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PSY 6430 Unit 8, Pre-employment Screening

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Title: PSY 6430 Unit 8, Pre-employment Screening


1
PSY 6430 Unit 8, Pre-employment Screening
  • Application Forms, Reference Checks, Credit and
    Background Checks, Social Media, Interviews

Schedule Wednesday, 4/15 Lecture, one
lecture unit! Monday, 4/20 Exam
8 Task analysis due if grade BF
ME2 Wednesday, 4/22 Return of E8
ME2 Study objectives Monday, 4/27
ME2 at 500-700 pm
Task analysis due can leave it in
my mailbox in Wood, if you prefer
2
Application forms Biodata assessments
  • As indicated in SO1, while I understand that
    biodata assessments are valid, I have a hard time
    with them because
  • Invasion of privacy see questions in Tables 9.2
    and 9.3 on pages 340 and 341
  • Particularly given the warning by the authors
    later in the text that invasion of privacy issues
    are likely to become more important in the future
  • Nature of the work force may (and does) change
    over time and what predicts successful
    performance for current workers may not at all
    predict successful performance for new
    generations of workers, particularly given
    increasing diversity of the workforce

(cont. next slide)
3
SO2 Application Biodata assessments
  • A. And, they dont add any predictive value over
    general mental ability tests
  • B. Implication Employers would do as well with a
    readily available mental ability test (save time
    and money re development) and avoiding biodata
    inventories

4
SO3 Falsification of information on resumes and
application forms
  • People do falsify information, for positions at
    all levels of an organization
  • A study by the Society of Human Resources
    Management reported that 53 of applications
    contain false information
  • The NY Times reported that 34 of applications
    contain outright lies about experience,
    education, and ability to perform the essential
    job functions
  • NFE, but 41 of college students said they
    included at least one false statement on an
    application, and 95 said they were willing to do
    that
  • Also NFE, but 40 of executives reported they had
    lied about their education

5
SO3, NFE examples from a 2012 article
  • Marilee Jones, Dean of Admissions at MIT did not
    have any of the degrees she claimed from three
    universities
  • Kenneth Lonchar, CEO of Veritas Software lied
    about having an accounting degree
  • Shirley DeLibero, head of Houston Metropolitan
    Transit Authority, did not have two degrees
    listed on her resume
  • Michael Brown, head of the Federal Emergency
    Agency
  • Claimed he was assistant city manger when he was
    only assistant to the manager with no mgt.
    responsibilities
  • Claimed he was a professor when he was only a
    student at a particular university
  • Claimed to have been the national head of a trade
    group when he had only headed a regional chapter
  • Did not reveal previous employment from which he
    had been terminated

Bible, J. D. (2012). Lies and damned lies Some
legal implications of resume fraud and advice
for Preventing it. Employee Relations Law
Journal, 38(3), 22-47.
(and probably once of the most infamous..)
6
SO3,NFE Examples cont.
  • Any sports fans?
  • In 2001, Notre Dame hired George Leary as the new
    football coach
  • He was fired 5 days later for falsifying his
    credentials
  • He claimed he had an MA from NYU, which he did
    not
  • He claimed that he had coached a football team in
    New Hampshire, which he had not
  • And, finally he claimed he had played 3 years of
    football, which he had not

7
SO3,NFE Examples, cont.
  • My experience at Port Authority when I was
    working in the Personnel Department, Management
    Division
  • We hired a woman as a human resources
    representative who claimed to have a very strong
    background as a personnel administrator
  • She was a disaster
  • About 6-8 months after she was hired, one of my
    colleagues took it upon himself to check out her
    references
  • Every single one of them was false
  • My colleague brought this to the attention of our
    manager, who at the time was an interim manager
    (who wanted to be the permanent manager)
  • He buried the whole thing and kept her on

8
SO3,NFE One more example
  • WMU, Hamman, 2010
  • Hired in 2004, left in February, 2010, age 58
  • Co-directed WMUs Center of Excellence for
    Simulation Research, College of Aviation, medical
    simulation work
  • He was a United Airlines pilot, hired directly by
    the Dean of the College of Aviation, who had also
    been a UA pilot and who bypassed WMUs regular
    hiring process
  • The co-director, Bill Rutherford, was a physician
    and also had been a pilot and executive at UA
  • Hamman claimed to have a Ph.D. and a medical
    degree from University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • The Center brought in over 4.2 million dollars
    in grant funding
  • He left to join William Beaumont Hospital in
    Royal Oak
  • In June, Beaumont discovered he did not have
    either a Ph.D. or a medical degree!

