Connection: Bias ↔ Performance Appraisals & Recruitment

PHIL252 establishes that bias is a systematic distortion in reasoning — a preference that causes us to evaluate evidence unfairly. ADMN201 Ch8 states directly that job interviews are poor predictors of success precisely because of bias, and advocates behaviour-based interviewing as the structural remedy. The same bias-correction logic PHIL252 teaches applies directly to the design of fair HRM practices.

graph TD
    subgraph PHIL252
        B["Cognitive Bias\nSystematic reasoning distortion"]
        SB["Selection Bias\nWho gets observed / interviewed"]
    end
    subgraph ADMN201
        INT["Job Interviews\nCommonly used — but biased"]
        PA["Performance Appraisal\nFormal evaluation of job performance"]
        BBI["Behaviour-Based Interviewing\nStructured bias reduction method"]
        ABC["ABC Feedback Model\nAccurate · Business-Oriented · Consistent"]
    end
    B -->|"distorts evaluation"| PA
    B -->|"reduces validity"| INT
    SB -->|"affects who reaches the interview stage"| INT
    INT -->|"remedied by"| BBI
    BBI -->|"anchors on past evidence\nnot impressions"| PA
    ABC -->|"structural protocol\nthat fights the same biases"| PA

From PHIL 252

Bias identifies preferences and attitudes that systematically distort reasoning. Several types are directly relevant to hiring and appraisals:

  • Confirmation bias: Interviewers form a first impression and then seek evidence that confirms it — discounting contradictory signals
  • In-group bias: Interviewers unconsciously favour candidates who remind them of themselves (shared background, style, appearance)
  • Halo/horn effect: One strong or weak trait colours the evaluation of all other traits
  • SelectionBiasVariants: Who reaches the interview stage is already a non-representative sample — only candidates who passed the résumé filter are visible, meaning the full applicant population is never observed

PHIL252’s core remedy for bias is the same as ADMN201’s: demand concrete, observable evidence rather than accepting impressions or vague claims.

From ADMN 201

RecruitmentAndSelection and HumanResourceManagement both note:

  • Unstructured interviews are one of the weakest predictors of job success precisely because they give bias maximum room to operate
  • Behaviour-Based Interviewing reduces this by anchoring the interviewer on past, observable behaviour (“Tell me about a time you handled X…”) rather than hypothetical scenarios — functionally identical to PHIL252’s instruction to demand specific evidence, not speculation
  • The ABC Feedback Model in performance appraisals is a structured protocol fighting the same biases:
    • Accurate: use objective examples from a performance log; avoid “always/never” (combats confirmation bias and halo effect)
    • Business-Oriented: focus on business reasons, not personality (combats in-group bias and personal animus)
    • Consistent: give feedback throughout the year (combats recency bias — the tendency to weight recent events disproportionately)

Why This Matters

Knowing PHIL252’s bias taxonomy turns ADMN201’s HR recommendations from procedural checklists into principled systems:

  • You can name the specific bias each interview structure addresses
  • You can explain why behaviour-based interviewing works as a countermeasure (it reduces reliance on impression and increases reliance on evidence)
  • You can critique performance appraisal systems that violate the “Accurate” and “Consistent” principles by naming the bias those violations enable

Bias, SelectionBiasVariants, HumanResourceManagement, RecruitmentAndSelection