The requirements of fair employment laws prohibit you from asking certain questions during an interview.
for example, questions about when an applicant graduated from high
school or college or other questions whose answers might suggest that a
person was over age 40.
whether the applicant’s wife will mind him working long hours or whether
a candidate’s husband is likely to be transferred.
ancestry, national or ethnic origin, or parentage. You can’t ask if
someone was born in the United States nor can you ask what language they
speak at home or what kind of accent they have.
Nor can you ask whether an applicant has ever received workers’
compensation. And you cannot ask if the applicant has any physical or
mental disabilities.
You can’t even ask if an applicant’s religion prevents him or her from
working weekends or holidays or whether the person would need to take
time off for observance of any religious days.
A good rule of thumb is to always remember to focus on the job rather than the applicant–the issue is never, for example, whether the applicant atttends church on Sundays, but whether or not the applicant is able to work an 8-4 shift on Sundays.
A good rule of thumb is to always remember to focus on the job rather than the applicant–the issue is never, for example, whether the applicant atttends church on Sundays, but whether or not the applicant is able to work an 8-4 shift on Sundays.