5° EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY had been applied, seventeen were definitely unsatisfactory, while nine were not described. And of those above the standard who would have been hired, thirty-four were definitely described as satisfactory, only one as unsatis factory, and thirty-two could not be designated. These results were such as to vindicate the application of the tests, even at a time when workers were urgently de manded. Later on, however, it was possible to make a much more satisfactory comparison, based upon the actual produc tion or output record of the girls. Forty-three inspectors who had succeeded or almost succeeded in becoming piece workers, and who had been at work for two months or more, were considered in this comparison. The hourly production of each girl was averaged for a period extend ing from one to four months. In this way a consistent production record was obtained for each girl, one which expressed the dominant characteristics of the girl rather than her particular ability on a particular day. The rank ing of the girls in production was then compared with their rankings in the cancellation and number group checking tests, tests number 8 and 6. (Test number 2, the card sorting test, had not been given because of the length of time it required and because of the large number of girls who were applying for work.) The corre lation for these tests was found to be very good, being forty-four for number 8, forty-seven for number 6, and fifty-eight for both tests when taken together. These correspondences are not as high as some of those found in the first experiment, but it will be remembered that at the time of this comparison a good many extremes had already been eliminated by their own failure. The striking thing about this comparison, however, is