construct an examination for any
particular item in his analysis of the abilities required, the
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