Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession

Social desirability as a tendency to present oneself in a better light rather than in a truthful manner is common feature presented during job interviews. Previous studies mainly focused on blue-collar professions and therefore authors researched contrary set of white-collar professions in three sub...

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Main Authors: Marek ePreiss, Tereza eMejzlíková, Adéla eRudá, David eKrámský, Jindra ePitáková
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01886/full
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spelling doaj-6bd676d9a40846738635a7d22d90e4b22020-11-24T22:20:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782015-12-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.01886168481Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar professionMarek ePreiss0Marek ePreiss1Tereza eMejzlíková2Tereza eMejzlíková3Adéla eRudá4David eKrámský5Jindra ePitáková6University of New York in PragueNational Institute of Mental HealthNational Institute of Mental Health1st Faculty of Medicine at Charles UniversityPolice of the Czech RepublicNational Institute of Mental HealthNational Institute of Mental HealthSocial desirability as a tendency to present oneself in a better light rather than in a truthful manner is common feature presented during job interviews. Previous studies mainly focused on blue-collar professions and therefore authors researched contrary set of white-collar professions in three sub-studies with four different participant groups (legal professions; police officers; controls and university students influenced by scenarios; overall N=636). It was hypothesized that candidates for legal profession would show similar tendency towards social desirability, when compared with controls. Furthermore, police officers were hypothesized to show similar levels of social desirability as legal professions. Lastly, participants in the instruction manipulation condition were hypothesized to show increased levels of social desirability in tender situation as compared to the honest situation. All groups were tested with Balanced Inventory of Desirable Responding (BIDR, Paulhus, 1984). Statistical analyses revealed statistically significant differences for both subscales of BIDR when comparing legal professions and control group. Similarly, increased levels of social desirability were detected in police officer candidates as well as in university students in the tender situation compared with students in the honest situation. The overall results indicated that it is typical for white-collar candidates to adapt to the testing situation and it cannot be expected to see different behavior from legal profession candidates as was originally expected.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01886/fullPersonnel SelectionJusticeBIDRBalanced Inventory of Desirable RespondingMoral integritydesirable responding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marek ePreiss
Marek ePreiss
Tereza eMejzlíková
Tereza eMejzlíková
Adéla eRudá
David eKrámský
Jindra ePitáková
spellingShingle Marek ePreiss
Marek ePreiss
Tereza eMejzlíková
Tereza eMejzlíková
Adéla eRudá
David eKrámský
Jindra ePitáková
Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
Frontiers in Psychology
Personnel Selection
Justice
BIDR
Balanced Inventory of Desirable Responding
Moral integrity
desirable responding
author_facet Marek ePreiss
Marek ePreiss
Tereza eMejzlíková
Tereza eMejzlíková
Adéla eRudá
David eKrámský
Jindra ePitáková
author_sort Marek ePreiss
title Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
title_short Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
title_full Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
title_fullStr Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
title_full_unstemmed Testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
title_sort testing the level of social desirability during job interview on white-collar profession
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Social desirability as a tendency to present oneself in a better light rather than in a truthful manner is common feature presented during job interviews. Previous studies mainly focused on blue-collar professions and therefore authors researched contrary set of white-collar professions in three sub-studies with four different participant groups (legal professions; police officers; controls and university students influenced by scenarios; overall N=636). It was hypothesized that candidates for legal profession would show similar tendency towards social desirability, when compared with controls. Furthermore, police officers were hypothesized to show similar levels of social desirability as legal professions. Lastly, participants in the instruction manipulation condition were hypothesized to show increased levels of social desirability in tender situation as compared to the honest situation. All groups were tested with Balanced Inventory of Desirable Responding (BIDR, Paulhus, 1984). Statistical analyses revealed statistically significant differences for both subscales of BIDR when comparing legal professions and control group. Similarly, increased levels of social desirability were detected in police officer candidates as well as in university students in the tender situation compared with students in the honest situation. The overall results indicated that it is typical for white-collar candidates to adapt to the testing situation and it cannot be expected to see different behavior from legal profession candidates as was originally expected.
topic Personnel Selection
Justice
BIDR
Balanced Inventory of Desirable Responding
Moral integrity
desirable responding
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01886/full
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