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Ask HN: How do you know if a job candidate didn't outsource the assignment?

by supr_strudl on 11/29/21, 3:02 PM with 4 comments

  • by PragmaticPulp on 11/29/21, 3:09 PM

    Take-home assignments are a small part of the interview process.

    I use the take-home assignment as prep for the live interview. We have the candidate explain how they chose to structure their solution and why they chose their implementation over alternatives. The conversation is treated as a code review or an explanation to a coworker inheriting the code.

    If someone can’t really explain how their code works or otherwise appears to be reading it for the first time, we don’t assume they cheated but we also don’t give any positive points. People can fumble under interview pressure and should be given a second chance. They need to demonstrate their skills sufficiently in the rest of the interview, though.

  • by leros on 11/29/21, 4:40 PM

    I used to teach a college lab course where students would do a lab project on their own time and then bring it to class to have it checked and graded. I'd always ask a few basic questions about it and it was really obvious who didn't do their own project.

    I would do something similar. Ask a few questions about how they solved it, why they made a certain decision, etc.

  • by pkrotich on 11/29/21, 3:51 PM

    I guess you’ll know 3 months in post hiring.

    But on a serious note - take home assignments (if any) should only be a small part of evaluation.

  • by okdjnfweonfe on 11/29/21, 3:18 PM

    talking to them