(article at the end of the sos)
9
SO3 Falsification of information on the
application form (this slide, also NFE)
  • The moral of the story
  • Even for high profile positions, some applicants
    falsify information, so check references!!

10
SO4 Wording to reduce falsification on
applications
  • Every application form should have the following
    wording on it
  • Deliberate attempts to falsify information can
    be detected and may be grounds for either not
    hiring you or for terminating you after you begin
    work
  • And, the following to obtain certification by the
    applicant
  • By signing this application, I declare that the
    information provided by me is complete and true
    to the best of my knowledge. I understand that
    any misrepresentation or omission on this
    application may preclude an offer of employment,
    or may result in a withdrawal of an employment
    offer, or may result in my discharge from
    employment if I am already employed at the time
    the misrepresentation or omission is discovered.
  • It is much easier to fire a person because he/she
    lied on the application than it is to fire a
    person for false or incomplete information on the
    application!
  • SO4, FE This type of wording has been shown to
    reduce falsification by almost 50!

11
SO5 Application blanks The more the
better danger
  • Some employers think it is desirable to obtain as
    much information as possible on the application
    in order to screen applicants better
  • However, the more the better danger can create
    major problems for an employer. Why?
  • They are covered by EEO and AA laws
  • Those laws assume that ALL questions on the
    application are used to make selection decisions
  • Under a charge of unfair discrimination, the
    burden of proof may be on the employer to
    demonstrate that ALL questions are fair, and not
    discriminatory

12
SO6 (NFE) Questions to ask about application
form items - Table 9.5
  • Will answers to this question, if used, have
    adverse impact on members of a protected group?
  • Is this information really needed to evaluate an
    applicants competence or qualifications for the
    job?
  • Does the question conflict with EEOC guidelines,
    federal or state laws, or statutes?
  • Does the question constitute an invasion of
    privacy?
  • Is information available that could be used to
    show that responses to a question are associated
    with success or failure on a specific job

(five questions to ask did anyone bring in an
application form from a company they work for?)
13
SO7 Questions most litigated
  • Reviews of 300 federal court cases re
    applications
  • Sex and age most frequent (53 of cases)
  • Of those, the plaintiff won over 40
  • NFE, but 20 of the cases involved questions
    relating to
  • Educational requirements
  • Convictions
  • Work history
  • Experience requirements

(cant ask for dates of attendance to high school
or college age)
14
SO8 Fair Employment Practice Laws
  • The Fair Employment Practice Laws of states
    determine the legal status of pre-employment
    inquiries, and thus these are the laws that
    employers should review first when looking at
    their application forms

15
SO9 State vs. Federal laws, which are favored by
EEOC and why?
  • EEOC favors state laws
  • Federal laws tend to be more conservative, that
    is they favor the organization more than the
    person bringing the complaint
  • Federal laws supersede state laws so state laws
    must be as conservative as federal laws
  • State laws can be more liberal (favor the
    individual more)
  • State laws can cover other demographic
    characteristics (Michigan laws cover people who
    are overweight and sexual orientation California
    covers cross-dressers)
  • Example in book federal laws permit questions
    re criminal convictions (not arrests, but
    convictions), but some states, OH, for example,
    applicants cannot be required to disclose
    convictions for minor misdemeanor violations

16
SO10 Questions you can and cannot ask
  • Turn to Table 9.6, page 354
  • Cannot ask anything about marital status,
    children or child care
  • Cannot ask anything that reveals the date of
    birth (when did you graduate from high school)
  • Undesirable to ask about military experience
  • Cannot ask about arrests, only convictions

17
SO11 Use of technology and screening resumes
  • Companies are increasingly
  • Optically scanning resumes
  • Using keyword searches for to identify specific
    information that addresses minimum qualifications
    and credentials

Lesson When applying for jobs look for the key
words in the add and include those on your resume
(SO is worded awkwardly sorry)
18
SO12 Two legal issues re online screening
  • Minority applicants may not have equal access to
    the internet and may be overlooked during the
    screening process, which could result in
    disparate impact
  • Privacy third-party vendors or the web sites
    themselves may track sensitive data provided by
    applicants
  • Should include a statement re privacy who will
    have access to their data?

