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> Ability at work > Issues for people with disability in staff selections > 14. What feedback should I give? > Next: Better practice strategies
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What feedback should I give?

Providing feedback, especially to unsuccessful applicants, is an important part of any selection process. For people with disability, however, it may be particularly important because in the absence of detailed and constructive advice they may be inclined to assume that their disability was a factor in their not getting the job.

Preparing to give feedback can also be a useful discipline for people conducting a selection process because it requires them to focus carefully on exactly why people were successful or not in their application, irrespective of whether they have a disability. It can also be helpful in keeping valuable applicants interested in applying for subsequent vacancies in that agency or in that area. In other words, this is simply one more area in which the ‘right thing’ to do for applicants with disability is good practice for everyone.

In the APS, effective feedback: