Assessors' use of personality traits in descriptions of assessment centre candidates: A five-factor model perspective
Authors: Lievens F.; De Fruyt F.; Van Dam K.
Source: Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, Volume 74, Number 5, December 2001 , pp. 623-636(14)
Publisher: British Psychological Society
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Business , Neurology & Psychiatry , Public Health
- By this author: Lievens F. ; De Fruyt F. ; Van Dam K.
Content Key:
- Free
- New
- Open Access
- Subscribed
- Free Trial
Abstract:
In assessment centres assessors are typically taught to note down behavioural observations. However, previous studies have shown that about 20% of assessor notes contain trait descriptors. Instead of regarding these descriptors as errors, this study examines their position in a personality descriptive taxonomy (i.e. the AB5C taxonomy, see Hofstee, De Raad, & Goldberg, 1992) and relates them to employment recommendations. To this end, assessor notes of 403 assessees (214 men, 189 women; mean age 33 years) were scrutinized for personality descriptors. Results show that assessors, as a group, use descriptors referring to all five personality domains with a preference for positive Conscientiousness and Emotional Stability terms. The distribution of the Big Five categories differs across assessors and particularly across assessment centre exercises. Finally, three of the Big Five factors, namely Extraversion, Conscientiousness, and Openness, are related to the final employment recommendation.Language: English
Document Type: Research article
Content Key:
- Free
- New
- Open Access
- Subscribed
- Free Trial

Click here for Page Help