Quintax - Big Five model of Personality (Quintax is a
registered trademark)
Describing personality differences between people. How big is your personality?
Psychometric test example that we use is Quintax. The greatest growth in
the use of the psychometric test has come in the use of personality
profiling with the development of people in mind. This article looks at
the content of one personality questionnaire and its origins. The author
of this page has not used the instrument nor have they any experience of
using it. This is one of the reasons this form of psychometric test has
been chosen. The other is because it has been derived from the Big Five.
The Big Five has five dimensions:
- Extraversion (sociability and interactivity versus solitude and
privacy)
- Openness (abstract ideas and possibilities versus concrete realities and
facts)
- Agreeableness (co-operative versus competitive approaches to
interactions with others)
- Conscientiousness (task oriented versus divergent, process oriented work
styles)
- Negative emotionality (responsiveness to stress)
Quintax as a psychometric test provides a five factor profile and a
taxonomy or system of types for describing personality differences
between people - hence its name which derives from 'Quin..' for five and
'..tax' for taxonomy. Quintax is designed for use in the workplace in
both selection and development applications where a short administration
personality questionnaire is required. Having the 'Big Five' as a basis,
it provides a broad picture of individual behaviour based on the
acknowledged major dimensions of personality. Utilising narrative
reports for both profile and type approaches, it provides the
practitioner with an instrument that can be used in individual
assessment, management development workshops, and training. With managerial, student based, and general occupational norms
differentiated by age and gender it comes equipped with all the required
comparison groups for individual norming. Key Features of the Quintax
psychometric test: Developed from the 'Big Five' model of personality to
focus on personality styles that give important information about
behaviour at work. Applicable to a broad range of human resource
functions including: selection, personal development, outplacement and
career counselling, workshops and training in areas such as team
building, team roles, time management. Designed to provide full support
for practitioners in personality assessment including:
- Manual or computer-based administration and scoring
- Narrative report software,
- Development workshop materials, type-based interpretive guides, variety
of norm groups.
Designed, tested and standardised in partnership with UK organisations
using best practice in psychometric test development. Short
administration time. Can be used employees at a wide range of levels.
Self-scorable answer sheets and reusable question booklets.
So What?
Of course having an insight into your own or another persons personality
is useful but how can you use this in a situation, for example, where
you are recruiting someone. Being able to give and receive feedback in
the most effective way is critical. Relentlessly focus on the small
incremental steps that move one toward superior performance and learn
about giving and receiving feedback from this site. Of course there are
many questionnaires and psychometric test instruments each with their
own claims. We think of the difference between the two as follows:
- Psychological tests have been produced after extensive research and
testing. They have then been registered with the British Psychological
Society (BPS), or similar professional body, and accepted on their
approved list of tests.
- Questionnaires on the other hand are developed more for on-line surveys
and do not, necessarily, go through the rigorous procedures set down by
the BPS.
However this is just a very simplistic personal view and does not
detract from the valuable use that questionnaires perform. They still
need to be produced with great care and tested rigorously. We welcome
your views on which is more useful - questionnaires or the psychometric
test.
|