1 / 25

Work, Leisure, and Retirement

Work, Leisure, and Retirement. Traditional age-differentiated structure. Education – Work – Leisure Now age-integrated Education Lifelong learning Gain adaptive knowledge and skills Train for new occupation Understand technology Develop retirement, liesure role. Work. Careers

nita
Télécharger la présentation

Work, Leisure, and Retirement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Work, Leisure, and Retirement

  2. Traditional age-differentiated structure • Education – Work – Leisure • Now age-integrated • Education • Lifelong learning • Gain adaptive knowledge and skills • Train for new occupation • Understand technology • Develop retirement, liesure role

  3. Work • Careers • Choice of Vocation • Influences?

  4. Family • Opportunities (SES, occupational status) • Socialization (values) • Mother’s employment status (women) • Early work experiences (attitudes) • University experiences

  5. Interest/Work Match • Holland’s Person-Environment Fit Model • personality characteristics and success in occupation • moderate but significant relationship • stable throughout adulthood

  6. Contextual Factors • Marital/Family commitments • Economy

  7. Donald Super: Stages in career planning • Crystallization: vague, general • Early adolescence • Specification: being focus • Late adolescence/university • Implementation: try outs • Young adults • Establishment

  8. Super: stages • Consolidation • Maintenance • Deceleration • Retirement

  9. Career Development Early Career • early professional socialization • forming a “dream” (Daniel Levinson) • goal expectation • career satisfaction (intrinsic, extrinsic factors) • reality shock and mentorship • self ethic vs. work ethic • focus on quality of own work (control) • reduced loyalty, commitment

  10. Middle Career settling down • taking stock of “dream” • increased autonomy • Spillover effects: • Multiple roles (enhancement, stress) • positive, negative • job strain and stress (high demand, low control) • decreased immune function • poor health habits • mental health (depression, anxiety)

  11. Women and Minorities • occupational segregation (service/clerical) • lower income • dual career, dual earner couples • underrepresentation in managerial/professional positions

  12. Late Career and Retirement • Normative life event in recent history • Retirement in popular culture? • Valid images? • Why?

  13. Decision to retire • Adequate retirement benefits (financial security) • Leisure interests • Spouse retiring • Declining health • Routine, boring job • Low work commitment

  14. Retirement: Modern Phenomenon • 1900: 68% over 65 working • 1960: 30% • 1985: 16% (1/2 = part time)

  15. Why the shift? • Personal resources • Previous: work until death/disability • no safety net • Retirement requires: • Productive economy • Public/private pension • First government pension: Germany, 1889 • Retirement age: 65 • Lower life expectancy

  16. Canada Pension Plan • 1930s • Response to growing unemployment and poverty among elderly • Cheap labour (immigration) • Displacement (technology) • Great Depression • Age discrimination • Pension Plans: employment incentive

  17. Retirement as a Life Stage • Not poverty • Addresses problem of youth unemployment • Leisure for elderly

  18. Impact of Retirement • Adjustment • Atchley (1976): Stage Model • Honeymoon • Disenchantment • Reorientation • Termination • Much individual difference • Bridge jobs

  19. Adjustment • Crisis Theory • Retirement correlates with loss of • Health • Status • Self esteem • But supporting research did not control for pre-retirement characteristics

  20. Adjustment • Continuity Theory • Identity based on more than work • Attitudes, activities changed minimally after retirement

  21. General Characteristics of Adaptation • Individual variation in responses • Coping ability depends on previous coping skills, perceptions (challenge vs. threat) • Adaptation easier when: • Voluntary vs. forced retirement • Change is minimized (bridge job) • Transition is gradual • Personal resources critical (income, health, social support, high occupation level)

  22. Busy Ethic • Idealization and expectation of retired life • Retirement manages socially, morally • Authority from Work Ethic • Therapeutic value of activity • Encourages habit of engagement • Continuous with general cultural prescriptions for adulthood • Legitimates leisure of retirement

  23. Busy Ethic • Defends retired people against judgments of senescence • Gives definition to retirement role • Helps individuals adapt to retirement • Adapts retirement to prevailing societal norms

More Related