Does effectiveness in performance appraisal improve with rater training?
Date
2019Abstract
Performance appraisal is a complex process by which an organization can determine the
extent to which employees are performing their work effectively. However, this appraisal
may not be accurate if there is no reduction in the impact of problems caused by possibly
subjective rater judgements. The main objective of this work is to check the effectiveness—
separately and jointly—of the following four training programmes in the extant literature
aimed at improving the accuracy of performance assessment: 1) Performance Dimension
Training, 2) Frame-of-Reference, 3) Rater Error Training, and 4) Behavioural Observation
Training. Based on these training strategies, three programmes were designed and applied
separately. A fourth programme was a combination of the other three. We analyzed two
studies using different samples (85 students and 42 employees) for the existence of differences in the levels of knowledge of performance and its dimensions, rater errors, observational accuracy, and accuracy of task and citizenship performance appraisal, according to
the type of training raters receive. First, the main results show that training based on performance dimensions and the creation of a common framework, in addition to the training that
includes the four programmes (Training_4_programmes), increases the level of knowledge
of performance and its dimensions. Second, groups that receive training in rater error score
higher in knowledge of biases than the other groups, whether or not they have received
training. Third, participants’ observational accuracy improves with each new moment measure (post-training and follow-up), though not because of the type of training received.
Fourth, participants who receive training through the programme that combine the other four
gave a task performance appraisal that was closer to the one undertaken by the judgesexperts than the other groups. And finally, students’ citizenship performance appraisal does
not vary according to type of training or to different moment measures, whereas the group of
employees who received all four types of training gave a more accurate citizenship performance assessment.