Perceptions of the utility of personality assessment for personnel selection in the South African context: An exploratory study

Article

Perceptions of the utility of personality assessment for personnel selection in the South African context: An exploratory study

Published in: Journal of Psychology in Africa
Volume 25 , issue 5 , 2015 , pages: 482–485
DOI: 10.1080/14330237.2015.1101285
Author(s): Sapna Fakir Department of Psychology, South Africa , Sumaya Laher Department of Psychology, South Africa

Abstract

This study explored South African industrial psychologists’ perceptions of the utility of personality assessment for personnel selection. Eleven industrial psychologists (2 male, 9 female) from the Johannesburg area, South Africa were the participants. They participated in semi-structured interviews exploring their understanding of the place of personality assessment in personnel selection within organisational settings in South Africa and the common practices employed. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. Four dominant themes emerged from the data: person-environment fit; specific uses of personality tests; commonly used tests and validity and ethical concerns. Based on the findings, personality assessment use in South African industry settings appears multi-layered and consistently evolving.

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