RIASEC TYPES AND BIG FIVE TRAITS AS PREDICTORS OF EMPLOYMENT STATUS AND NATURE OF EMPLOYMENT

This prospective study investigated the validity of the Five-Factor Model (FFM) of personality and Holland's RIASEC vocational interest typology in predicting employment status and the nature of employment in a sample of graduating college seniors as they entered the job market. A sample of 934 senior college graduates enrolled in various academic subjects filled in Costa and McCrae's NEO-PI-R (1992) and Holland's Self-Directed Search (1979). One year after graduation, they were requested to describe their labor market positions and jobs, using the Position Classification Inventory (PCI; Gottfredson & Holland, 1991). Six hundred and twelve people responded to the second call, of whom 335 were employed and 66 unemployed. The incremental validity of the 2 models over and above each other was investigated in the sample of employed and unemployed subjects (N= 401) using stepwise regression analysis. The results showed that Extraversion and Conscientiousness were the only valid predictors of employment status and that vocational interests did not show incremental validity over and above these factors. The RIASEC types, however, were clearly superior in explaining the nature of employment, underscoring the validity of Holland's hexagonal calculus assumptions. Employment reflecting Realistic, Social and Enterprising characteristics was to a limited extent predicted by four of the Big Five, except Neuroticism, over and above the RIASEC types. The findings are discussed in the framework of Schneider's Attraction-Selection-Attrition (ASA) theory (1987) concluding that Holland's RIASEC model is more employee-driven, being better at predicting the nature of employment, whereas the FFM is more employer-oriedted, with greater validity in evaluating the employability and employment status of applicants.

[1]  M. D. Dunnette Emerging trends and vexing issues in industrial and organisational psychology. , 1998 .

[2]  Ann R. Fischer,et al.  More on RIASEC and the Five-Factor Model of Personality: Direct Assessment of Prediger's (1982) and Hogan's (1983) Dimensions. , 1998 .

[3]  L. Hough The Millennium for Personality Psychology: New Horizons or Good Old Daze , 1998 .

[4]  J. Burger,et al.  PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS OF JOB APPLICANTS AND SUCCESS IN SCREENING INTERVIEWS , 1998 .

[5]  Ivan Mervielde,et al.  The five-factor model of personality and Holland's RIASEC interest types , 1997 .

[6]  J. Schinka,et al.  Correspondence between five-factor and RIASEC models of personality. , 1997, Journal of personality assessment.

[7]  Eric D. Heggestad,et al.  Intelligence, personality, and interests: evidence for overlapping traits. , 1997, Psychological bulletin.

[8]  J. Salgado The Five Factor Model of personality and job performance in the European Community. , 1997, The Journal of applied psychology.

[9]  Ivan Mervielde,et al.  Personality and interests as predictors of educational streaming and achievement , 1996 .

[10]  Amy L. Kristof PERSON-ORGANIZATION FIT: AN INTEGRATIVE REVIEW OF ITS CONCEPTUALIZATIONS, MEASUREMENT, AND IMPLICATIONS , 1996 .

[11]  Terence J. G. Tracey,et al.  The Spherical Representation of Vocational Interests , 1996 .

[12]  Murray R. Barrick,et al.  Relative importance of personality and general mental ability in managers' judgments of applicant qualifications. , 1995, The Journal of applied psychology.

[13]  Gary G. Kay,et al.  Persons, Places, and Personality: Career Assessment Using the Revised NEO Personality Inventory , 1995 .

[14]  J. Block A contrarian view of the five-factor approach to personality description. , 1995, Psychological bulletin.

[15]  D. M. Tokar,et al.  Evaluation of the correspondence between Holland's vocational personality typology and the five-factor model of personality. , 1995 .

[16]  D. M. Tokar,et al.  Dimensions Relating Holland's Vocational Personality Typology and the Five-Factor Model , 1995 .

[17]  Lawrence A. Pervin,et al.  A Critical Analysis of Current Trait Theory , 1994 .

[18]  C. Brand How many dimensions of personality? The "Big 5" the "Gigantic 3" or the "Comprehensive 6"? , 1994 .

[19]  John L. Holland,et al.  Personality and vocational interests: The relation of Holland's six interest dimensions to five robust dimensions of personality , 1993 .

[20]  Steven E. Ekeberg,et al.  The Relation between Interest Congruence and Satisfaction: A Metaanalysis , 1993 .

[21]  Terence J. G. Tracey,et al.  Evaluating Holland's and Gati's Vocational-Interest Models: A Structural Meta-Analysis , 1993 .

[22]  L. R. Goldberg The structure of phenotypic personality traits. , 1993, The American psychologist.

[23]  L. R. Goldberg,et al.  Integration of the big five and circumplex approaches to trait structure. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  Hans J. Eysenck,et al.  Four ways five factors are not basic , 1992 .

[25]  R. Schwartz Is Holland's theory worthy of so much attention, or should vocational psychology move on? , 1992 .

[26]  THE STRUCTURE OF VOCATIONAL INTERESTS , 1991 .

[27]  Murray R. Barrick,et al.  THE BIG FIVE PERSONALITY DIMENSIONS AND JOB PERFORMANCE: A META-ANALYSIS , 1991 .

[28]  H. Eysenck Dimensions of personality : 16, 5 or 3? ― Criteria for a taxonomic paradigm , 1991 .

[29]  Newell K. Eaton,et al.  Criterion-related validities of personality constructs and the effect of response distortion on those validities , 1990 .

[30]  Jeffrey J. Mchenry,et al.  PROJECT A VALIDITY RESULTS: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PREDICTOR AND CRITERION DOMAINS , 1990 .

[31]  J. M. Digman PERSONALITY STRUCTURE: EMERGENCE OF THE FIVE-FACTOR MODEL , 1990 .

[32]  E. I. Meir,et al.  Meta-analysis of the relationship between congruence and well-being measures , 1987 .

[33]  B. Schneider THE PEOPLE MAKE THE PLACE , 1987 .

[34]  P. Costa,et al.  Validation of the five-factor model of personality across instruments and observers. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[35]  Arnold R. Spokane A review of research on person-environment congruence in Holland's theory of careers , 1985 .

[36]  R. Iachan,et al.  A Measure of Agreement for Use with the Holland Classification System. , 1984 .

[37]  Dale J. Prediger Dimensions Underlying Holland's Hexagon: Missing Link between Interests and Occupations?. , 1982 .

[38]  Thelma Baldwin Zener,et al.  Effects of the self-directed search on high school students. , 1976 .

[39]  L. Gottfredson,et al.  The Relation of Vocational Aspirations and Assessments to Employment Reality. , 1974 .

[40]  John L. Holland,et al.  The Environmental Assessment Technique: A way to measure college environments. , 1961 .