Our aim is to sketch the outlines of a new science which is to intermediate between the modern laboratory psychology and the problems of economics: the psychological experiment is systematically to be placed at the service of commerce and industry. So far we have only scattered beginnings of the new doctrine, only tentative efforts and disconnected attempts which have started, sometimes in economic, and sometimes in psychological, quarters. The time when an exact psychology of business life will be presented as a closed and perfected system lies very far distant. But the earlier the attention of wider circles is directed to its beginnings and to the importance and bearings of its tasks, the quicker and the more sound will be the development of this young science.

- 261 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Psychology and Industrial Efficiency
About this book
Trusted by 375,005 students
Access to over 1.5 million titles for a fair monthly price.
Study more efficiently using our study tools.
Information
Topic
PsychologiePART I
THE BEST POSSIBLE MAN
IV
IV
VOCATION AND FITNESS
Instead of lingering over theoretical discussions, we will
move straight on toward our first practical problem. The economic
task, with reference to which we want to demonstrate the new
psychotechnic method, is the selection of those personalities which
by their mental qualities are especially fit for a particular kind
of economic work. This problem is especially useful to show what
the new method can do and what it cannot do. Whether the method is
sufficiently developed to secure full results to-day, or whether
they will come to-morrow, is unimportant. It is clear that the
success of to-morrow is to be hoped for, only if understanding and
interest in the problem is already alive to-day.
When we inquire into the qualities of men, we use the word
here in its widest meaning. It covers, on the one side, the mental
dispositions which may still be quite undeveloped and which may
unfold only under the influence of special conditions in the
surroundings; but, on the other side, it covers the habitual traits
of the personality, the features of the individual temperament and
character, of the intelligence and of the ability, of the collected
knowledge and of the acquired experience. All variations of will
and feeling, of perception and thought, of attention and emotion,
of memory and imagination, are included here. From a purely
psychological standpoint, quite incomparable contents and functions
and dispositions of the personality are thus thrown together, but
in practical life we are accustomed to proceed after this fashion:
if a man applies for a position, he is considered with regard to
the totality of his qualities, and at first nobody cares whether
the particular feature is inherited or acquired, whether it is an
individual chance variation or whether it is common to a larger
group, perhaps to all members of a certain nationality or race. We
simply start from the clear fact that the personalities which enter
into the world of affairs present an unlimited manifoldness of
talents and abilities and functions of the mind. From this
manifoldness, it necessarily follows that some are more, some less,
fit for the particular economic task. In view of the far-reaching
division of labor in our modern economic life, it is impossible to
avoid the question how we can select the fit personalities and
reject the unfit ones.
How has modern society prepared itself to settle this social
demand? In case that certain knowledge is indispensable for the
work or that technical abilities must have been acquired, the
vocation is surrounded by examinations. This is true of the lower
as well as of the higher activities. The direct examination is
everywhere supplemented by testimonials covering the previous
achievements, by certificates referring to the previous education,
and in frequent cases by the endeavor to gain a personal impression
from the applicant. But if we take all this together, the total
result remains a social machinery by which perhaps the elimination
of the entirely unfit can be secured. But no one could speak of a
really satisfactory adaptation of the manifold personalities to the
economic vocational tasks. All those examinations and tests and
certificates refer essentially to what can be learned from without,
and not to the true qualities of the mind and the deeper traits.
The so-called impressions, too, are determined by the most
secondary and external factors. Society relies instinctively on the
hope that the natural wishes and interests will push every one to
the place for which his dispositions, talents, and psychophysical
gifts prepare him.
In reality this confidence is entirely unfounded. A threefold
difficulty exists. In the first place, young people know very
little about themselves and their abilities. When the day comes on
which they discover their real strong points and their weaknesses,
it is often too late. They have usually been drawn into the current
of a particular vocation, and have given too much energy to the
preparation for a specific achievement to change the whole
life-plan once more. The entire scheme of education gives to the
individual little chance to find himself. A mere interest for one
or another subject in school is influenced by many accidental
circumstances, by the personality of the teacher or the methods of
instruction, by suggestions of the surroundings and by home
traditions, and accordingly even such a preference gives rather a
slight final indication of the individual mental qualities.
