Judith Elkan
"I am really concerned with offering people 'second chances'.
My work covers three sorts of clients: First, there are the young people who need
to make choices about higher or further education; then there are the young people
or graduates for whom things have not gone well, and who need to re-assess their
aptitudes and interests; a growing area involves people who are well advanced in
life, and whose present career does not seem to offer a way forward.
I am always concerned that people look at their own personal style of working and
think about the work they do in relation to what makes them feel comfortable with
themselves. Peoples' home commitments, finance, state of health and personal situation
can play a large part in the decisions that they are able to make.
I am a practitioner, trying to solve the problem that a client brings to me. As
well as talking through issues with a client, I need to know where their potential
is strongest.
In order to have an informed discussion, I need a quantitative analysis of the client's
profile. If I did not do this, I would be guessing, or going on public exam results,
perhaps taken a long time ago, depending partly on a teacher's skills or a person's
state of emotional development. In that case, I could just as well made a pot of
leaf tea and read the leaves in the cup. But with the Morrisby Profile report I
have an accurate, reliable measurement. In addition, the client is given confidence
in the assessments, for they are based on a series of tasks that do not depend on
previous knowledge. The client also has the benefit of a written report that they
can take away and use in furtherance of their subsequent career moves."
Judith Elkan Careers
111 Victoria Road
Oxford
OX2 7QG
01865 552888
www.judithelkan.co.uk
Prospects
In North London, Prospects uses the Morrisby Profile with school pupils, mainly
in year 11 but also some in year 12, and with college students, year 12 or above.
Participants are asked to complete evaluations and these have been overwhelmingly
positive. Very often, the response to the feedback is "It's spooky! How does it
know that about me?" One boy recently said, "It knows me better than I know myself!"
The Morrisby Profile assesses abilities but also personality and certainly gives
our clients a better understanding of themselves. It often makes them think about
issues they have not previously considered. For example, when considering a job
it is not only the nature of the work which is important, but also the working environment.
Such things as working under pressure, taking responsibility, or strict time deadlines,
may have a bearing on whether a job might be more or less suitable. Does the young
person have the right personality for this type of work? It is often the first time
they have thought about themselves in this way, and this self-knowledge is crucial
in helping them make informed decisions about their future.
I find the section on preferred Learning Styles useful, especially when discussing
the post -16 options. Young people have a choice about where they go and what they
study, and the methods of assessment can vary hugely. If you are a person who goes
to pieces during exams, don’t take a course where the outcome depends entirely on
exams! I have also found the pattern and statement "You may not find it easy to
learn facts and pass exams" really encouraging for some young people who obviously
have ability and yet are struggling in the school system.
Because we deliver the Morrisby Profile mainly in year 11, we use it particularly
for discussing post 16 options and the suitability of possible next steps. It can
also provide a much needed wake-up call for some young people. There are two groups:
those who tell me they are going to get lots of high passes and continue in school
for A/S levels, but whose profile would indicate they will achieve considerably
less; and those who think they are unlikely to achieve much, but whose profile shows
abilities off the scale. The first group can be encouraged to aim high but to put
in place some alternative plans just in case. The second group may not be achieving
for many reasons, such as a hidden disability, and these positive results can be
the first steps on the road to investigating the cause and hopefully dealing with
it.
Before I wrote this, I looked at my own report again. I think it is astonishingly
accurate. In fact, the more I read it the more accurate I think it is!
Barbara Orr
Project Manager
Prospects
Enfield
EN1 3JL
www.prospects.co.uk
Andy Gardner
"Career guidance can be an enormously complex process, with so many issues to take
into account. But I do feel that the guidance I give when the client has taken the
Morrisby Profile is usually far superior to the guidance I give when the client
hasn't taken the tests.
As a guidance practitioner it provides so many more in-depth insights than the usual
interest guides.
It has even helped some of my students improve their exams results, because the
profile led them to a greater understanding of their academic strengths and weaknesses."
Andy Gardner,
University and careers adviser
Andy Gardner has been an independent university and careers adviser for eight years,
working for JFS School, Brent, and LSU Catholic Secondary School, Camden. He also
supports the early UCAS applicants at La SWAP Sixth Form Consortium, Camden.
