> If you want a reasonable coding assessment, sit them down at a terminal and give them an hour (and an appropriately difficult problem).
I am doing just that.
> But literal whiteboard tests are a recipe for complete blackouts.
Not always. I've done a lot of whiteboard interviews too. It's a different way to discuss a problem, and one that people do use at work.
Most design sessions happen with a colleague or two in front of a whiteboard, not sitting at a workstation.
I disagree that blacking out is so common, though I understand it does happen occasionally. Also, we typically do at least 5 interviews in every onsite, one blackout wouldn't destroy the chances of an otherwise strong candidate.
It affects some people much more than others, it's not a uniform random occurrence, so a person with one blackout is more likely than most to have more than one. Some people are very anxious during interviews, and their frontal lobe basically shuts down, others love interviews. So it's very likely that many of the people you've interviewed who you thought "couldn't code" actually just couldn't code while you were watching them.
I am doing just that.
> But literal whiteboard tests are a recipe for complete blackouts.
Not always. I've done a lot of whiteboard interviews too. It's a different way to discuss a problem, and one that people do use at work.
Most design sessions happen with a colleague or two in front of a whiteboard, not sitting at a workstation.
I disagree that blacking out is so common, though I understand it does happen occasionally. Also, we typically do at least 5 interviews in every onsite, one blackout wouldn't destroy the chances of an otherwise strong candidate.