19
SO13 Training and Experience (TE)
Evaluations (this slide, NFE)
  • These are an excellent way to document a persons
    past experiences and relevant KSAs
  • I particularly find the behavioral consistency
    method useful (374-377)
  • Many organizations have begun to use these
  • They are an excellent first step in any applicant
    screening process
  • They can be easily implemented in small
    organizations as well as large ones
  • Many organizations try to collect this
    information during an interview, but the
    interview
  • Is not long enough to collect this information
  • Does not provide a written permanent product that
    others in the organization can then evaluate

20
SO13 Training and Experience (TE)
Evaluations (this slide, NFE)
  • They are based on the following assumptions
  • Job applicants should be evaluated on the basis
    of behaviors that show differences between
    superior and minimally acceptable employees
  • These behaviors can be identified by SMEs who
    have observed superior and marginal performance
    on the job
  • Applicants past accomplishments are predictive
    of their future behaviors (sound familiar as
    behaviorists?)
  • Applicants past accomplishments can be reliably
    rated by SMEs

21
SO15 Briefly describe behavioral consistency
TEs
  • Job applicants describe, in narrative form, their
    past accomplishments in several job-related areas
    (usually 5-7) that have been determined to
    discriminate between excellent and marginal job
    performance
  • Asked to answer questions such as
  • What are examples of your past achievements that
    demonstrate the necessary abilities and skills to
    perform these job behaviors?
  • What was the problem on which you worked?
  • What did you do to solve the problem, and when
    did you do it?
  • What was the result of your actions?
  • What percentage of credit do you claim for this
    achievement?
  • What are the names and contact information for
    individuals who can verify the achievement and
    the credit you claim?
  • Rating scales that describe job-related behaviors
    that distinguish between superior and marginal
    performance are used by raters to evaluate the
    applicants written (now usually electronic)
    descriptions.

(I really like these questions, by the way!
SO16 NFE meta-analyses have shown estimated
validities of .45 high Page number for SO16
should be 370,1, not 371,1)
22
SO1719 Reference checking
  • The principal purpose of a reference check is to
    verify what an applicant has said on the
    application form and resume
  • It serves primarily as a basis for disqualifying
    an applicant, not qualifying one
  • As it turns out, data indicate that the
    relationship between reference checking and
    obtaining recommendations from references have
    only a low to moderate relationship with job
    success
  • Many reasons for this, but one of the main ones
    is that the applicant selects the references

23
SOs 2021 Two legal issues related to reference
checking that work against each other
  • Defamation
  • This is why organizations often refuse to give
    out any information about a former employee
    except the dates the person worked for the
    company
  • Every organization should have this policy
  • All requests for information should be forwarded
    to HR, who should refuse any information except
    the dates of employment
  • Negligent hiring
  • To protect itself, the hiring organization should
    seek reference information from the organizations
    with which an applicant has worked

(These are very important issues the first
discourages organizations to give out
information, The second encourages prospective
employers to get seek it and get it)
24
SO20 Defamation
  • Defamation learn definition
  • A written (libel) or oral (slander) false
    statement made by an employer about a previous
    employee that damages the individuals reputation
  • (NFE) Text provides several case studies where
    the organization was found to have defamed a
    former employee
  • A written letter that contained a statement that
    a woman had brought a charge of sexual
    discrimination against the company
  • Note that the statement was true, however, the
    court found that the company illegally retaliated
    against her for exercising her rights under Title
    VII

