Putting judging situations into situational judgment tests: Evidence from intercultural multimedia SJTs
Publication Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
3-2015
Abstract
Although the term situational judgment test (SJT) implies judging situations, existing SJTs focus more on judging the effectiveness of different response options (i.e., response judgment) and less on how people perceive and interpret situations (i.e., situational judgment). We expand the traditional SJT paradigm and propose that adding explicit assessments of situational judgment to SJTs will provide incremental information beyond that provided by response judgment. We test this hypothesis across 4 studies using intercultural multimedia SJTs. Study 1 uses verbal protocol analysis to discover the situational judgments people make when responding to SJT items. Study 2 shows situational judgment predicts time-lagged, peer-rated task performance and interpersonal citizenship among undergraduate seniors over and above response judgment and other established predictors. Study 3 shows providing situational judgment did not affect the predictive validity of response judgment. Study 4 replicates Study 2 in a working adult sample. We discuss implications for SJT theory as well as the practical implications of putting judging situations back into SJTs.
Keywords
Situational judgment test, intercultural skills, performance, verbal protocol analysis
Discipline
Human Resources Management | Organizational Behavior and Theory
Research Areas
Organisational Behaviour and Human Resources
Publication
Journal of Applied Psychology
Volume
100
Issue
2
First Page
464
Last Page
480
ISSN
0021-9010
Identifier
10.1037/a0038098
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Citation
ROCKSTUHL, Thomas; ANG, Soon; NG, Kok-Yee; LIEVENS, Filip; and Linn, Van Dyne.
Putting judging situations into situational judgment tests: Evidence from intercultural multimedia SJTs. (2015). Journal of Applied Psychology. 100, (2), 464-480.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/5707
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1037/a0038098