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WED 466: Unit 4

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Good theories explain why people choose careers and become dissatisfied with them. ... Career success and satisfaction is related to choosing an occupation that is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WED 466: Unit 4


1
WED 466 Unit 4
  • Psychological Foundationsof Workforce Education

2
General Objective
  • Understands the psychological foundations of
    workforce education.

3
Career Development
  • a lifelong process involving psychological,
    sociological, economic, and cultural factors that
    influence individuals selection of, adjustment
    to, and advancement in the occupations that
    collectively make up their careers (Brown, 2003,
    p. 30)
  • Brown, D. (2003). Career information, career
    counseling, and career development. Boston, MA
    Allyn Bacon.

4
Good vs. Bad Theories
  • Good theories have well-defined terms and easily
    interpreted constructs.
  • Good theories explain the career development
    process for all groups.
  • Good theories explain why people choose careers
    and become dissatisfied with them.
  • Good theories are parsimonious.

5
Early Theories
  • Have limited applicability to special groups
    women, European men and women.
  • Are culturally oppressive because they are rooted
    in Eurocentric beliefs
  • Reflect independent, not dependent career
    decision making.

6
Career Choice and Development Categories
  • Trait and Factor Theories
  • Developmental Theories
  • Theories Based in Learning Theory
  • Socioeconomic Theories

7
Hollands Theory of Vocational Choice
  • Individual personality is the primary factor in
    vocational choice.
  • Interest inventories are personality inventories.
  • Daydreams about occupations are precursors to
    occupational choice.
  • Identify is related to a small number of focused
    vocational goals.
  • Career success and satisfaction is related to
    choosing an occupation that is congruent with
    ones personality.

8
Hollands Six Personality Types
  • Realistic
  • Investigative
  • Artistic
  • Social
  • Enterprising
  • Conventional

9
Hollands Six Work Environments
  • Realistic Environment
  • Investigative Environment
  • Artistic Environment
  • Social Environment
  • Enterprising Environment
  • Conventional Environment

10
Theory of Work Adjustment (TWA)
  • People have two types of needs.
  • Biological (survival)
  • Psychological (social acceptance)
  • These needs give rise to drive states.
  • Work environments have requirements that are
    analogous to individual needs.
  • Workers select jobs because of the perception
    that the job will satisfy their needs.

11
Predicting Worker Success
  • (i.e., worker adjustment)
  • Skills
  • Job-related skills
  • Aptitudes
  • Potential to develop job-related skills
  • Personality
  • Combination of skills and aptitudes

12
Supers Life-Span, Life-Space Theory
  • People differ in their abilities, personalities,
    needs, values, interests, traits, and
    self-concepts.
  • People are qualified, by virtue of these
    characteristics, each for a number of
    occupations.
  • Each occupation requires a characteristic pattern
    of abilities and personality traits.
  • Vocational preferences and competencies change
    with time and experience.
  • Self-concepts are increasing stable beginning in
    late adolescence.
  • The process of change is a series of life stages.

13
Supers Life Stages
  • Growth Stage
  • Exploratory Stage
  • Establishment Stage
  • Maintenance Stage
  • Decline Stage

14
Supers Life-Span, Life-Space Theory (continued)
  • The nature of the career pattern is determined by
    the individuals parental socioeconomic level,
    mental ability, education, skills, personality
    characteristics, career maturity, and the
    opportunity to which he/she is exposed.
  • Success in coping with environmental demands
    depends on the readiness of the individual to
    cope (career maturity).
  • Career maturity is a hypothetical construct.
  • Life stage development can be guided partly by
    the maturing of abilities and interests and
    partly by aiding in reality testing and in the
    development of self concepts.

15
Supers Life-Span, Life-Space Theory (continued)
  • The process of career development is developing
    and implementing occupational self-concepts.
  • Several factors influence the process of
    synthesis of or compromise between individual and
    social factors.
  • Work satisfaction is proportional to the degree
    to which they have been able to implement
    self-concepts.
  • Work and occupation provide a focus for
    personality organization.

16
Krumboltzs Social Learning Theory
  • Factors that influence career decision making
  • Inherited characteristics
  • Environmental conditions and events
  • All previous learning experiences
  • Task approach

17
Socioeconomic Theories
  • Status Attainment Theory
  • Family socioeconomic status influences
    occupational choice.
  • Dual Labor Market Theory
  • Core firms have internal labor markets.
  • Peripheral firms make no long-term commitments to
    employees.
  • Race, Gender, Career
  • African Americans earn less than whites.
  • Women earn less than men.

18
Emerging Theoretical Statements
  • Social-Cognitive Career Theory
  • Interaction of people with their environment is
    highly dynamic.
  • Career-related behavior is influenced by
    behavior, self-efficacy beliefs, outcome
    expectations, goals, and genetically determined
    characteristics.
  • Direct and indirect variables influence actual
    career choice and development.
  • Performance in educational activities and
    occupations is the results of interactions among
    ability, self-efficacy beliefs, outcome
    expectations, and goals.

19
Emerging Theoretical Statements
  • Career Information-Processing Model
  • People develop self-knowledge and knowledge about
    careers.
  • Individuals draw on generic information-processing
    skills to make career decisions.
  • Generic Information Processing Skills are CASVE
    communication, analysis, synthesis, valuing, and
    execution
  • Metacognitions are the cognitive functions
    essential to monitoring and regulating the
    decision-making process.

20
Work and Cultural Values
  • Cultural values are factors important to career
    development and vocational behavior.
  • Contextual variables socioeconomic status,
    family or group influence, and discrimination
    influence career choice, satisfaction, and/or
    success.

21
Career Choice and Satisfaction
  • Values beliefs about how one should function.
  • Values relate to
  • Human nature
  • Person-nature relationship
  • Time orientation
  • Activity
  • Self-control
  • Social relationships
  • Collateral
  • allocentrism

22
Career Choice and Satisfaction
  • Enculturation process by which individuals
    incorporate beliefs and values of their cultural
    group to form a values system
  • Monoculturalism beliefs and values of one
    culture
  • Biculturalism the unlikely concept of adopting
    the values of two or more cultures
  • Acculturation enculturation of beliefs from a
    culture different from ones own.
  • Dominant cultures values that are often at odds
    with the values of minority cultures

23
Browns Values-Based theory
  • Highly prioritized work values are the most
    important determinants of career choice for
    people who value individualism.
  • Collective social values heavily influence
    occupational decision making.
  • Cultural values regarding activity do not
    constrain occupational decision making.
  • Differing value systems of men, women, and
    different cultural influence occupational entry
    rates.
  • Choosing an occupational value involves a series
    of estimates.
  • Occupational success is related to job-related
    skills.
  • Occupational tenure is partially the result of
    the match between the cultural and work values of
    the worker, supervisors, and colleagues.

24
Contextualist Theory of Career
  • Career-related behaviors are goal-directed
    results of the individuals construction of the
    context in which they function.
  • Actions take place in a series of sequential
    steps that occur in social context from which the
    actor cannot be separated.

25
Theories of Decision-Making
  • Prescriptive models describe how decisions ought
    to be made.
  • Descriptive models describe how decisions are
    actually made.

26
Summary
  • Theories of career choice and development provide
    guides to this complex phenomenon.
  • Trait and factor theories (particularly Hollands
    model) are of greatest influence.
  • There is increasing interest in theories based in
    learning theory.
  • Constructivists theories are receiving
    increasing attention.
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