25
SO20(NFE) Defamation
  • School superintendent told a person conducting a
    reference check that
  • The teacher was not really a good math teacher,
    being more concerned about living up to his
    contract than going the extra mile, and not being
    able to turn students on
  • Superintendent argued those were his personal
    opinions and protected by his first amendment
    rights (free speech)
  • Court ruled the statements were given with
    reckless disregard of their truth or falsity
    and therefore libel and slander were committed
    against the teacher
  • Lawyers at EMU have told all of their professors
    never to write a bad recommendation letter for a
    student rather just to say no

(WMUs request that we get students to sign a
form when we provide references one more slide
on this)
26
SO20(NFE) Defamation
  • These type of law suits are becoming major issues
    for organizations
  • There are now firms that individuals can hire who
    will call their former employers, posing as
    potential employers (google documented reference
    check)
  • https//references-etc.com
  • You need to be very careful and make sure
    everyone else in the organization is careful too

27
SO21 Negligent hiring
  • 21A Explain what it is
  • A third party (e.g., coworker, client, customer)
    files suit against an employer for injuries
    caused by an employee
  • The focus is that the employer knew or should
    have known that the employee who caused the
    injury was unfit for the job
  • Thus, the employers negligence in hiring the
    individual produced the persons injuries

(note the should have known clause relevant to
Western, as it is to all universities, based on
any harm done to a student - the student or the
parent can file a law suit)
28
SO21 Negligent hiring, this slide NFE
  • Western, for example, is concerned about this due
    to an event that occurred several years ago
  • WMU hired a professor who was later accused of
    sexual harassment (justifiably)
  • When they looked into his background and did some
    checking it turns out he had been accused of
    sexual harassment at two prior universities where
    he had worked
  • But both universities had agreed to a legal
    settlement with him wherein he would leave, but
    the charges (never legally proven) would not ever
    be divulged

(not uncommon in a very rare incident in our
dept., a doctoral student was shown to have
published fake data. Beyond a doubt. Agreement
was reached that he would leave the program but
we could not divulge the information to others,
another slide)
29
SO21 Negligent hiring, this slide NFE
  • Consider the situation that has just been set up
  • If the prior universities had divulged the
    information to WMU, they could have been sued for
    violation of the legal settlement, and also for
    defamation of character since the charges were
    never proven
  • On the other hand, WMU was subject to a negligent
    hiring law suit because we accepted the
    recommendations that were given - that is, we did
    not conduct telephone reference checks
  • So guess what? We now do in-depth telephone
    reference checks for our faculty candidates
  • When applying they sign a form that permits us to
    contact people other than those they list as
    references

30
SO21 Negligent hiring, this slide NFE
  • Students from my Advanced Systems Analysis class
    developed the form that is still used today that
    gets permission from candidates to conduct those
    telephone references
  • I found myself in a very strange situation at the
    time (I was chairing quite a few faculty searches
    in those days)
  • For some reason, our then Provost, told us we had
    to send out the forms, but forbade us to send out
    the forms until after we had done the reference
    checks!
  • The Director of Employment, VP of Institutional
    Equity and I all objected, to no avail
  • I sent a very long email to our Dean, telling the
    Dean that as a selection specialist, I had to get
    the applicants permission before we conducted
    the reference checks, or I would be violating
    professional standards
  • We did that (undercover) in our department for
    about two or three years, until they changed the
    official procedure to the correct procedure

31
SO21 Negligent hiring (FE)
  • 21B. Explain the Catch 22 situation that
    organizations can find themselves in with regard
    to reference checks
  • As a prospective employer, you want to seek
    information that would prevent negligent hiring,
    but past employers wont provide that information
    for fear of a defamation of character law suit

(Catch 22? Novel crazy leave military so how do
you get out of the Catch 22 - next slide)
32
SO21 Negligent hiring (FE)
  • 21C.
  • How can an organization get out of this Catch
    22?
  • If you can prove through written documentation
    that you attempted to collect background
    information, even if the previous employer
    refused to give it, then you are OK.
  • Why does this procedure protect an organization?
  • As the text states, the legal question becomes
  • Did the employer take reasonable steps and
    precautions to identify a problem employee, given
    the risks inherent in the tasks performed on the
    job?
  • Thus, if you attempt to get the information and
    document your attempts, courts will generally
    conclude that you have taken reasonable steps
    and precautions

