Any answers: Making competency based interviews work

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Competency-based interviews measure candidates against specific job competence models, making it harder for interviewees to give vague answers and allowing interviewers to probe deeper for proof of understanding. Effective implementation requires defining hard and soft competencies for the role, using relevant examples from work and non-work environments, and questioning candidates strategically to assess their actual capabilities.

Public sector disability guidelines likely to breach law

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A Disability Rights Commission investigation found that guidelines for teachers, nurses, and social workers likely violate anti-discrimination laws, with over 70 regulations across three sectors failing to account for disability protections. The review revealed inconsistent definitions of health and fitness requirements that enable discrimination against disabled people seeking entry to and working in these professions.

Flexible working and discrimination: landmark legal ruling ahead

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The Employment Appeal Tribunal has referred a landmark case to the European Court of Justice to determine whether refusing flexible working to a parent of a disabled child constitutes discrimination. The ruling could extend disability discrimination protections to carers who face unfair treatment because of their association with disabled family members.

Bang on the head earns sex addict £3.1 million

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A man who developed compulsive sexual behavior after a workplace head injury has been awarded £3.1 million in compensation. The court found the accident left him severely disabled with behavioral changes including infidelity and visits to prostitutes, likely leading to marriage breakdown and preventing future employment.

HR Zone Christmas Card

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The HR Zone team sends festive holiday greetings to all clients, partners, and colleagues this Christmas season.

Heads or veils? Tread carefully. By Matt Henkes

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Two high-profile cases involving religious dress at work sparked intense debate this year. A Muslim teaching assistant’s hijab and a flight attendant’s cross raised questions about religious expression in the workplace, with both claimants ultimately losing their cases in November.

A third of graduates ‘chose the wrong degree’

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A third of graduates regret their degree choice, according to a Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development study. Many cite high tuition costs and resulting debt as barriers to homeownership, starting families, and retirement savings. The research suggests graduates would have chosen more science, technical, or business-focused courses with better workplace relevance.

Secret reference amounted to victimisation

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An employment tribunal found that Brighton and Hove City Council and a senior manager discriminated against and victimised a former employee on grounds of gender reassignment. The manager revealed the employee’s change of gender and former name to a recruitment agency without consent, delayed providing references, and the council later refused to provide another reference and ignored grievance procedures.

Smelly staff and chocolate benefits: Top HR Zone stories in 2006

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HR Zone’s top 2006 stories covered workplace challenges including managing employee hygiene issues, childcare voucher benefits, age discrimination legislation, part-time work arrangements, and handling problem staff—highlighting key HR concerns and solutions for UK businesses.

HR Tip: Timekeeping standards

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Establish clear timekeeping standards for all employees while addressing perceptions of unfairness. Sales staff working extended evening hours can have adjusted start times, but this arrangement must be clearly communicated to all staff to prevent resentment and maintain morale.

War for City talent to continue throughout 2007

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City firms expect continued talent recruitment challenges in 2007, with 79 percent anticipating hiring difficulties despite expecting more hiring activity than 2006. Investment banks remain confident in strong economic growth, but sourcing qualified staff will remain a key priority.

DTI issues new guidance on flexibility regulations

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The DTI has updated flexible working guidance to grant carers of adults the legal right to request working pattern changes from April 6, 2007. The guidance clarifies eligibility requirements and outlines responsibilities for both employers and employees regarding flexible work requests.

HR in 2007: What does the future hold? By Sarah Fletcher

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In 2007, HR professionals predict major shifts including the expansion of shared service centres, increased employment law complexity, and growing staff litigation. Other anticipated changes include new equal opportunities legislation impacting training and service delivery, while HR struggles to maintain strategic relevance within organizations.

Why ‘Generation Y’ is all a lie. By Sarah Fletcher

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The criticism of ‘Generation Y’ as selfish and disloyal misses a crucial point: employers created this dynamic by eliminating job security and loyalty in favor of market demands. Today’s graduates simply adapted to workplace realities where long-term commitment no longer exists.

Pay rises beat inflation

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Average earnings rose 3.8% in the year to October 2006, outpacing inflation at 2.4%. Private sector pay growth of 3.9% significantly exceeded public sector gains of 3.1%, driven by increased overtime.

Frustrating promotion processes leave employees quitting to get ahead

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Poor communication and secrecy around promotion processes are driving 60% of employees to switch jobs for career advancement. Research shows 53% of employees don’t understand their organization’s promotion criteria, and a third felt unfairly overlooked without explanation for the decision.

More women occupy professional roles

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A Work Foundation report reveals significant growth in managerial and professional roles over the past decade, with women entering these positions at notably higher rates than men. Between 1995 and 2005, the number of female managers increased by 29.53 percent and associate professionals by 56.89 percent, challenging theories that economic change would create wider class divisions.

Ask the expert: Unrecorded resignation

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An employee verbally resigns but refuses written confirmation until securing another job. Employment law experts explain what HR can legally do and whether this situation truly requires intervention.

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