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Are undergraduate students good proxies for HRM professionals? A comparison of responses in a hiring decision study

Heather M. Clarke (Austin E. Cofrin School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA)
Kara A. Arnold (Faculty of Business Administration, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Canada)

Evidence-based HRM

ISSN: 2049-3983

Article publication date: 27 January 2022

Issue publication date: 6 May 2022

155

Abstract

Purpose

There is a dearth of human resource management (HRM) literature examining the generalizability of research employing undergraduate student participants. The purpose of this study is to conduct an experiment to compare the job applicant evaluations and hiring decisions of undergraduate student participants with those of working adults with hiring experience.

Design/methodology/approach

This study employed a between-person 2 × 2 × 4 experimental design: participant group (undergraduate students or working adults with hiring experience) × job gender-type (male typed or female typed) × job applicant (heterosexual female, lesbian female, heterosexual male or gay male). Participants read descriptions of a job and a job applicant and then evaluated the applicant.

Findings

The results supported a moderated mediation model where participant group moderated the interaction of applicant gender and job gender-type in predicting perceptions of competence, which in turn predicted perceptions of person-job fit, likeability and respect-worthiness, which then predicted hiring decisions. Undergraduate student participants, but not working adults with hiring experience, evaluated female applicants applying for a male-typed job in a manner consistent with gender stereotypes and were less likely to hire the female applicant than the male applicant.

Originality/value

To inform HRM practice, research must reflect real-world decision-making. The literature on the roles of gender stereotypes and bias in hiring, and other important HRM decisions, relies heavily on undergraduate student participants. Findings of this study suggest a need to further examine whether those studies can be generalized to working adults actually making those decisions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: This research was supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Development Grant.

Citation

Clarke, H.M. and Arnold, K.A. (2022), "Are undergraduate students good proxies for HRM professionals? A comparison of responses in a hiring decision study", Evidence-based HRM, Vol. 10 No. 2, pp. 221-239. https://doi.org/10.1108/EBHRM-05-2021-0091

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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