(The steps a potential employer should take
with documentation are provided in the text)
33
Intro Selection Interviews (NFE)
  • Researchers have studied selection interviews for
    over 80 years
  • Until recently, validity data were not good
  • Inappropriate questions and irrelevant factors
    influenced selection recommendations
  • Also, many resulted in adverse impact
  • New improved interviews, validity coefficients
  • Structured interviews - .44, .57, .62
  • Unstructured interviews - .20, .31, .33

34
SO24 What should and should not be covered in
interviews
  • Most interviews try to do too much
  • There are three types of characteristics that are
    best evaluated in an interview due to the fact
    that it is a social situation
  • Applied social skills, such as interpersonal and
    communication skills
  • Personality and habits, such as
    conscientiousness, emotional stability and
    extraversion
  • Fit with the job and organization (values, goals,
    norms, and attitudes)

35
SO25A How useful are unstructured, get
acquainted interviews? Explain.
  • They are not very useful
  • Interviewer tends to form subjective, global
    ratings that are not useful, although the
    interviewer believes they are (and therein lies
    the problem)
  • They are confident in their own ability to
    evaluate an applicant, even though their
    decisions are being influenced by irrelevant
    factors such as physical attractiveness, the
    strength of the handshake, eye contact, etc.

36
SO25B Rapport building in interviews, intro to
study by Barrick, Stewart et al.
  • Does rapport building at the beginning of an
    interview help or hurt the validity of
    interviews?
  • Building rapport sets the applicant at ease and
    thus could enhance validity (you see more of the
    persons actual repertoire)
  • On the other hand, if greater rapport results in
    the interview becoming more biased, then it could
    decrease validity

37
SO25B Rapport and first impressions
  • First impressions do matter!
  • 1958 results on average interviewers made a
    decision in four minutes
  • Barrick et al. confirmed the importance of first
    impressions in a series of recent studies
  • Evaluations made after a brief introduction and
    getting to know you phase and before any
    substantive questions correlated highly with
    hiring recommendations
  • Implications First impressions formed early in
    interviews have a substantial effect on whether
    an interviewer recommends hiring the person

38
SO25 (NFE) Interviews and applicantsphysical
appearance, first impressions
  • An applicants physical appearance has repeatedly
    been demonstrated to affect the evaluations of
    interviewers
  • Eye contact, smiling, posture, hand movements,
    self-promotion, ingratiation (latter two are
    double-edged swords)
  • In a number of studies, attractive individuals,
    especially women, were rated higher than
    unattractive individuals
  • In another, grooming (style of hair, clothing,
    makeup, and jewelry) was related to evaluations
    of female applicants
  • Clothing for women! Female applicants receive
    more favorable ratings if they wear masculine
    type clothing, i.e., a tailored navy blue suit,
    rather than a dress
  • No stiletto heals
  • No low cut (let alone see through) blouses
  • No tight blouses, tight sweaters, or tight suit
    jackets
  • No dangly earrings (same is true for men these
    days!)

(dress is very important females must dress
conservatively)
39
SO27 Two ways to reduce effects due to age,
race, sex, and other demographics
  • Use highly structured interviews
  • Use experienced interviewers
  • Legal issues In a review of 158 federal court
    cases
  • 57 of cases involved the use of an unstructured
    interview
  • Only 6 involved the use of a structured
    interview
  • In 41 of the cases, the unstructured interview
    was found to be the cause of the unfair
    discrimination
  • In 0 of the cases, the structured interview was
    found to be the cause of the unfair
    discrimination

Not for exam
40
SO29 Interviewers give more weight to negative
than to positive information. Why?
  • Even experienced interviewers give more weight to
    negative information than to positive information
  • In one study, unfavorable ratings on only one of
    several characteristics resulted in the rejection
    of the applicant in over 90 of the cases
  • Interviewers can usually specify why a rejected
    applicant would not be a good employee, but can
    not specify why acceptable candidates would be
    satisfactory
  • Implies clearer use of negative information