Publications include:
The Inspiring Futures Foundation
"We all find that the Morrisby Profile provides a sound foundation both for our
guidance interviews and for the client in providing an objective starting point
to our Futurewise scheme (www.myfuturewise.org.uk).
We're constantly reminded by clients how perceptive the personality measures are.
They produce a useful perspective, sometimes in reinforcing acknowledged traits
and at times challenging assumptions.
A number of individuals have visibly grown in self-confidence as they read the analysis
of their strengths and could see themselves in a wider context than the small school
community in which they currently operate.
The immediate reaction to the career suggestions frequently provides a sense of
direction for the individual, be it in reinforcing an existing idea or in offering
a highly valued area for exploration; the combination of objectivity and proven
connection underpins our guidance activity.
As attention increasingly turns to skills the Morrisby Profile once again demonstrates
its relevance and versatility.
John Watson,
Manager,
Profiling Services
The Inspiring Futures Foundation
VT Indigo
“Within VT Careers Management Indigo, we use the Morrisby Profile as a highly useful
and objective basis to support career and educational guidance.
Good quality guidance needs to be objective in relation to each individual and so
it is the actual measurement of key abilities and personality factors which allows
us to be entirely realistic in our work.
The Morrisby Profile is especially useful, where in providing our guidance we have
little other supporting information upon which to pitch our help. Even where we
may be aware of, say, subject grades, the Morrisby Profile, because of its objective
measurement, gets underneath this information to provide a more substantive basis
for guidance - since how well someone does at a particular subject can fluctuate
because of a change of teacher, a less interesting phase of the subject at a certain
time of year or because of various other personal reasons which can affect school
performance at any time.
Although the career suggestions are useful, we tend to suggest that each one is
an example of a type of career i.e. not definitive, and research is needed around
each suggestion into other related areas and possibilities.
Apart from career suggestions, in a good guidance session, it is possible to extrapolate
higher education or other courses or subject choices which would suit an individual.
The Morrisby Profile is also capable of demonstrating other key issues for a person’s
individual development. These can often be more important for a client than career
suggestions. It may be, for example, that a pupil is being dismissed as not very
bright, uninterested or even disruptive in school. The Morrisby Profile can occasionally
show that a person is particularly bright in terms of their reasoning ability, but
a school’s tendency to didactic teaching doesn’t suit them and they may learn far
better from observation and visual demonstration, rather than through words.”
Guy Sutton
Manager
VT Careers Management - Indigo
AIB Capital Markets
“We currently use the Morrisby Profile as a selection tool for our Graduate recruitment,
in order to shortlist Graduates for interview.
During interviews, we can tailor our competency-based questions to each candidate,
depending on their profile. For example, if the profile suggested a graduate was
very flexible, we would investigate this further with specific questions.
Once they commence employment, graduates attend a group presentation and one-on-one
feedback on their profile from fully Morrisby-trained HR representatives.
We find that since using the Morrisby Profile, we have a better hit rate in terms
of the number of candidates interviewed. Our Corporate Banking divisions in particular
find graduates that are successful on the job display similar traits to those suggested
by their Morrisby profile.”
Caitriona Ward
Team HR
AIB Capital Markets
IFSC Dublin 1
Cabair College of Air Training
The selection of trainee commercial pilots for sponsored/assisted airline programmes
requires specific assessment across a full range of an individual applicant’s ability
and capacity.
Initial testing is all computer-based, starting with an investigation of academic
levels in mathematics, physics and English language (when selecting for overseas
airlines). This is followed by more practical assessment of psychomotor skills,
spatial awareness, decision making, confidence and capacity.
We use the Morrisby Profile to support these tests and find it to be invaluable
as confirmatory tool when evaluating assessment results. The clear and concise manner
in which the Profile is constructed allows easy comparison through the range of
ability tests and personality dimensions, greatly assisting in the selection of
the best candidates for each individual operator. Easy access to the Occupational
Psychologists is of great value throughout the process.
Quality and speed of delivery are of paramount importance when conducting trainee
pilot assessments for major UK and overseas airline customers and in a relationship
extending over fifteen years, The Morrisby Organisation have provided a faultless
performance.
Tim Sharland
General Manager
Cabair College of Air Training
www.cabair.com