Moreover, such mere inclinations and interests cannot determine the
true psychological fitness for a vocation. To choose a crude
illustration, a boy may think with passion of the vocation of a
sailor, and yet may be entirely unfit for it, because his mind
lacks the ability to discriminate red and green. He himself may
never have discovered that he is color-blind, but when he is ready
to turn to the sailor's calling, the examination of his
color-sensitiveness which is demanded may have shown the disturbing
mental deficiency. Similar defects may exist in a boy's attention
or memory, judgment or feeling, thought or imagination,
suggestibility or emotion, and they may remain just as undiscovered
as the defect of color-blindness, which is characteristic of four
per cent of the male population. All such deficiencies may be
dangerous in particular callings. But while the vocation of the
ship officer is fortunately protected nowadays by such a special
psychological examination, most other vocations are unguarded
against the entrance of the mentally unfit individuals.
As the boys and girls grow up without recognizing their
psychical weaknesses, the exceptional strength of one or another
mental function too often remains unnoticed by them as well. They
may find out when they are favored with a special talent for art or
music or scholarship, but they hardly ever know that their
attention, or their memory, or their will, or their intellectual
apprehension, or their sensory perceptions, are unusually developed
in a particular direction; yet such an exceptional mental
disposition might be the cause of special success in certain
vocations. But we may abstract from the extremes of abnormal
deficiency and abnormal overdevelopment in particular functions.
Between them we find the broad region of the average minds with
their numberless variations, and these variations are usually quite
unknown to their possessors. It is often surprising to see how the
most manifest differences of psychical organization remain
unnoticed by the individuals themselves. Men with a pronounced
visual type of memory and men with a marked acoustical type may
live together without the slightest idea that their contents of
consciousness are fundamentally different from each other. Neither
the children nor their parents nor their teachers burden themselves
with the careful analysis of such actual mental qualities when the
choice of a vocation is before them. They know that a boy who is
completely unmusical must not become a musician, and that the child
who cannot draw at all must not become a painter, just as on
physical grounds a boy with very weak muscles is not fit to become
a blacksmith. But as soon as the subtler differentiation is needed,
the judgment of all concerned seems helpless and the physical
characteristics remain disregarded.
A further reason for the lack of adaptation, and surely a
most important one, lies in the fact that the individual usually
knows only the most external conditions of the vocations from which
he chooses. The most essential requisite for a truly perfect
adaptation, namely, a real analysis of the vocational demands with
reference to the desirable personal qualities, is so far not in
existence. The young people generally see some superficial traits
of the careers which seem to stand open, and, besides, perhaps they
notice the great rewards of the most successful. The inner labor,
the inner values, and the inner difficulties and frictions are too
often unknown to those who decide for a vocation, and they are
unable to correlate those essential factors of the life-calling
with all that nature by inheritance, and society by surroundings
and training, have planted and developed in their minds.
In addition to this ignorance as to one's own mental
disposition and to the lack of understanding of the true mental
requirements of the various social tasks comes finally the
abundance of trivial chances which become decisive in the choice of
a vocation. Vocation and marriage are the two most consequential
decisions in life. In the selection of a husband or a wife, too,
the decision is very frequently made dependent upon the most
superficial and trivial motives. Yet the social philosopher may
content himself with the belief that even in the fugitive love
desire a deeper instinct of nature is expressed, which may at least
serve the biological tasks of married life. In the choice of a
vocation, even such a belief in a biological instinct is
impossible. The choice of a vocation, determined by fugitive whims
and chance fancies, by mere imitation, by a hope for quick
earnings, by irresponsible recommendation, or by mere laziness, has
no internal reason or excuse. Illusory ideas as to the prospects of
a career, moreover, often falsify the whole vista; and if we
consider all this, we can hardly be surprised that our total result
is in many respects hardly better than if everything were left
entirely to accident. Even on the height of a mental training to
the end of adolescence, we see how the college graduates are too
often led by accidental motives to the decision whether they shall
become lawyers or physicians or business men, but this
superficiality of choice of course appears much more strongly where
the lifework is to be built upon the basis of a mere elementary or
high school education.