(the authors give a very nice environmental
explanation for this reasons on next slide)
41
SO29 Interviewers give more weight to negative
than to positive information. Why?
  • Relative costs (consequences) to the interviewer
    and the organization
  • The greatest cost to the interviewer is making
    the mistake of selecting an applicant who fails
    on the job
  • His/her professional reputation suffers
  • Organization suffers loss of productivity
  • Rejecting an applicant who would, in fact, be a
    successful performer, has no real costs
  • Who would know since the person was not hired?
  • Thus, cost is lowered by rejecting marginal or
    doubtful candidates

(all points FE)
42
SO33 Validity of an individual interviewer vs.
an interview panel
  • There is a common belief that a panel of
    interviewers will produce more reliable, valid
    evaluations than an individual interviewer
  • The data just do not support that
  • (NFE) There are at least three reasons for why a
    panel may not produce more reliable and valid
    ratings
  • Panel interviews tend to be more unstructured
    than individual interviews
  • Facing a group of interviewers is more
    intimidating (and can be very intimidating) than
    facing an individual interviewer, and that may
    inhibit the answers from an applicant
  • The social interaction between and among the
    members of the panel affect the ultimate rating
    (which may not be a good thing, particularly if
    you have a member of the panel who is a
    domineering person)

43
SO33 Validity of an individual interviewer vs.
an interview panel (this slide, NFE)
  • Have any of you ever had a panel interview?
  • My own experience as an applicant has always been
    bad when I have been interviewed by a panel
  • I had a panel interview with the then Upjohn at
    the newly built Taj Mahal
  • I had worked as an intern for two years in one of
    the departments and the manager wanted to hire me
    full-time
  • There were nine members on the panel, all white,
    all male, all at least 15 years older than I was
  • One of the first things that happened - I walked
    into the room, sat down at the conference table,
    and without anyone moving or saying anything, the
    door to the conference room swung shut by
    itself and locked - you could easily hear the
    locking mechanism

44
SO33 Validity of an individual interviewer vs.
an interview panel (this slide, NFE)
  • I was doing OK until one member of the panel, who
    was one of the head trainers, asked me what I
    thought about a training program they had
    implemented with engineers to improve the
    functioning of their right brains (or left?? -
    whatever the creative side is supposed to be)
  • The training program consisted of bringing in
    engineers and having them finger paint
  • I admit I paused while I ran through a number of
    possible things I could say, one of which would
    clearly have resulted in my rejection
  • I also decided that I didnt want to argue
    theory
  • After a brief pause, I commented that the data
    with respect to whether training improved
    performance should drive the training program,
    and then asked him one question
  • How are you evaluating the effectiveness/success
    of that training?
  • What do you think? Good or bad response/question
    on my part?

45
SO33 Validity of an individual interviewer vs.
an interview panel (this slide, NFE)
  • As it turns out, bad!
  • He said he evaluated the results based on how
    well the engineers liked it, and then launched
    into a diatribe about the practical realities of
    organizations vs. school-book knowledge
  • I was not offered the job (even though the
    manager for whom I worked with for 2 years wanted
    to hire me)

46
SO34 Consumer reports
  • More and more employers are using consumer
    reports to screen applicants
  • In April 2012, the EEOC issued new guidelines re
    the use of consumer reports in selection/screening
  • Consumer reports include
  • Credit checks, criminal background checks, motor
    vehicle record checks, among others
  • Credit checks and criminal background checks have
    been found to have adverse impact
  • The use of consumer reports is regulated by the
    Fair Credit Reporting Act (even though it covers
    more than credit checks)

47
SO34 Consumer reports
  • Before an employer can obtain a consumer report
  • Employers must notify applicants/employees that
    they are obtaining or may obtain a consumer
    report in writing
  • Employers must obtain a written consent from
    applicants/employees

48
SO35 Consumer reports
  • Before an employer can take any adverse action
    (i.e., denying employment) the employer must
    notify the person in advance
  • After an employer takes an adverse action, the
    employer must provide the person with additional
    notice
  • That notice must include the name, address, and
    toll-free number of the vendor that conducted the
    background check

