INTERVIEW
OVERVIEW LESSON SKILL PROCESS PREPARING INFORMATION HELP ADVICE
TIPS LEARNING WORK CAREERS EMPLOYMENT
SAMPLE EXAMPLE PRACTICE BUSINESS LIFE SKILLS
Learn
an introduction to interviewing.
INTERVIEW OVERVIEW
What is an
interview?
An interview
is a meeting between a job applicant and a
representative of the company. The meeting
comes about because the company had a job
available. People applied for the job. The
company needs to decide who to hire.
What is the
purpose of the interview?
The purpose
of the interview is for the company to get a
good look at you. It is the company’s chance to
ask you questions about your work experience. It
is the company’s opportunity to see if you would
fit in with the other employees.
JOB INTERVIEWING
OVERVIEW
The
interview is also your opportunity to look at
the company. You get to ask questions about the
company’s business. It is your opportunity to
see if the company suits you.
In the 1800’s when a company
needed workers, they would put a
sign outside the building. If
the sign read: “Tall Men
Needed”, there would be no
reason for you to apply if you
didn’t reach the mark on the
door.
If you owned a mill and needed a
man to work with the grinding
stones, the interview would
consist of your examination of
the applicant’s hands. The hand
that worked the stones would be
rough and would have stone
embedded in it. Smooth hands
would tell you that the
applicant did not know how to do
the job.
Today, an interview is still a
visual inspection and usually
includes a pre-employment drug
screen.
The different types of
interviews
There are two basic types of
interviews:
Screening Interview
Selection Interview
1. The Screening Interview
Determines whether the
candidate is in or out.
Does the candidate have the
skills necessary to perform
the job?
Questions are designed to
collect facts.
Clear and concise answers
are looked for.
This is usually done by reading
the applications and the
resumes.
Sometimes this screening will be
conducted over the telephone.
A manager I know had 23
applicants for an open position.
They all looked great from the
applications and resumes. The
position required excellent
telephone skills. She decided to
call each person first. All 23
candidates were taken out of the
running because of the way they
answered their telephones. She
saved a lot of time and effort
by making the calls first.
2. The Selection Interview
Usually conducted by the
person with the authority to
hire.
Can you do the tasks
required by the position?
Are you willing and
motivated to solve the
employer’s problems?
Are you going to fit in?
Will I be comfortable seeing
you every day?
Selection interviews can be one
on one or panel interviews.
A one on one interview
means you are being interviewed
by one other person. This could
be the manager, the human
resources representative, or the
owner of the business.
A panel interview means
that you will be interviewed by
more than one person at the same
time. It could be three or it
could be seven people. Each
person asks you a question. The
other individuals are told to
observe you and listen carefully
to your response.
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Interview Overview Lesson
Information Advice Test
High School College
Assessment Workshop kit
- Pre resume preparation
- High School Students -
Secondary education -
Adults - Special
Education - Teens -
Teenagers - Kids Free
Instruct - Thematic Unit
- Children - Secondary
Education - Middle
School - Young Adults -
Classroom Review -
Career Education