i8
EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
ical tests is quite in accord with the dictates of common
sense and good practice. However, while similar in prin
ciple, psychological tests differ from the general tests
just mentioned in being far more refined and accurate.
They are developed by a method based on very careful
experiments and the use of accurate statistical formulas.
The details of this method as applied to employment are
explained in subsequent chapters.
This method is gradually making it possible to obtain
standard measures of the mental qualities, measures
which are infinitely more accurate than those used in the
past. By means of these measures or tests, it is becoming
possible to set up standard specifications for the kinds
of applicants who are desired for a given position, and to
fill these specifications exactly as the tool maker would
fill the specifications for a tool which he is to make. Not
only will it be possible to apply these standards in the
particular office or location where they have been origi
nated, but it will be possible to apply them in all places.
The psychological tests devised for use in the army, for
instance, were distributed throughout every camp in the
country, and as a result, the classification of all privates,
commissioned and non-commissioned officers, was based
largely upon standard measures.
The distinguishing feature of employment psychology,
that which differentiates it from applied psychology in
general, is its field of activity. Heretofore mental tests
have been devised largely in the university laboratory
and have been tried out for the most part on students and
pupils in educational institutions. Employment psychol
ogy, however, works directly in the field of employment,
not employment as represented merely by the activities
of the employment office, but employment in the sense