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Topic 11

Topic 11. Career Development. Beginning of Career Choice. Career choice begin early: Personal experience: Watching parents/neighbours Adult conversation Role Play Temporary/part-time work

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Topic 11

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  1. Topic 11 Career Development

  2. Beginning of Career Choice • Career choice begin early: • Personal experience: • Watching parents/neighbours • Adult conversation • Role Play • Temporary/part-time work • Early experience  adolescent learn  will continue developing career towards their interest. • However  career choice may change with maturity.

  3. Stages in Career Development • Since the age of 10  a child stars to think what they want to be when they grow up  will continue until 24 yrs old. • Pre adolescent period Career choice are based on • Fantasy/Dream • Excitement/Adventure • Not on their ability

  4. Stages in Career Development • Early & middle adolescent  choice of career change according to their interest, ability and their values. • Late adolescent & early adult  able to make a correct choice according to own ability, experience and knowledge. • Choice of career are more clearer and establish after succeeded entering college/higher learning institutions.

  5. Social factors : Choosing a career • Parents • Educational level • Mass media • Gender

  6. Career Education • Why need Career education? • To assist students • Know themselves (their ability) • Develope their potential • For well-being • For community • For the country.

  7. Why Career Education Programme? • Build Self-Awareness • Assist student to understand issues related to: • Interest and liking • Potentials, ability & Skills • Relating self-potentials to suitable career • Self-development opportunities

  8. Role of school in developing career awareness • Seminar/ speech • Exhibition • Co-curriculum (Uniform cadets) • Ready Informations

  9. Theories

  10. Theories in Career Choice/Development • Ginzberg • Holland

  11. Ginzberg’s Career Choice Theory • Ginzberg (1972) suggested several stages people move through in choosing a career. • 3 stages: • Fantasy (11 & below) • Tentative (11-17 yrs. old) • Realistic (17/18 & above)

  12. Stage 1: Fantasy • Choice of career (ambitions) are made based on: • Excitement & interesting • Emotions & not practicality • Child perceptions * Fantasy period – the period of life when career choices are made – and discarded – without regard to skills, abilities, or available job opportunities

  13. Stage 2: Tentative • Focus  on self & Career choice based on 4 aspects: • Interest (11-12 years old) • Capasity (13-14 years old) • Values (15-16 years old) • Transition (16-17 years old) • Early adolescent  interest play a major role but as they grow older  more matured  start thinking about their ability. • Integration between interest and ability  from the value system. * Tentative period- the second stage which spans adolescence, in which people begin to think in pragmatic terms about the requirements of various jobs and how their own abilities might fit with those requirements

  14. Stage 3: Realistic • Focus on career opportunity and market demand. • Starts reviewing their aspiration, needs & interest, their ability and occupational work demand. • Choice are also made based on: • Experience & achievement so far. • Family influences • Personal job influence • Realistic period – the stage in late adolescence and early adulthood during which people can explore career options through job experience or training, narrow their choices, and eventually make a commitment to career

  15. John Holland Theory of Career Choice

  16. John Holland Personality –Type Theory • According to Holland (1959): • Individual personality influences a person choice of career . • 6 types of basic personaliti  6 types of basic occupations • Only certain types of occupation suits a specific personality.

  17. John Holland Theory of Career Choice • Personalities & basic environment: • Realistic • Investigative • Conventional • Enterprising • Artistic • Social

  18. John Holland Theory of Career Choice • Realistic – down-to earth, practical problem solvers, physically strong, mediocre social skills • Intellectual/Investigative – theoretical and abstract orientation, not particularly good with people • Conventional – prefer highly structured tasks • Enterprising – risk takers and take-charge types, good leaders • Artistic – use art to express themselves and prefer the world of art to interactions with people • Social– verbal skills and interpersonal relations are strong, good at working with people

  19. John Holland Theory of Career Choice You Type of Occupation • Realistic • Investigative • Conventional • Enterprising • Artistic • Social • Realistic • Investigative • Conventional • Enterprising • Artistic • Social Type of Personality Type of Suitable job environment Potential to succeed Suits

  20. Investigative/Intellectual • Like to investigate  suitable to an abstract type of occupation, intellectual and scientific. • Not interested in Enterprising type of work • Individual Characteristic • Clever • Analytical • Independent • Rasional • Curious • Type of Occupation • Mathematicians • Chemist • Biologist • PhysicistAhliFizik

  21. Realistic • Prefer job in an objective environment  does not involve good communication skills, involves physical & related to technical and farming. • Favourite type of work characteristics  relate to machine, equipment, nature & athletic. • Not interested in work related to Social • Type of Occupation • Mechanic • Rangers • Carpenter • Farmers • Contractors • Athletics • Individual Characteristic • Mechanical • Aggressive • Strong/athletic • Stubborn • Stern

  22. Convensional • Career choice  involve community support but does not involve lot of thinking Suitable in concrete and predictable envirobnment. Prefer routine and structural type of work. Not interested in artistic type of work • Individual Characteristic • Specific/precise • Orderly • Practical • Efficient • Careful • Type of Occupation • Accountant • Proof-reader • Statistician • Secretary

  23. Enterprising • Suitable in an adventurous, energizing and challenging work environment. Have an empowering and extrovert personality, and loves power. • Not interested in realistic type of work • Type of Occupation • Sales person • Politician • Businessman • Legal/law • Evangelism • Individual Characteristic • Coherent • Aggressive • Ambitious • Confidence • Controlling

  24. Artistic • Suitable in an artistic  arts and designing environment  able to express their creativity. • Not interested in conventional type of work. • Individual Characteristic • Independent • Creative • Non-conformist • Abstract • Idealistic • Type of Occupation • Musician • Artist/sculpture • Dancer/singer • Acting • Others  related to art

  25. Social • Prefer job related to the social, administrative or treating environment  ability in communication and interpersonal relationship. • Not interested in realistic type of occupation. • Type of Occupation • Teaching • Counselor • Social work • Psychologist/psychiatrist • Nurse/doctor • Individual Characteristic • Cooperative • Tolerent • Social • Empathy • Understanding

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