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Career Theory Individual Perspectives

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Title: Career Theory Individual Perspectives


1
Career Theory Individual Perspectives
  • Career Development

2
Overview
  • Objective Subjective Faces of Career
  • Objective careers career patterns
  • Subjective careers
  • Career Stress
  • Adjustment
  • Theories of Career Development and Career Choice
  • Developmental perspective (Super, 1957,1980)
  • Behaviourist perspective (Krumboltz et al, 1976)
  • Differentialist perspective (Holland, 1959)
  • Decision Making perspective (Tiedman OHara,
    1963)
  • Structuralist perspective (Robert, 1977)

3
The Concept of Career
  • Career the sequence of employment-related
    positions, roles, activities and experiences as
    encountered by a person (Arnold et al, 1998
    Greenhaus Callanan, 1994)
  • Career is a metaphor for upward progression in
    a public, institutional sense.
  • Vs
  • Career represents the experiences of the
    individual - their personal development and
    progression.

4
The Context of Career
  • Recent changes in organisations/work (Arnold et
    al, 1998)
  • increasing workload for individuals
  • organisational changes (delayering, downsizing)
  • increasing global competition
  • more team-based work (expert teams, limited time,
    clear goals)
  • more short-term contracts
  • frequent changes in skills required
  • more part-time jobs
  • changing workforces (less school leavers, older
    workers)
  • increasing self-employment, small business
  • flexible working (working at home, teleworking,
    flexi-time)
  • Impacts lateral or downward moves more common,
    increased concern about quality of worklife gt
    org.less responsible
  • Schein (1990) Internal vs External Career
  • Internal subjective, individual-oriented view
  • External objective realities and constraints in
    the world of work

5
Career Patterns
  • Many models presuppose careers take place within
    an organisation/occupation - an ordered
    progression through series of related jobs (N.B.
    Locals vs Cosmopolitans)
  • Driver (1982) Types of Career Pattern
  • Transitory
  • Steady-state
  • Linear
  • Spiral
  • Watts (1981) types of job change - influenced
    by employment contract - core employee or
    temp./contract/consultant-style
  • N.B. some people just hold a series of unrelated
    jobs. Is the concept of career still applicable?

6
Work-Role Transitions (subjective
careers)Nicholson (1990)
  • Preparation what both the individual and the
    organisation do before the employee starts, to
    integrate them into the workplace (psychological
    contract, RJPs).
  • Issue of realism and congruence
  • Hughes (1958) reality shock
  • Encounter newcomer tries to establish a mental
    map information seeking (task, role, group,
    organisation).
  • Morrison (1993) active info seeking
    satisfaction, performance commitment.
    Successful strategy monitoring
  • Louis (1981) newcomer socialisation - change,
    contrast surprise (Arnold, 1988 - UK graduates
    experiences)

7
  • Adjustment employee has an understanding of the
    workplace - now tries to understand how to go
    about doing the job in the long-term.
  • Orientations (Schein, 1971) (a) custodianship,
    (b) content innovation (c) role innovation.
  • People-processing (Van Maanen and Schein, 1979)
    individualised or institutionalised.
  • Latack (1989) career stress - Transactional
    Process Theories
  • Nicholson (1984) 4 modes of adjustment
    (replication, absorption, determination,
    exploration)

8
Adjustment, continued...
  • Schein (1978) Concept of Career Anchors
  • Career Anchor an area of the self-concept that
    is so central to the individual that (s)he would
    not give it up, even if forced to make a
    difficult choice
  • Peoples anchors develop and become clear during
    their early career, as a result of experience and
    learning from it.
  • Being able to identify ones career anchor is an
    important step in successful career
    (self-)management
  • It is important for an organisation to identify
    the career anchors it offers (for informing
    selection, transfer, promotion, etc.)

9
Scheins Career Anchors (1993)
  • Managerial Competence want/like to manage
    others. Generalists. Value advancement,
    leadership, responsibility, income.
  • Technical/Functional Competence want/like to
    develop specialist skills/knowledge. Build their
    identity around the content of their work.
  • Security want/like reliable, predictable work
    environment.
  • Autonomy want to be free of all restrictions in
    their work activities (clothing, hours/times
    worked, etc)
  • Entrepreneurial Creativity want/like to create
    their own products, services and/or
    organisations.
  • Challenge want/like winning against strong
    competition
  • Service/Dedication want/like work expressing
    social,political, religious or other personal
    values
  • Lifestyle Integration want a work-life balance.

10
Stabilisation
  • Being an old hand at the job.
  • Maintaining aspects of a valued work role/career
    and personalising it to meet own needs.
  • Hall (1976) increasing restriction in
    opportunities available
  • Identity and stability issues become increasingly
    salient
  • Career plateau (mentor, coach, etc.)

