Cliff will share with us initial findings of his current research into understanding how college students think. His answers may surprise you. These insights will shed meaningful insight into how complex, yet highly revealing, a thorough understanding of the HVP and its indices can be for a consultant or counselor who uses this instrument in your practice.
Cliff will share with us initial findings of his current research into understanding how college students think. His answers may surprise you.
Perhaps just as important will be his recounting of how he came to study college students after having studied and reported on the thinking patterns of early-stage entrepreneurs compared with senior managers. He’ll share those findings, too, in the context of his ongoing work.
In this session, too, he wants to share his newly formed opinion that those of us who interpret HVP scores for a living would be well served if we dwell more closely upon one key measure that we often take for granted. We tend to use it as a cut-off point rather than as a measure worthy of conversation and exploration with our clients. I’m talking about RHO scores, sometimes known as a reliability index.
If this all sounds nerdy right now, it won’t be. Well, maybe a little. We hope it will shed meaningful insight into how complex, yet highly revealing, a thorough understanding of the HVP and its indices can be for a consultant or counselor who uses this instrument in your practice.
As usual, we’ll hold a breakout session in which you can discuss your use of this index in your current interpretation practice and how the lessons that Cliff shares may influence that practice in the future.
We’ll wrap with a quick look at two future directions for Cliff’s ongoing research agenda. You may not exactly hold your breath for them, but we anticipate you will want to know what this research discovers when he gets there.
Mastering the art of interpreting an instrument as profoundly meaningful and as profoundly complex as the HVP invites a bit of nerdiness in all of us. Come and nerd out with us on Wednesday, March 10th, from 4:00 to 5:00 pm Eastern time. You don’t need to bring a calculator, just an inquiring mind.
Join Us at the Next Hartman Happy Hour