Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?

Recent research has shown that many text-based situational judgment test (SJT) items can be solved even when the situational descriptions in the item stems are not presented to test takers. This finding challenges the traditional view of SJTs as low-fidelity simulations that rely on ‘situational’ (c...

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Main Authors: SCHÄPERS, Philipp, LIEVENS, Filip, FREUDENSTEIN, Jan-Philipp, HÜFFMEIER, Joachim, KÖNIG, Cornelius J., KRUMM, Stefan
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2020
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6433
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7432/viewcontent/Schaepersetal_2019_videoSJTswithoutsituations.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-74322020-06-02T06:47:36Z Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats? SCHÄPERS, Philipp LIEVENS, Filip FREUDENSTEIN, Jan-Philipp HÜFFMEIER, Joachim KÖNIG, Cornelius J. KRUMM, Stefan Recent research has shown that many text-based situational judgment test (SJT) items can be solved even when the situational descriptions in the item stems are not presented to test takers. This finding challenges the traditional view of SJTs as low-fidelity simulations that rely on ‘situational’ (context-dependent) judgment. However, media richness theory and construal level theory suggest that situation descriptions presented in a richer and more concrete format (video format) will reduce uncertainty about inherent requirements and facilitate the perception that the situation is taking place in the here and now. Therefore, we hypothesized that situational judgment would be more important in video situation descriptions than in text situation descriptions. We adapted a leadership SJT to realize a 3 (situation description in the item stem: video vs. text vs. none) × 2 (response format: video response options vs. text response options) between-subjects design (N = 279). Participants were randomly assigned to one of the six conditions. The removal of video-based situation descriptions in item stems led to an equivalent decrease in SJT scores as the removal of text-based situation descriptions in item stems (video-based version: Cohen's d = 0.535 vs. text-based version: Cohen's d = 0.531). SJT scores were also contingent on the presentation format of both situation descriptions and response options: The highest scores were observed when situation descriptions and response options were presented in the same format. Implications for SJT theory and research are discussed. Practitioner points: The presentation format did not moderate the effect of omitting situation descriptions in SJTs – that is, the context dependency of SJT performance did not increase when the SJT was administered in a video-based rather than a text-based format. The elimination of situation descriptions in item stems had a medium effect on overall test scores: SJT scores were significant lower without situation descriptions in comparison to SJT scores with situation descriptions (video-based version: Cohen's d = 0.535 vs. text-based version: Cohen's d = 0.531). It is important to match the stimulus and response formats in SJTs. 2020-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6433 info:doi/10.1111/joop.12297 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7432/viewcontent/Schaepersetal_2019_videoSJTswithoutsituations.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University situational judgment test contextualization video low-fidelity Human Resources Management Industrial and Organizational Psychology
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic situational judgment test
contextualization
video
low-fidelity
Human Resources Management
Industrial and Organizational Psychology
spellingShingle situational judgment test
contextualization
video
low-fidelity
Human Resources Management
Industrial and Organizational Psychology
SCHÄPERS, Philipp
LIEVENS, Filip
FREUDENSTEIN, Jan-Philipp
HÜFFMEIER, Joachim
KÖNIG, Cornelius J.
KRUMM, Stefan
Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
description Recent research has shown that many text-based situational judgment test (SJT) items can be solved even when the situational descriptions in the item stems are not presented to test takers. This finding challenges the traditional view of SJTs as low-fidelity simulations that rely on ‘situational’ (context-dependent) judgment. However, media richness theory and construal level theory suggest that situation descriptions presented in a richer and more concrete format (video format) will reduce uncertainty about inherent requirements and facilitate the perception that the situation is taking place in the here and now. Therefore, we hypothesized that situational judgment would be more important in video situation descriptions than in text situation descriptions. We adapted a leadership SJT to realize a 3 (situation description in the item stem: video vs. text vs. none) × 2 (response format: video response options vs. text response options) between-subjects design (N = 279). Participants were randomly assigned to one of the six conditions. The removal of video-based situation descriptions in item stems led to an equivalent decrease in SJT scores as the removal of text-based situation descriptions in item stems (video-based version: Cohen's d = 0.535 vs. text-based version: Cohen's d = 0.531). SJT scores were also contingent on the presentation format of both situation descriptions and response options: The highest scores were observed when situation descriptions and response options were presented in the same format. Implications for SJT theory and research are discussed. Practitioner points: The presentation format did not moderate the effect of omitting situation descriptions in SJTs – that is, the context dependency of SJT performance did not increase when the SJT was administered in a video-based rather than a text-based format. The elimination of situation descriptions in item stems had a medium effect on overall test scores: SJT scores were significant lower without situation descriptions in comparison to SJT scores with situation descriptions (video-based version: Cohen's d = 0.535 vs. text-based version: Cohen's d = 0.531). It is important to match the stimulus and response formats in SJTs.
format text
author SCHÄPERS, Philipp
LIEVENS, Filip
FREUDENSTEIN, Jan-Philipp
HÜFFMEIER, Joachim
KÖNIG, Cornelius J.
KRUMM, Stefan
author_facet SCHÄPERS, Philipp
LIEVENS, Filip
FREUDENSTEIN, Jan-Philipp
HÜFFMEIER, Joachim
KÖNIG, Cornelius J.
KRUMM, Stefan
author_sort SCHÄPERS, Philipp
title Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
title_short Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
title_full Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
title_fullStr Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
title_full_unstemmed Removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: Does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
title_sort removing situation descriptions from situational judgment test items: does the impact differ for video-based versus text-based formats?
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2020
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6433
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7432/viewcontent/Schaepersetal_2019_videoSJTswithoutsituations.pdf
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