History of Psychology Applied to Employee Selection Essay

Total Length: 1202 words ( 4 double-spaced pages)

Total Sources: 3

Page 1 of 4

History of Psychology Applied to Employee Selection" appears in Historical Perspectives in Industrial and Organizational Psychology. Although it is a chapter in the book, it provides detailed information and can be used as a stand-alone text in an analysis of the subject. Vinchur (2007) divides the subject into chronological time periods, which is unusual for most essays in the field of organizational psychology. The first section is on the origins and early years of the application of psychological principles to employee selection. Surprisingly, this section covers the Industrial Age until 1930, an era in which psychology was barely recognized as a science let alone human resources being recognized as a field. The next section in the article is about Depression, World War II, and immediate postwar period employee psychology practices. Basically, this section covers 1930 until 1963. Finally, the civil rights era and "beyond" is the section that includes developments leading up to the current day.

A chronological analysis allows the author to trace trends in the field, linking those trends to the field of organizational psychology. Thus, the field as a whole is placed in its historical context. It is important to place personnel psychology in context because current and future managers will need to be aware of their own biases and assumptions, shaped by cultural and temporal factors. As a scholarly article, "A History of Psychology Applied to Employee Selection" relies on research and when possible, primary source evidence.

The author finds that the earliest era in question, that is, until 1930, provides the foundation for all further research in the field of personnel psychology and employee selection. I found this surprising, because I would have assumed that the 1960s and its burgeoning psychological research foundation would have been more applicable to organizational psychology.
It turns out that the practices and procedures used by 1930 remain firmly entrenched. Technologies and other specific features of employee selection procedures have changed, but the underlying paradigm has not, according to Vinchur (2007). Whether or not this is a good thing is not within the author's province; this is a dry research article rather than a strong persuasive piece. A detached tone adds, rather than detracts from the material because the level of objectivity used to describe issues in the history of organizational psychology is impressive. Although the author asserts that the foundation for all future personnel psychology practices was laid by 1930, Vinchur (2007) does also thoroughly explicate the core differences in approaches to organizational psychology during the early years of pre-Depression era America vs. today.

For example, the nature of the workforce was profoundly different in 1910 than it was in 2010. More than a third of all American laborers were farmers; life expectancy was only 47 years and child labor was common. None of these things are even remotely close to reality just a few generations later. Such dramatic changes are attributable to several core elements, which Vinchur (2007) presents as being scientific advancements, the fusion of Darwin's theories with functionalist views in psychology; a burgeoning faith in capitalism, nearly religious in scope; and of course, industrialization. According to the author, early and pioneering psychological research had its immediate practical application in the workforce. Not all psychologists agreed that industrial/organizational psychology was a valid output for research, and yet it was the most obvious arena in which to test hypotheses related to human behavior and witness real and practical results. From the perspective of business, the principles and practice of psychology proved to be a tremendous boon.

Darwinian theory.....

Need Help Writing Your Essay?