show/hide this revision's text 3 minor spelling & grammar

I've come up with what I believe are realistic problems to work on during an interview. Frequently I have candidates respond that they cannot code under the pressure of me watching them code (via Live Meeting or Locally). Is this a valid excuse for inability to complete the task (or taking too long) during the interview? If so, what can I do to decrease the pressure during the interview process?

It would seem that being unable to program under this kind of pressure could be problematic in typical employment because there are times when we as developers are fixing code when our manager is standing beside us, or during internal demos with product management. Additionally there is also the pressure that is typical with programming jobs that comes with deadlines (yes, we all hate them) and bug fixesthat is typical with programming jobs.

Edit: I do my best to not "breath breathe down their necks" but I don't exactly abandon them during the process. Maybe I will take the "get the hell out of there" approach.

show/hide this revision's text 2 I do my best to not "breath down their necks" but I don't exactly abandon them during the process. Maybe I will take the "get the hell out of there" approach.

I've come up with what I believe are realistic problems to work on during an interview. Frequently I have candidates respond that they cannot code under the pressure of me watching them code (via Live Meeting or Locally). Is this a valid excuse for inability to complete the task (or taking too long) during the interview? If so, what can I do to decrease the pressure during the interview process?

It would seem that being unable to program under this kind of pressure could be problematic in typical employment because there are times when we as developers are fixing code when our manager is standing beside us, or during internal demos with product management. Additionally there is also the pressure that comes with deadlines (yes, we all hate them) and bug fixes that is typical with programming jobs.

Edit: I do my best to not "breath down their necks" but I don't exactly abandon them during the process. Maybe I will take the "get the hell out of there" approach.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Should "inability to code under pressure" be a valid excuse when writing code in an interview?

I've come up with what I believe are realistic problems to work on during an interview. Frequently I have candidates respond that they cannot code under the pressure of me watching them code (via Live Meeting or Locally). Is this a valid excuse for inability to complete the task (or taking too long) during the interview? If so, what can I do to decrease the pressure during the interview process?

It would seem that being unable to program under this kind of pressure could be problematic in typical employment because there are times when we as developers are fixing code when our manager is standing beside us, or during internal demos with product management. Additionally there is also the pressure that comes with deadlines (yes, we all hate them) and bug fixes that is typical with programming jobs.