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The design of an undergraduate chiropractic curriculumKleynhans, Andries Mentz 11 1900 (has links)
Evidence is provided to support Kierkegaard's phenomenology that only what is learned
through experience is truly known. It is demonstrated that the chiropractic curriculum
represents a unique area of investigation and that it is possible to define curriculum; to create
a functional and integrative model which subsumes elements from the traditional, cyclical
and process models; and to design an integrative, problem-based, evidence-based,
experiential chiropractic curriculum. A taxonomy is proposed for curriculum design in four
domains which deal respectively with a) curriculum processes which include the selection,
motivation and interaction of curriculum developers, curriculum definitions and models, and
an algorithm for curriculum design; b) curriculum organisation which addresses
philosophical, sociological, cultural and psychological foundations, curriculum paradigms
and a chiropractic conceptual framework; c) curriculum development which concerns design
strategies, situational analysis, intent, content, design and organisation of learning
experiences and assessment of student performance; and d) curriculum application, which
includes the learning climate, quality management, management of change, self-evaluation
and external accreditation / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Didactics)
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The validation of a psychological assessment battery for the selection service agents in a South African commercial airline companyDavis, Ryan Jonathan 10 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the research was to determine whether measures of ability,
personality and behaviour would significantly predict job performance of customer
service agents in a South African commercial airline company. The Verbal
Interpretation Test (VCC1), Numerical Reasoning Test (NP6.1), Basic Checking Test
(CP7.1C), Occupational Personality Questionnaire (OPQ32) and a competency
based interview were completed by job applicants. Customer Contact Competency
(CCC) scores and a Person Job Match (PJM) score were derived from the OPQ32
and ability measures to ensure job relevance during selection assessment. Job
performance statistics in the form of training scores and supervisor ratings (from
performance appraisals and criterion questionnaires) were obtained for the sample
as criterion data. Correlations revealed statistically significant small to moderate
correlations between the predictors and the criterion data / Industrial & Organisational Psychology / M.Com (Industrial & Organisational Psychology)
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The validation of a psychological assessment battery for the selection of customer service agents in a South African commercial airline companyDavis, Ryan Jonathan 06 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the research was to determine whether measures of ability,
personality and behaviour would significantly predict job performance of customer
service agents in a South African commercial airline company. The Verbal
Interpretation Test (VCC1), Numerical Reasoning Test (NP6.1), Basic Checking Test
(CP7.1C), Occupational Personality Questionnaire (OPQ32) and a competency
based interview were completed by job applicants. Customer Contact Competency
(CCC) scores and a Person Job Match (PJM) score were derived from the OPQ32
and ability measures to ensure job relevance during selection assessment. Job
performance statistics in the form of training scores and supervisor ratings (from
performance appraisals and criterion questionnaires) were obtained for the sample
as criterion data. Correlations revealed statistically significant small to moderate
correlations between the predictors and the criterion data / Industrial and Organisational Psychology / M.Com. (Industrial & Organisational Psychology)
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Selection of industrial and organisational psychology master's students: exploring the validity of applied psychometric measuresOlivier, Karina Cornelia 10 1900 (has links)
The objective of this study was to investigate how well the academic performance of the
Industrial and Organisational Psychology master’s students at a research institution can be
predicted through psychometric measures. A non-experimental design was used in this
empirical study. The sample consisted of one hundred and thirty-three IO Psychology master’s
students over a five-year period.
The secondary data for this research originated from the students completing the Graduate
Verify Ability tests as well as the Occupational Personality Questionnaire, which are
psychometric measures that form part of the selection. Both psychometric measures load onto
the Person Job Match competencies. A theoretical relationship could be found between the
Ability tests and academic success as well as the PJM competencies that included weighted
scores from both psychometric measures. The empirical relationships, therefore, proved that
the ability tests have the strongest predictive ability for academic success. / Industrial and Organisational Psychology / M. Com. (Industrial and Organisational Psychology)
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