4 8
EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
interest. It would have been practically impossible, with
out a much larger clerical force than was available at the
time, to follow up closely the results of each individual
selection. Instead, therefore, of attempting a superficial
survey of all those selected, it was decided to make an in
tensive study of all selections made for one shop. One of
the largest and most carefully managed shops was chosen
for this purpose. A careful record of the production of
each girl examined and hired for this shop was started,
in order that her record in the tests might later be com
pared with her actual work as an inspector. However,
when these tests were first given, there was a sudden and
imperative demand for workers, and consequently, appli
cants were accepted whether they passed the tests or not.
This provided an exceptional opportunity for discovering
the value of the tests and of comparing the results of the
old method with that of the new. For it now became
possible to discover to what extent the girls who passed
the examination were better than those who did not.
Subsequently the recommendations made on the basis
of the tests were observed, and only those who met the
standard requirements were hired.
Before a sufficiently extensive record of production was
at hand, a question arose as to whether the results of the
tests justified their use. This question arose because the
exigencies of the war made a vast number of new workers
necessary, and because this need was being aggravated
by the fact that an appreciable number of applicants were
being rejected because of too low a rating in the psycho
logical examination. A large proportion of those rejected
in this way were assigned to other work; but there was still
a considerable number who refused to accept any other
kind of work, and who were therefore regarded as a dead