Five most influential theories
Super, Holland, Gottfredson, Krumboltz, Saviskas
Classification of career theories
Actuarial and
... [Show More] Developmental
Actuarial
theorists from this perspective focused on some 'structure' of the individual such as needs, traits, interests, etc., and designed a theory of how career development occurs from that basis.
Developmental
theorists from this perspective viewed career development as occurring over time, usually through stages. This process of career development could include various 'structures' such as self-concept and need
Vocational Development Stages
Growth, Exploratory, Establishment, Maintenance, Decline
Growth Development Stage
Birth to 14-15, Development of capacity, interests, and self-concept.
Exploratory Development Stage
15-24 years. Tentative choices made
Establishment Development Stage
22-44 years. Trail (in work situations) and stabilize
Maintenance Development Stage
45-65, Continual adjustment process
Decline Development Stage
65+ years. Preretirement, work output issues and retirement. Later changed to disengagement
Vocational Development Tasks
Crystallization, Specification, Implementation, Stabilization, Consolidation
Ages no longer apply, can repeat or recycle throughout tasks
Crystallization Development Task
Ages 14-18. formulating a general vocational goal through awareness
Specification Development Task
Ages 18-21. Moving from a tentative to a specific vocational choice
Implementation Development Task
Ages 21-24. Completing training and entering employment.
Stabilization Development Task
Ages 24-35. Confirming a preferred choice by performing the job.
Consolidation Development Task
35+ becoming established in a career, advancing, achieving status
Nine major roles we play in life
Child, student, citizen, spouse, homemaker, parent, worker, leisure, pensioner.
Four theaters
Home, community, school, workplace.
Archway Model
Graphic representation of many determinants that comprise one's self-concept. One pillar represents the factors & variables within the individual that influence career development such as needs, aptitudes, interests, and achievements. The other pillar includes external factors such as family, community, and labor market. Between the tow pillars is the self of the individual.
Career Pattern Study
examined the vocational behavior of 9th graders all the way into their 30's. Adolescents who are career mature and achieve in high school tend to be more career mature and successful as young adults.
Holland Types
Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, Conventional
Everyone has all six types in varying amounts
Realistic
aggressive, prefers explicit tasks requiring physical manipulation; has poor interpersonal skills.
Ex: Mechanic, technician
Investigative
intellectual; prefers systematic, creative investigation activities; has poor persuasive and social skills.
Ex: chemist, computer programmer
Artistic
imaginative; prefers self-expression via physical, verbal, or material, dislikes systematic and ordered activities
Ex: artist, editor
Social
social; prefers activities that inform, develop, or enlighten others, dislikes activities involving tools or machines
Ex: counselors, teachers
Enterprising
extroverted; prefers leadership and persuasive roles; dislikes abstract, cautious activities
Ex. manager, slaes personnel
Conventional
practical; prefers ordered, structured activities, dislikes ambiguous, and unsystematized tasks
Instruments used to determine Holland Type
Vocational Preference Inventory and Self-Directed Search
Dictionary of Holland Occupational Codes
Most occupations in the United States have been assigned a Holland Type and can be found here
Consistency (HT)
adjacent pairs of types are more psychologically alike than nonadjacent pairs of types
Differentiation (HT)
an individual's profile of six types has significant highs(differentiated) and lows or the profile of six types tends to be flat(undifferentiated).
Congruence (HT)
the individual's type and the environment type are at the same
Vocational identity (HT)
high identity individuals are those who have a clear and stable picture of their interests and goals.
Linda Gottfredson
Circumscription and Compromise- focuses on the vocational development processes experienced by children. Vocational self concept is central and influences occupational selection
Circumscription (LG)
Narrow down occupations
Compromise (LG)
opt out of unavailable or inappropriate occupations
Four Stages of Career Development (LG)
Orientation to: Size and power, sex roles, social valuation, internal unique self
Orientation to Size and Power
Ages 3-5. Children have neither; they are concrete thinkers and begin to understand what it means to be an adult. Even as young as age 3 they can name occupations they would like to do.
Orientation to Sex Roles
Ages 6-8. There is greater awareness of values held by peers, family, and community; occupations vary greatly in social value-desirability
Orientation to internal unique self
14+. In occupational selection as a teenager or adult, internal factors such as aspirations, values, and interests are critical.
Young children choose occupations
that fit their sex
Preadolescents choose occupations
which have social values consistent with their perceived social class. They may also rule out occupations which are inappropriate because of mismatch in ability, intelligence level or cultural factors.
Teenagers/adults choose occupations
taking into consideration self-awareness of personal characteristics
Zone of Acceptable Alternatives
Individuals develop a cognitive map of occupations based on sex-type, social value (prestige), and field of work (interest area). Occupations within this range are consistent with the individual's self concept.
John Krumboltz
Learning Theory of Career Counseling
Used Bandura's social learning theory to identify the principle concepts of his theory
Learning Theory of Career Counseling
Important concepts include: reinforcement theory, cognitive information processing, and classical behaviorism
Learning experiences over lifetime influence career choice
Unplanned and chance events will influence an individuals career development
Genetic Endowment and Special Abilities (LTCC)
this includes inherited qualities which may set limits on career opportunities
Environmental Conditions and Events (LTCC)
Influence skill development, activities, and career preferences. Natural resources, economic conditions, and legislation may be involved.
