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Employers are turning to mathematically modelled ways of sifting through job applications. Even when wrong, their verdicts seem beyond dispute – and they tend to punish the poor.
I took the Kroger pre-hire personality test, whatever it is called. It is clearly designed to weed out people who are confrontational, always have to be right, and do not have a customer service attitude, which I think is a pretty reasonable expectation for a corporation that runs a retail operation in which customer interaction is crucial. I worked with high school kids, folks with graduate degrees, and everything in between, a number of whom would be considered poor, and some of them were fairly stupid, but they possessed the attitude that was wanted and were able to fulfill the roles they were given.
what personality tests do people on CD even refer to? all my jobs, the only personality test is to ask current worker if they knew me/of me, and if they want to work with me. And I get ask that for people applying as well. It's a small field, just a few hundred for 1-2 million people.
maybe i missed it in article, but i didn't see how they "punish the poor", but they referred to it without anything to back up the claim.
maybe i missed it in article, but i didn't see how they "punish the poor", but they referred to it without anything to back up the claim.
I searched the text for the word "poor." There were 2 sections that specifically reference an effect on the poor.
The first is the one about resumes being filtered by CV keywords and the poor not being able to afford professional resume services that tell them how to optimize their resume by including certain keywords.
The second is about resumes being filtered by distance from the job site. If an employer is located in an area with high-cost housing, filtering by distance discriminates against people who live a longer distance from that area, in housing that is more affordable to them.
Location: East of Seattle since 1992, 615' Elevation, Zone 8b - originally from SF Bay Area
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bo
I searched the text for the word "poor." There were 2 sections that specifically reference an effect on the poor.
The first is the one about resumes being filtered by CV keywords and the poor not being able to afford professional resume services that tell them how to optimize their resume by including certain keywords.
The second is about resumes being filtered by distance from the job site. If an employer is located in an area with high-cost housing, filtering by distance discriminates against people who live a longer distance from that area, in housing that is more affordable to them.
Living far from the jobsit, or for that matter being poor, is not a protected class, so discrimination on either of those is perfectly legal. The poor may not be able to affor professional resume help, but there are plenty of free services, including a lot of websites. If anything, the difficulty for the really poor is having to go to a library to apply, if they have no internet, because almost all good jobs require online applications.
I searched the text for the word "poor." There were 2 sections that specifically reference an effect on the poor.
The first is the one about resumes being filtered by CV keywords and the poor not being able to afford professional resume services that tell them how to optimize their resume by including certain keywords.
The second is about resumes being filtered by distance from the job site. If an employer is located in an area with high-cost housing, filtering by distance discriminates against people who live a longer distance from that area, in housing that is more affordable to them.
You don't need "professional resume services" to include keywords in the resume and living far from the job site does not equate to being poor. I think the author is reaching.
Might be legal, but it's frustrating for those of who are unable to drive, and have to rely on public transit.
frustrating to employers when their employees can't show up on time either if they are so reliant on someone else driving
in cities without good transportation, some employees never show up
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