1. Employment professionals will refrain
from any practice that improperly influences and affects job acceptances.
Such practices may include undue time pressure for acceptance of
employment offers and encouragement of revocation of another employment
offer. Employment professionals will strive to communicate decisions
to candidates within the agreed-upon time frame.
2. Employment professionals will know the recruitment and career
development field as well as the industry and the employing organization
that they represent, and work within a framework of professionally
accepted recruiting, interviewing, and selection techniques.
3. Employment professionals will supply accurate information on
their organization and employment opportunities. Employing organizations
are responsible for information supplied and commitments made by
their representatives. If conditions change and require the employing
organization to revoke its commitment, the employing organization
will pursue a course of action for the affected candidate that is
fair and equitable.
4. Neither employment professionals nor their organizations will
expect, or seek to extract, special favors or treatment which would
influence the recruitment process as a result of support, or the
level of support, to the educational institution or career services
office in the form of contributed services, gifts, or other financial
support.
5. Serving alcohol should not be part of the recruitment process.
6. Employment professionals will maintain equal employment opportunity
(EEO) compliance and follow affirmative action principles in recruiting
activities in a manner that includes the following:
a) Recruiting, interviewing, and hiring individuals without
regard to race, color, national origin, religion, age, gender,
sexual orientation, or disability, and providing reasonable accommodations
upon request;
b) Reviewing selection criteria for adverse impact based upon
the student's race, color, national origin, religion, age, gender,
sexual orientation, or disability;
c) Avoiding use of inquiries that are considered unacceptable
by EEO standards during the recruiting process;
d) Developing a sensitivity to, and awareness of, cultural differences
and the diversity of the work force;
e) Informing campus constituencies of special activities that
have been developed to achieve the employer's affirmative action
goals;
f) Investigating complaints forwarded by the career services
office regarding EEO noncompliance and seeking resolution of such
complaints.
7. Employment professionals will maintain the confidentiality of
student information, regardless of the source, including personal
knowledge, written records/reports, and computer data bases. There
will be no disclosure of student information to another organization
without the prior written consent of the student, unless necessitated
by health and/or safety considerations.
8. Those engaged in administering, evaluating, and interpreting
assessment tools, tests, and technology used in selection will be
trained and qualified to do so. Employment professionals must advise
the career services office of any test conducted on campus and eliminate
such a test if it violates campus policies. Employment professionals
must advise students in a timely fashion of the type and purpose
of any test that students will be required to take as part of the
recruitment process and to whom the test results will be disclosed.
All tests will be reviewed by the employing organization for disparate
impact and job-relatedness.
9. When using organizations that provide recruiting services for
a fee, employment professionals will respond to inquiries by the
career services office regarding this relationship and the positions
the organization was contracted to fill. This principle applies equally
to any other form of recruiting that is used as a substitute for
the traditional employer/student interaction.
10. When employment professionals conduct recruitment activities
through student associations or academic departments, such activities
will be conducted in accordance with the policies of the career services
office.
11. Employment professionals will cooperate with the policies and
procedures of the career services office, including certification
of EEO compliance or exempt status under the Immigration Reform and
Control Act, and will honor scheduling arrangements and recruitment
commitments.
12. Employment professionals recruiting for international operations
will do so according to EEO standards. Employment professionals will
advise the career services office and students of the realities of
working in that country and of any cultural or foreign law differences.
13. Employment professionals will educate and encourage acceptance
of these principles throughout their employing institution and by
third parties representing their employing organization on campus,
and will respond to reports of noncompliance.
Taken directly from
http://www.naceweb.org/principles/annotated.htm
Taken from National Association of Colleges and
Employers
NACE Principles for Professional Conduct
June 10, 2004 |