49
SO44 Social Network Media
  • In a survey of 300 hiring managers, 90 of
    recruiters reported that they visited an
    applicants social media web site
  • 69 reported that they have rejected an applicant
    based on the web site
  • 68 also reported that they have hired an
    applicant based on the web site

(I am going to skip to SO44 these are stats that
you really need to know)
50
SO44 Social Network Media
  • Leading reasons for rejection (other surveys have
    found the same thing)
  • References to drinking or drug use
  • Provocative photos
  • Bad mouthing previous employers
  • Discriminatory comments related to race/ethnic
    background, sex, religion, etc.
  • Poor writing/communication skills
  • Lying about qualifications

(I am going to skip to SO44 these are stats that
you really need to know)
51
SO44 Social Network Media
  • Leading reasons for hiring an applicant
  • General personality
  • Professional image
  • Background information matched the resume
  • Great communication skills
  • Creativity
  • Well-rounded interests

(Watch your social networking sites privacy
options!!)
52
SO45 First and foremost risk for using social
media web sites
  • Run afoul of the discrimination laws
  • Web sites can reveal information about protected
    status/demographics
  • There havent been any major law suits yet, but
    the courts could rule, as they have for
    application blanks, any information obtained is
    assumed to be used to make selection decisions

53
SO46 NFE Social media passwords
  • Yes! Some employers are requiring that applicants
    give them their social media passwords!
  • I have to admit I am astonished at this
  • No federal law exists yet to prohibit this but 12
    states, including Michigan, have adopted
    prohibitive laws
  • No employer should do this, enough said

54
SO47 NFE Genetic Information Act
  • Another very interesting issue
  • When a company requires a medical examination,
    post-offer, the common practice of physicians
    asking about family medical history is a
    liability even if the information obtained is
    never provided to the prospective employer
  • I have no clue where this one is going
  • The article calls it a sleeper
  • Only 333 cases were filed last year with the EECO
    re genetic discrimination
  • In 2013, the EEOC filed two law suits citing GINA
    and ADA, both involving only one individual
  • The article states that these cases alert
    employers to expect aggressive enforcement in the
    future
  • (this is another stayed tuned issue)

55
SO48 NFE Protection of unemployed
  • Yet another very interesting issue
  • In 2011, the EEOC met to consider whether
    employers were unfairly screening out the
    unemployed and the increasing prevalence of job
    ads that discourage the unemployed from applying
  • Again, there is no federal legislation and
    proposed laws in most states and municipalities
    have failed, but two states and the DC have
    enacted laws (as well as a few large cities), and
    nine states proposed bills in 2013
  • States that have enacted laws New Jersey
    Oregon
  • States that have proposed laws FL, IA, ME, MA,
    MN, NH, NY, PA, VA

(again, another stay tuned selection/recruitment
issue last slide)
56
The End
  • Questions and Comments?

57
NFE Facebook and social media
  • April 20, 2012 survey of 2,000 hiring managers
    and human resource personnel
  • 37 of employers use social networking sites to
    pre-screen applicants (most use Facebook)
  • 11 said they planned to start
  • 34 said they had come across something that
    caused them not to hire the person
  • Provocative photo
  • References to drinking or drug use
  • Other red flags speaking badly about a former
    employer, making discriminatory comments related
    to race, gender, religion, etc., lying about
    qualifications, not writing well

(study conducted by Harris Interactive
commissioned by the website Career Builder
privacy settings Some employers have even asked
applicants to give them their username and
password hand out article )
58
NFE Facebook and social media
  • Legal status
  • In 2012, Delaware, Maryland, Washington passed
    legislation prohibiting employers from
    requesting/requiring usernames and passwords
  • Michigan passed similar legislation on 12/28/12
  • Similar laws are pending in other states
  • CA, IL, MA, NY, OH, SC
  • A bill has been introduced in the U.S. House of
    Representatives

But, remember, the bills do not prohibit
companies from looking at your social networking
sites they only ban asking applicants for
usernames and passwords. So.be careful what you
put online!
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