2 6
EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
eyes or letting up of the attention is likely to allow some
bad shells to slip by or to lengthen the operation.
This analysis having been made, the next step was
to find tests which would be likely to detect the presence
of these qualities. Sixteen different tests were chosen
and prepared for preliminary trials. It is not possible
or necessary to go into detail on all these tests at this
point. However, each test was tried out on a large enough
number of girls to give a good indication as to whether
it was likely to prove significant. A good deal of time
was required for this part of the experiment, but eventu
ally a set of eight tests was selected for the body of the
experiment. These eight tests will be described later; but
before describing them, one or two preliminary prob
lems will be of interest.
An important question to be settled was the question
as to just how these tests should be given. The rooms in
which the girls were at work were very noisy, due to con
stantly running machines and the handling of thousands
of brass shells. Should the girls be tested in this noisy
atmosphere or should they be taken off to some quiet
place, free from any possible disturbance? In the end it
was decided to give the tests in the workroom, on the
supposition that if the subjects were left in their regular
environment, they would be more likely to show character
istic results in their performance in the tests. A girl
suddenly taken out of a noisy shop to which she had be
come accustomed and into a soundless room might feel
just as strange as a girl taken from a quiet place into a
very noisy one. A small room was screened off on one
side, and this served as a place in which the tests could be
given with comparative freedom from intrusion.
Some difficulty had been anticipated in putting the