VIII
STENOGRAPHERS, TYPISTS, AND COMPTOM-
ETRISTS
The work of typists, dictaphone clerks, stenographers,
and computing-machine operators, is clerical work which
is specialized by the use of a standard machine. In apply
ing tests to this kind of work, therefore, it is necessary to
take into consideration two additional factors: first, the
skill already acquired by the worker at a certain machine;
and secondly, the aptitude which the worker possesses
for learning and improvement in the use of the machine.
A typist, for instance, must usually possess, at the outset,
a certain degree of clerical ability. However, this is only
the foundation of her work. She must also be trained in
the use of the typewriter, and she should have, in addition,
that aptitude or innate ability which will make her, in
time, a fast and accurate typist. The same holds true of
other office-machine operators, except that the stenog
rapher must also have ability in taking dictation and in
reading her notes.
In order to find tests which could meet these conditions,
an extensive series of experiments was conducted in which
relevant tests were given to two senior classes of over
three hundred girls and boys in a commercial high school,
to seventy-six pupils of two business schools, to a group
of twenty-two office typists, to another group of nineteen
stenographers, to over four hundred candidates for posi
tions as typists and stenographers, to three groups of over
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