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2013 т. 3 no 2
Topic of the issue: Assessment Center
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- Pages
- Organizational psychology in practice
Evgenii Vuchetich,
Dmitriy Gofman,
Aleksandr Erofeev,
Evgeny Lurie,
Maria Maltseva,
Yuriy Mikheev,
Yulia Poletaeva,
Sergey Sergienko,
Svetlana Simonenko,
Yulia Sinitsina,
Sergey Umnov,
Tatiana Khvatinina,
Aleksandr Shmelyov
Russian version of Russian Standard for Assessment Centers
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8–32
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This is document is a first guidelines and ethical considerations for assessment center in Russia. Development of the Russian Standard for Assessment Centers was initiated in 2013 by the National Confederation for Human Capital Development and supported by the expert community. Today the Assessment Center method is widely used in Russia. There is an international Assessment Center Standard as well as a number of national standards. However, the Russian professional community does not view these as documents that are imperative to observe, because none of these standards fully re ects features speci c to Russian Assessment Center practices and corresponds to Russian theoretical and methodological traditions of scienti c research and development. For these reasons, the need to design a national Standard regulating Assessment Center development and implementation practices and re ecting modern-day Russian realities has now become evident. This Standard is a national-level, scienti cally grounded, and cultural and ethical set of guidelines which describe the Assessment Center method and outline the minimum set of requirements for Assessment Centers. The Standard also contains recommendations based on best Assessment Center practices that will help to increase the quality of assessment procedures. The Standard addresses Assessment Center’s participants, observers, facilitators, administrators, developers and designers, sellers, scientists and researchers, consultants and experts, also trainers, university instructors teaching personnel assessment, students and Assessment Center training participants. |
Evgenii Vuchetich,
Dmitriy Gofman,
Aleksandr Erofeev,
Evgeny Lurie,
Maria Maltseva,
Yuriy Mikheev,
Yulia Poletaeva,
Sergey Sergienko,
Svetlana Simonenko,
Yulia Sinitsina,
Sergey Umnov,
Tatiana Khvatinina,
Aleksandr Shmelyov
English version of Russian Standard for Assessment Centers
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33–52
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This document is a first guidelines and ethical considerations for assessment center in Russia. Development of the Russian Standard for Assessment Centers was initiated in 2013 by the National Confederation for Human Capital Development and supported by the expert community. Today the Assessment Center method is widely used in Russia. There is an international Assessment Center Standard as well as a number of national standards. However, the Russian professional community does not view these as documents that are imperative to observe, because none of these standards fully reflects features specific to Russian Assessment Center practices and corresponds to Russian theoretical and methodological traditions of scientific research and development. For these reasons, the need to design a national Standard regulating Assessment Center development and implementation practices and reflecting modern-day Russian realities has now become evident. This Standard is a national-level, scientifically grounded, and cultural and ethical set of guidelines which describe the Assessment Center method and outline the minimum set of requirements for Assessment Centers. The Standard also contains recommendations based on best Assessment Center practices that will help to increase the quality of assessment procedures. The Standard addresses Assessment Center’s participants, observers, facilitators, administrators, developers and designers, sellers, scientists and researchers, consultants and experts, also trainers, university instructors teaching personnel assessment, students and Assessment Center training participants.
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Tat'yana Kozhevnikova,
Svetlana Afanas'eva,
Svetlana Morozova,
Anna Florentseva,
Ol'ga Filatova,
Nadezhda Minde,
Elena Sapogova,
Evgeniya Sevodina,
Alena Druzenko,
Filipp Rybakov,
Nikolay Steblyanskiy,
Galina Galushko,
Evgeniy Morgunov,
Ekaterina Podval'naya,
Yana Khal'di
Comment on Russian standard assessment center by Russian HR experts
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66–76
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