¶ … third one have several parts. The first question asks why some staff members may fear evaluation. The second question asks whether the evaluation process can be made less threatening and foreboding. Finally, a series of three questions is asked about the agency that the author of this paper works at.
Fear of Evaluations
There are a number of reasons why people are fearful of evaluations in general and/or of the process itself. The first main reason is fear that the process is somehow broken or intentionally rigged. If employees get the feeling that the evaluations are a rubber stamp, are done in an incomplete and/or unfair way and/or that the manager(s) in question have a bias against the employee (rightly or wrongly), the recipients of the evaluations may feel that the evaluation is not indicative of reality and/or that the evaluation will be used against them (Lewis, Packard & Lewis, 2007).
Other still may dislike the process because it pits people against one another in several ways. For example, prior evaluations (and how they compare to that of other applicants) is a big part of who is promoted and why. If the results are deemed to be invalid or less than genuine, it will suggest (again, rightly or wrongly) to the person perceiving the process that the entire system is not fair and/or is positioned against their favor (Lewis, Packard & Lewis, 2007).
In short, if either the process/system of evaluations or the evaluation as administered to a person is deemed to be unfair or otherwise biased, the employee(s) that hold this perception will resist and/or fear the evaluation and this will actually tend to make things worse for the employee unless it is clear to the reviewer or manager...
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