The final result corresponds exactly to these conditions.
Everywhere, in all countries and in all vocations, but especially
in the economic careers, we hear the complaint that there is lack
of really good men. Everywhere places are waiting for the right
man, while at the same time we find everywhere an oversupply of
mediocre aspirants. This, however, does not in the least imply that
there really are not enough personalities who might be perfectly
fit even for the highest demands of the vocations; it means only
that as a matter of course the result in the filling of positions
cannot be satisfactory, if the placing of the individuals is
carried on without serious regard for the personal mental
qualities. The complaint that there is lack of fit human material
would probably never entirely disappear, as with a better
adjustment of the material, the demands would steadily increase;
but it could at least be predicted with high probability that this
lack of really fit material would not be felt so keenly everywhere
if the really decisive factor for the adjustment of personality and
vocation, namely, the dispositions of the mind, were not so
carelessly ignored.
Society, to be sure, has a convenient means of correction.
The individual tries, and when he is doing his work too badly, he
loses his job, he is pushed out from the career which be has
chosen, with the great probability that he will be crushed by the
wheels of social life. It is a rare occurrence for the man who is a
failure in his chosen vocation, and who has been thrown out of it,
to happen to come into the career in which he can make a success.
Social statistics show with an appalling clearness what a burden
and what a danger to the social body is growing from the masses of
those who do not succeed and who by their lack of success become
discouraged and embittered. The social psychologist cannot resist
the conviction that every single one could have found a place in
which he could have achieved something of value for the
commonwealth. The laborer, who in spite of his best efforts shows
himself useless and clumsy before one machine, might perhaps have
done satisfactory work in the next mill where the machines demand
another type of mental reaction. His psychical rhythm and his inner
functions would be able to adjust themselves to the requirements of
the one kind of labor and not to those of the other. Truly the
whole social body has had to pay a heavy penalty for not making
even the faintest effort to settle systematically the fundamental
problem of vocational choice, the problem of the psychical
adaptation of the individuality. An improvement would lie equally
in the interest of those who seek positions and those who have
positions to offer. The employers can hope that in all departments
better work will be done as soon as better adapted individuals can
be obtained; and, on the other hand, those who are anxious to make
their working energies effective may expect that the careful
selection of individual mental characters for the various tasks of
the world will insure not only greater success and gain, but above
all greater joy in the work, deeper satisfaction, and more
harmonious unfolding of the personality.
V
V
SCIENTIFIC VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE
Observations of this kind, which refer to the borderland region between psychology and social politics, are valid for all modern nations. Yet it is hardly a chance that the first efforts toward a systematic overcoming of some of these difficulties have been made with us in America. The barriers between the classes lie lower; here the choice of a vocation is less determined by tradition; and it belongs to the creed of political democracy that just as everybody can be called to the highest elective offices, so everybody ought to be fit for any vocation in any sphere of life. The wandering from calling to calling is more frequent in America than anywhere else. To be sure, this has the advantage that a failure in one vocation does not bring with it such a serious injury as in Europe, but it contributes much to the greater danger that any one may jump recklessly and without preparation into any vocational stream.
It is fresh in every one's mind how during the last decade the economic conscience of the whole American nation became aroused. Up to the end of the last century the people had lived with the secure feeling of possessing a country with inexhaustible treasures. The last few years brought the reaction, and it became increasingly clear how irresponsible the national attitude had been, how the richness of the forests and the mines and the rivers had been recklessly squandered without any thought of the future. Conservation of the national possessions suddenly became the battle-cry, and this turned the eye also to that limitless waste of human material, a waste going on everywhere in the world, but nowhere more widely than in the United States. The feeling grew that no waste of valuable possessions is so reckless as that which results from the distributing of living force by chance methods instead of examining carefully how work and workmen can fit one another. While this was the emotional background, two significant social movements originated in our midst. The two movements were entirely independent of each other, but from two different starting-points they worked in one respect toward the same goal. They are social and economic movements, neither of which at first had anything directly to do with psychological questions; but both led to a point where the psychological turn of the problem seemed unavoidable. Here begins the obligation of the psychologist, and the possibility of fulfilling this obligation will be the topic of our discussion concerning the selection of the best man.
