EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY DEFINED I9
of the work as it is actually being done. Its laboratory
is the shop and the office. The conditions under which
it conducts its experiments are the actual conditions and
not the highly artificial and theoretical conditions entailed
by the stereotyped psychological laboratory. The employ
ment psychologist must find and apply mental tests to
employees on the basis of a study of the work which they
are doing. In fact, he must become an employee himself,
in order that he may understand the kind of mental action
for which he is trying to find tests or measures. Only the
most temerarious psychologist would attempt to devise
or apply tests to employees whose work he understood in
only a superficial fashion.
There is a very decided tendency to-day to make a wide
spread and wholesale use of tests for employment purposes.
Newspapers and periodicals have given much space to the
description of tests and have made many sensational and
extravagant claims for their usefulness. There is great
danger in a sudden and extensive application of tests.
Indeed, ridicule has already been provoked by their indis
criminate use; for anyone with a little ingenuity, whether
he be a psychologist or not, can take a ready-made psy
chological test and apply it, after a fashion. But, having
applied it, the chief difficulty remains, namely, how shall
it be interpreted? What does it mean? No test has any
significance for employment purposes until it has been
tried out (by the scientific process to be described later)
on employees doing exactly the same kind of work as
that for which new applicants are to be tested later on.
If, for instance, an employment manager receives a set
of trade tests or clerical tests for use in connection with
the selection of workers, he can not use those tests effec
tually until a trained psychologist has tried them out on