Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview

The interview is an important component of the selection process for employment and is one of the initial presentations of self by the applicant to the interviewer. As an extension of a study by Wilson, Aleman, and Leatham (1998), this study used politeness theory to investigate perception of face t...

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Main Author: Howell, Catherine Ray, 1985-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-1159
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2010-05-11592015-09-20T16:55:32ZProtecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interviewHowell, Catherine Ray, 1985-FacesExpressionsFacial expressionsPolitenessInterviewJob interviewsInterviewersThe interview is an important component of the selection process for employment and is one of the initial presentations of self by the applicant to the interviewer. As an extension of a study by Wilson, Aleman, and Leatham (1998), this study used politeness theory to investigate perception of face threat in the context of a job interview, specifically, when making requests and giving advice. This study predicted that jobseekers perceive an act as a greater threat to an interviewer’s negative face (appealing to interviewer’s autonomy) when making a request than when giving advice. Secondly, the study predicted that job seekers would perceive an act as greater threat to the interviewer’s positive face (appealing to the interviewer’s desire for approval) when giving advice or recommendations than when making a request. Both hypotheses were supported and other related interests such as acceptability of the act and likelihood of getting the job were also investigated.text2010-10-28T18:12:23Z2010-10-28T18:12:36Z2010-10-28T18:12:23Z2010-10-28T18:12:36Z2010-052010-10-28May 20102010-10-28T18:12:36Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-1159eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Faces
Expressions
Facial expressions
Politeness
Interview
Job interviews
Interviewers
spellingShingle Faces
Expressions
Facial expressions
Politeness
Interview
Job interviews
Interviewers
Howell, Catherine Ray, 1985-
Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
description The interview is an important component of the selection process for employment and is one of the initial presentations of self by the applicant to the interviewer. As an extension of a study by Wilson, Aleman, and Leatham (1998), this study used politeness theory to investigate perception of face threat in the context of a job interview, specifically, when making requests and giving advice. This study predicted that jobseekers perceive an act as a greater threat to an interviewer’s negative face (appealing to interviewer’s autonomy) when making a request than when giving advice. Secondly, the study predicted that job seekers would perceive an act as greater threat to the interviewer’s positive face (appealing to the interviewer’s desire for approval) when giving advice or recommendations than when making a request. Both hypotheses were supported and other related interests such as acceptability of the act and likelihood of getting the job were also investigated. === text
author Howell, Catherine Ray, 1985-
author_facet Howell, Catherine Ray, 1985-
author_sort Howell, Catherine Ray, 1985-
title Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
title_short Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
title_full Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
title_fullStr Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
title_full_unstemmed Protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
title_sort protecting your interviewer's face : how job seekers perceive face threat in a job interview
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-1159
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