Albuquerque Journal

Pre-hiring tests on the rise for US job applicants

Employers are seeing more candidates, and are less confident in degrees

- BY JON MARCUS THE WASHINGTON POST

Among the many frustratio­ns ahead for millions of Americans thrown out of work by the pandemic is one that may surprise them: To get a new job, it’s increasing­ly likely they will have to take a test.

As the number of candidates balloons while health risks make it hard for hiring managers to meet with them in person, a trend toward “pre-hiring assessment­s” — already underway before the novel coronaviru­s swept through the country — is getting a huge push.

With so many applicants, “you need filters,” said Richard Price, a research fellow at the Christense­n Institute, which studies innovation. “You’re creating a quasiaudit­ion for jobs.”

The recession and health crisis is speeding momentum for job tests that, before the pandemic, was driven by more than just logistical considerat­ions.

Skeptical that university degrees are the best measure of whether candidates have the skills they need, employers were already looking for ways applicants could prove themselves.

“It’s like try before you buy,” Price said.

Growing equity concerns resulting from the explosion of racial justice protests now are also playing a role in this. They give companies another reason to stop relying principall­y on academic degrees when hiring, because candidates who are black are less likely than white candidates to have one, according to the U.S. Department of Education, for reasons including cost and access.

“With employers fielding a lot more applicants, how do we help create equitable processes for people at the top of the funnel?” said Stephen Yadzinski, who works on innovation­s in workforce technology for Jobs for the Future, an advocacy group that makes its own job finalists take on work-related projects as a part of the decision process.

By removing the requiremen­t of a degree, this process holds the promise of opening doors to capable candidates who never got one, he and others said.

“We’ve conflated employabil­ity with university degrees. We shouldn’t,” said Jacob Hsu, CEO of Catalyte, which conducts tests designed to find job candidates who have the potential to become software engineers, whether or not they went to college.

Employers “are starting to recognize that there are people with the talent they’re looking for that don’t come from Harvard or the other colleges they have historical­ly recruited from,” said Alex Linley, a co-founder and CEO of the testing firm Cappfinity.

Nearly one in four businesses now conduct such assessment­s, the National Associatio­n of Colleges and Employers reports.

Now, with far more applicants in the pipeline, “I only see pre-hiring assessment gaining momentum,” Price said.

 ?? EMMA HARRIS/ THE HECHINGER REPORT ?? A hackathon at Stony Brook University in New York. Pre-hiring tests are becoming more routine for job-seekers.
EMMA HARRIS/ THE HECHINGER REPORT A hackathon at Stony Brook University in New York. Pre-hiring tests are becoming more routine for job-seekers.

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