Instrumental and Associative Learning Experiences (LTCC)
Learning through reactions to consequences, results of actions, and through reactions to others. Reinforcement and non-reinforcement of behaviors and skills are important. Associative learning experience come from associations learning through observations and written materials. They influence an individuals perceptions
Task Approach Skills (LTCC)
Skills acquired such as problem-solving, work habits, mental sets, and emotional and cognitive responses
Career Beliefs Inventory (LTCC)
may be used to identify clients' mental barriers preventing them from taking actions.
Planned Happenstance (LTCC)
Unplanned and chance events will influence an individuals' career development, and such occurrences should be expected and taken advantage of.
Ginzberg, Ginsburg, Axelrad, and Herma
Developmentalists that believed occupational choice progressed through three periods.
Periods of occupational choice (Ginzberg)
Fantasy, Tentative, and Realistic
Fantasy (Ginzberg)
Birth to 11. Play becomes work orientated
Tentative (Ginzberg)
Ages 11-17. Four stages in this periods: interest, capacity, value, and transition
Realistic (Ginzberg)
17+. Three stages in this period: exploration, crystallization, and specification.
Ann Roe
Needs approach. Believed that genetic factors, environmental experiences, and parent-child relations influenced the needs structure each child developed. Believed that careers were chosen to meet needs.
Field-by-level Classification of Occupation
Developed by Ann Roe and has six levels and eight fields.
Field-by-level: Levels
Professional & managerial (highest level)
Professional & managerial (regular)
Semi-professional & managerial
Skilled
Semi-skilled
Unskilled
Field-by-level: Fields
Service, business contact, managerial, general cultural, arts and entertainment, technology, outdoor, and science
Tiedeman's Decision-Making Model
Believed that career development occurred as part of cognitive development as one resolved ego-relevant crisis.
Paralleled the eight psychosocial stages identified by Erikson.
Saw life decisions and career decisions as integrally related.
Phases of decision making
Anticipation or preoccupation
Implementation or adjustment
Anticipation or Preoccupation
Includes the following phases:
Exploration
Crystallization
Choice
Clarification
Implementation or Adjustment
Includes the following phases:
Induction
Reformation
Intergration
Tiedeman emphasized
the importance of the individual in the decision making process
I-power
personal reality of the individual was at the center of this potential for self-improvement and subsequent self-development.
Career development takes place (DMM)
Through a continuous process of differentiating one's ego development, processing developmental tasks, and resolving psychosocial crises
Cognitive information processing & career development
Reardon, Lenz, Sampson, & Peterson presented a theory of career development based on cognitive information processing (CIP). A procedure for solving career problems was developed based on a series of assumptions which emphasize cognitions, information, and problem solving.
CASVE Processing Skills
Communication, analysis, synthesis, valuing, execution
Communication (CIP)
identifying the career-related needs of the client
Analysis (CIP)
identifying the problem components and placing them in a conceptual framework
Synthesis (CIP)
formulating course of action or alternatives
Valuing (CIP)
judging each action as to it's potential for success or failure and impact on others. This is a prioritizing process
Execution (CIP)
developing pans and implementation strategies
Social Cognitive Theory and Self-Efficacy
Based on Bandura's social learning theory
Self Efficacy (SCT)
an individual's belief that he or she can perform some task or be successful in some endeavor
influences choice, performance, and persistence.
Self-efficacy can be strengthened through
learning experiences such as: personal performance accomplishments, vicarious learning, social persuasion, physiological states and reactions.
Constructivism and Contextualism
Suggests that individuals construct their own reality or truth through their own way of organizing information.
Becomes very subjective phenomenon and focuses on how individuals extract meaning from their present situation.
Contextualism implies
that career development constant interplay of forces within the individual, with in the environment, and the interaction between the two. One cannot separate individuals from their environments and the individuals' perceptions and information organizing processes create their reality.
Goals for Career Counselor (CC)
encourage the client to make meaning of his or her situation.
Unraveling events (CC)
Because context is so important, unraveling envenoms into very small pieces may be counterproductive and reduce the possibility for constructing personal meaning.
Focus of attention (cc)
is actions which are cognitively and socially based.
Three perspectives of action (CC)
Behavior which occurs,
Internal state (affect)
Their social meaning
Mark Savickas
proponent of a postmodern career counseling approach based on career construction theory.
View of counselor (MS)
not as the expert with infallible scores from inventories but rather as an active agent in assisting career clients to make sense of their life and work in order to be successful and satisfied.
Perspective of personality (CCT)
personality types, developmental tasks, and life themes
Personality types (CCT)
may be conceptualized as those stemming from the work of Holland and others
Developmental tasks (CCT)
were initially identified by Super and through the model presented by Bandura
Life themes (CCT)
relate to the stories individuals experience and how they hold them together in a coherent manner.
Stories and meaning (CCT)
are provide by clients (a narrative approach to career counseling) in order to construct a reality in line with their social and cultural backgrounds, as well as experiences.
H.B. Gelatt
focuses on the decision-making process and outlines a fairly traditional five step process
Decision-making process (Gelatt)
Recognize a need to make a decision
Collect data and look at courses of action
Besides looking at courses of action
Examine potential outcomes and probability
Attend to your value system
Evaluate and make a decision, and the decision can be investigatory or permanent [Show Less]