Age stereotyping at work: The role of rater and contextual factors on evaluations of job applicants

Citation
Lm. Finkelstein et Mj. Burke, Age stereotyping at work: The role of rater and contextual factors on evaluations of job applicants, J GEN PSYCH, 125(4), 1998, pp. 317-345
Citations number
53
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
ISSN journal
00221309 → ACNP
Volume
125
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
317 - 345
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-1309(199810)125:4<317:ASAWTR>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Using refinements of hypotheses by L. M. Finkelstein, M. J. Burke, and N. S . Raju (1995), the authors examined the effects of rater age, age salience, and job-relevant information on 324 managers' ratings of an older or a you nger hypothetical applicant's interpersonal skills, economic worth, and lik elihood of being interviewed. They hypothesized that age identity would int eract with age salience to produce ingroup biases that would lead raters to favor workers from their own age groups. There was a main effect of target age on all dependent variables, with the strongest effects on the ratings of economic worth: The participants rated the older target as less economic ally beneficial than the younger target. When age was highly salient and wh en the raters identified psychologically with their age groups, older rater s actually disfavored older workers in ratings of economic worth. The autho rs also discuss directions of future research into the roles of the target' s economic worth and the rater's age identity in age stereotyping and age d iscrimination in employment decisions.