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Career Choice and Development

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Presentation on theme: "Career Choice and Development"— Presentation transcript:

1 Career Choice and Development
CHAPTER 15 Career Choice and Development

2 Choosing the right career
Career choice: some key factors Intrinsic appeal of the job or field The role of social influence: parental influence, social models Personality: Holland’s 6 personality types, Roe’s 8 (basic occupational groups) Gender and ethnicity Populations with special needs

3 Holland’s six different personality types

4 Choosing the right career
Career choice: some key factors Intrinsic appeal of the job or field The role of social influence: parental influence, social models Personality: Holland’s 6 personality types, Roe’s 8 (basic occupational groups) Gender and ethnicity Populations with special needs

5 Roe’s 8 basic occupational groups
Service Business Managerial Technology Outdoor Science Arts Culture transmission

6 Choosing the right career
Career choice: some key factors Intrinsic appeal of the job or field The role of social influence: parental influence, social models Personality: Holland’s 6 personality types, Roe’s 8 (basic occupational groups) Gender and ethnicity Populations with special needs

7 Choosing the right career
Career decision making Learning resources: college, vocational schools, correspondence and distance learning courses, military service, entry-level job experiences Government information resources: Selected Characteristics of Occupations, Guide for Occupational Exploration, Occupational Outlook Handbook

8 Choosing the right career
Searching for jobs on the Internet Professional groups: networks, electronic bulletin boards Job search guides and databases The Online Career Center Listservs Classified ads Resume database services Recruiting agencies

9 Career development Getting help from your company
Human resource planning: recruitment, job matching, long-term planning, employee development Continuing education, in-house training, performance appraisals

10 Career development Helping yourself by planning for your own career development Knowing yourself: traits, interests, abilities, motivations and long-term goals Knowing your organization: career insight, organizational politics, formal vs. informal networks of communication Establishing and moving toward clear-cut goals (like a personal program of management by objectives)

11 Career development The changing career Protean careers
Layoffs, restructuring, downsizing, outsourcing Temping Job sharing, telecommuting Protean careers Self-managed by the individual Determined by the person’s needs and changing Circumstances Requires a strong self-identity, continuous learning, and an appropriate balancing of life interests

12 Career development A relational approach to careers
Mutuality and reciprocity (a two-way process) Focus on development and learning Self-reflection, active listening, empathy, and feedback Training opportunities, mentoring, recognition, coaching, and feedback

13 Career development 360 feedback
Helps employees identify their strengths and weaknesses Helps determine their needs for development May encourage worker involvement and teamwork Potential drawbacks: threat, hard feelings, lack of agreement and perceived invalidity

14 Career changes over a lifetime
Career development and life stages Changes in tasks, status, roles, geographic location, compensation, co-workers, life stage, family obligations Super’s career theory: a cycle of growth, exploration, establishment, maintenance, and decline Career and family Single parent families: issues of child care, time with children, coordinating schedules, monitoring children’s after-school activities, travel limitations Dual-career couples: issues of family roles and responsibilities, traditional gender roles, part-time work or job sharing, economic aspirations, family leaves

15 Career changes over a lifetime
Women and family: special challenges Postpone having children? Have smaller families? Choose part-time work? Choose a career that is easy to re-enter? Toward a family-friendly workplace 70% of large companies have developed family-friendly policies (flex time, part-time work, job sharing, child care) Trade-off: such policies can hinder career development


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