Abstract
Employment tests have long been scrutinized for psychometric considerations such as validity and reliability, but the extent to which cheating may occur on pre-employment tests has generally been overlooked. With the rise of unproctored, on-demand, online testing, the need has never been greater to focus on design and process considerations that can help mitigate the potential for cheating on employment tests. This paper builds on the limited existing research on the detection of inconsistent test scores on unproctored Internet testing. Job candidates (n = 4,026) completed a computer adaptive cognitive ability test under two conditions: an unproctored screening test followed by a proctored confirmation test. Analyses focused on detecting instances of inconsistent test scores based on comparison of standard errors of measure for the unproctored and proctored test scores (Guo and Drasgow, Int J Sel Assess 18:351–364, 2010). Results revealed a relatively low number of inconsistent scores and are discussed in the context of future research, application, and theory building on the nature of cheating on pre-employment tests.
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Notes
where H 0 is the null hypothesis, H a is the alternate hypothesis, θ u is the theta estimate yielded by the unproctored test administration, and θ v is that yielded by the proctored administration.
where d is the pairwise difference by the unproctored test administration, D is the hypothesized difference (0), and σ d is the standard deviation of the sample pairwise differences.
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Appendix
Appendix
Sample Item 1
Review the facts below:
An Executive Vice President calls each of her five division managers on Monday morning. She calls them in the same order each week.
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She calls Laura in one of the first two calls.
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She calls Pat after Jim.
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She calls Chris before Sandra.
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She calls Sandra after the third call.
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She does NOT call Pat last.
Based on the information above, which of these CANNOT be true?
-
A.
She calls Chris third.
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B.
She calls Jim second.
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C.
She calls Jim fourth.
-
D.
She calls Pat third.
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E.
She calls Chris fourth.
The answer is C. The Executive Vice President does not call Pat last. That means that Jim cannot be called fourth, since we know that she calls Pat after Jim.
Sample Item 2
Review the facts below:
-
Jane drives a red car.
-
Susan drives a blue car.
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There are no red cars in Ohio.
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Blue cars get 33 miles per gallon of gasoline.
Based on the information above, which of the following MUST be true?
-
A.
Jane lives in Ohio.
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B.
Susan lives in Ohio.
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C.
Red cars get 36 miles per gallon of gasoline.
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D.
Susan’s car gets 33 miles per gallon of gasoline.
-
E.
Jane and Susan live in the same state.
The correct answer is D. Since blue cars get 33 miles per gallon of gasoline, the fact that Susan drives a blue car means that her car gets 33 miles per gallon of gasoline.
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Kantrowitz, T.M., Dainis, A.M. How Secure are Unproctored Pre-Employment Tests? Analysis of Inconsistent Test Scores. J Bus Psychol 29, 605–616 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10869-014-9365-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10869-014-9365-6