These two American movements which we have in mind are the effort to furnish to pupils leaving the school guidance in their choice of a vocation, and the nowadays still better known movement toward scientific management in commerce and industry. The movement toward vocational guidance is externally still rather modest and confined to very narrow circles, but it is rapidly spreading and is not without significant achievements. It started in Boston. There the late Mr. Parsons once called a meeting of all the boys of his neighborhood who were to leave the elementary schools at the end of the year. He wanted to consider with them whether they had reasonable plans for their future. At the well-attended meeting it became clear that the boys knew little concerning what they had to expect in practical life, and Parsons was able to give them, especially in individual discussions, much helpful information. They knew too little of the characteristic features of the vocations to which they wanted to devote themselves, and they had given hardly any attention to the question whether they had the necessary qualifications for the special work. From this germ grew a little office which was opened in 1908, in which all Boston boys and girls at the time when they left school were to receive individual suggestions with reference to the most reasonable and best adjusted selection of a calling. There is hardly any doubt that the remarkable success of this modest beginning was dependent upon the admirable personality of the late organizer, who recognized the individual features with unusual tact and acumen. But he himself had no doubt that such a merely impressionistic method could not satisfy the demands. He saw that a threefold advance would become necessary. First, it was essential to analyze the objective relations of the many hundred kinds of accessible vocations. Their economic, hygienic, technical, and social elements ought to be examined so that every boy and girl could receive reliable information as to the demands of the vocation and as to the prospects and opportunities in it. Secondly, it would become essential to interest the schools in all these complex questions of vocational choice, so that, by observation of individual tendencies and abilities of the pupils, the teachers might furnish preparatory material for the work of the institute for vocational guidance. Thirdly,—and this is for us the most important point,—he saw that the methods had to be elaborated in such a way that the personal traits and dispositions might be discovered with much greater exactitude and with much richer detail than was possible through what a mere call on the vocational counselor could unveil. [3]
It is well known how this Boston bureau has stimulated a number of American cities to come forward with similar beginnings. The pedagogical circles have been especially aroused by the movement, municipal and philanthropic boards have at least approached this group of problems, two important conferences for vocational guidance have met in New York, and at various places the question has been discussed whether or not a vocational counselor might be attached to the schools in a position similar to that of the school physician. The chief progress has been made in the direction of collecting reliable data with reference to the economic and hygienic conditions of the various vocations, the demand and supply and the scale of wages. In short, everything connected with the externalities of the vocations has been carefully analyzed, and sufficient reliable material has been gained, at least regarding certain local conditions. In the place of individual advice, we have thus to a certain degree obtained general economic investigations from which each can gather what he needs. It seems that sometimes the danger of letting such offices degenerate into mere agencies for employment has not been avoided, but that is one of the perils of the first development. The mother institute in Boston, too, under its new direction emphasizes more the economic and hygienic side, and has set its centre of gravity in a systematic effort to propagate understanding of the problems of vocational guidance and to train professional vocational counselors in systematic courses, who are then to carry the interest over the land. [4]
The real psychological analysis with which the movement began has, therefore, been somewhat pushed aside for a while, and the officers of those institutes declare frankly that they want to return to the mental problem only after professional psychologists have sufficiently worked out the specific methods for its mastery. Most counselors seem to feel instinctively that the core of the whole matter lies in the psychological examination, but they all agree that for this they must wait until the psychological laboratories can furnish them with really reliable means and schemes. Certainly it is very important, for instance...
Table of contents
- Psychology and Industrial Efficiency
- INTRODUCTION
- I
- II
- III
- PART I
- IV
- V
- VI
- VII
- VIII
- IX
- X
- XI
- XII
- PART II
- XIII
- XIV
- XV
- XVI
- XVII
- XVIII
- PART III
- XIX
- XX
- XXI
- XXII
- XXIII
- XXIV
- NOTES
- Copyright
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn how to download books offline
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.5M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1.5 million books across 990+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn about our mission
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more about Read Aloud
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS and Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app
Yes, you can access Psychology and Industrial Efficiency by Hugo Münsterberg in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Psychologie & Geschichte & Theorie in der Psychologie. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.