EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
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complex varieties of work. It is indispensable to separate
applicants according to the degree of ability which they
possess; for there is an infinite number of jobs requiring
infinite kinds and degrees of ability. Therefore it is
entirely inadequate to class people by their possession
or lack of certain qualities. Unless some method of
measurement can be applied to the qualities which are
sought after, some reliable and standard gauge, then the
detection of these qualities is of little value. They are too
indefinite and too general to be of practical use.
Another phase of the same tendency to describe jobs in
terms of personal qualities is that represented by the so-
called experts in character analysis. Aside from the ab
surdity of being able to make experts in this art through
a correspondence course of a few months, are the diffi
culties which have been outlined. The character ex
perts describe jobs in terms of personal qualities, and
the qualities they enumerate are much the same as those
mentioned. They also include such points as the size
of the head, texture of the skin, such terms as mental,
motive, and vital, and a variety of other equally general
and personal qualities. Even if the expert in character
analysis could surely detect the qualities he deals in, he
would still be far from being an expert in fitting men to
jobs. For the qualities in which he deals are just as
vague and far removed from the practical aspects of
employment as those which have been named. They
are abstract, general, and they can not be scientifically
measured. Consequently they mean nothing when ap
plied to the practical task of hiring specific men for jobs
requiring specific abilities.
In contrast with the method of analyzing and describing
jobs in terms of personal qualities, is the psychological