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The biggest problem I would have to testing is the time it takes.
One of the posts today had some stat of a writing test requiring 3 to 5 pages.
If we follow the JoAnn Hackos' model of 4-hours per page (or some such, my book
is at home) yikes! It would take all day long.
Are you really gonna let some poor technical writer wanna-be slug sit in your
office for a day writing up a treatise on a stapler? Phoo!
Some tech writer interviewer's must have a lot of time on their hands.
I interviewed a bunch of technical writers one time, and Bob knows, if I had
each write something 2 or more pages long, I would go out of my creepy mind.
Let's see: Interview, write 3 pages for test, pee in a cup, submit blood sample,
submit to a credit check, hand over photos of your cats, have a retina scan,
finger prints...
> From: Jim_McAward -at- ademco -dot- com
> I use testing as a rule-out, not as a qualitative means of determining
> who gets the job. I am sure that, given your resume and prior
> responsibilities, you'd do plenty well - and because I test everyone,
> I would test you, too.
>
> I'll bet we could make it worth your while enough to stoop down to
> writing about a pencil sharpener... after all, they got me to pee in a
> cup to get this job, and I vowed I *never* would ;-)