11
Relocation
  • Brett et al (1992)
  • Job Transfer different part of the country
  • International Transfer different country
  • Group Moves relocation of a large number of
    employees who normally work together.
  • Issues surrounding relocation
  • disruption to family (childrens education,
    friendships)
  • spouses willingness to relocate other non-work
    factors best predictor of relocation success.
  • age, education, number of children less
    significant
  • cultural/language differences mean international
    transfers most likely to be least successful

12
Transitions in- and out of the job market
  • Entry into work from school.
  • Arnold (1990) relatively unstressful
  • Retirement
  • gradual winding-down/ disengagement
  • subjective experience of retirement
  • Bosse et al (1991) factors assisting adjustment
  • health, income, voluntary retirement, personal
    preparation

13
Developmental PerspectiveSuper (1957, 1980)
  • Career Development a process of implementing a
    self-concept and testing this self-concept
    against reality
  • 5 stages
  • Growth 0-14yrs
  • Exploration 15-24yrs
  • Establishment 25-44yrs
  • Maintenance 45-65yrs
  • Decline/Disengagement 65yrs
  • Career Rainbow and roles
  • Evaluation
  • considers career outside of the organisational
    context
  • career self-concept black box theory?
  • based on small, unrepresentative sample

14
Behaviourist PerspectiveKrumboltz, Mitchell
Jones (1976)
  • Social Learning Theory (Bandura) genetics,
    environmental factors, learning experiences,
    cognitive and emotional responses, performance
    skills determine career path.
  • Decision points influenced by personal and
    situational variables
  • Learning experiences (instrumental vs
    associative)
  • Factors influencing a preference for a certain
    occupation
  • being positively reinforced for participation in
    related activities
  • observe a valued model being positively
    reinforced
  • being positively reinforced by a valued model
  • being exposed to positive words/images of that
    occupation
  • Evaluation mechanistic but does recognise
    importance of modelling (vicarious learning)

15
Differentialist Perspective Holland (1959)
  • Hereditary factors cultural personal factors
    gt hierarchy of preferred methods for
    environmental tasks (habitual methods)
  • Vocational choice - series of adjustive
    orientations in accordance with occupational
    environments available.
  • Vocational Orientation lifestyle (values,
    interests, social interactions)
  • Direct self toward major occupational class.
    Based on
  • development
  • self-evaluation of ability to perform
  • mediating factors - personal (social pressure
    from family/peers) socio-economic.

16
Holland (1973) Holland Gottfredson
(1976)Vocational Types Theory
  • Realistic out-door type. Like activities
    requiring physical strength/co-ordination. Not
    keen on socialising
  • Investigative likes concepts logic. Enjoys
    abstract thought. Often interested in physical
    sciences.
  • Artistic uses imagination a lot. Likes to
    express ideas and feelings. Dislikes rules and
    regs. Enjoys music, art, drama.
  • Social enjoys the company of others, esp. in
    affiliative relationships. Tend to be warm and
    caring
  • Enterprising enjoy the company of others, but
    less affiliative (rather dominate or persuade).
    Enjoy action rather than thought.
  • Conventional likes rules and regs. Often well
    organised, but not very imaginative.
  • People seek congruence between vocational
    interests environments. Incongruence gt stress
    dissatisfaction
  • Vocational Preference Inventory, Strong
    Vocational Interest Inventory, Self-Directed
    Search (Holland, 1985)

17
Evaluation of Holland, 1959 (e.g. Spokane, 1985)
  • Holland (1962) 2 x large n studies of US high
    school students
  • Vocational Types good reflection of basic
    personality dimensions as described in general
    psychology. Hexagonal conceptualisation
    reasonable approximation of similarities/differenc
    es
  • Evidence congruence is correlated to satisfaction
    and success cannot infer causality.
  • Using 3 types to describe personality is
    unnecessary
  • Vocational Type and Career ? Career chosen or
    ideal career
  • Most construct validity research relied upon
    paper--pencil measures greater need for
    behavioural outcomes (e.g. absence rates, rate of
    promotion, etc).

18
Decision-Making Perspective
  • The Process of Career Decision
  • Tiedman OHara (1963) Anticipation,
    Crystallization Stabilisation. Gelatt (1962)
    3 systems Prediction, Relative Preference
    Evaluation and Selection.
  • Models Predicting Choice of Career
  • Knefelkamp Slepitz (1976) stage theory.
    Piaget. Adult developmental concerns, 9 cognitive
    developmental tasks
  • 1. Locus of Control 6. Openness to Alternatives
  • 2. Analysis 7. Ability to resume
    responsibility
  • 3. Synthesis 8. Ability to take on new roles
  • 4. Semantic Structure 9. Ability to take risks
    with oneself
  • 5. Self-Processing

19
Knefelkamp Slepitz (1976)
  • stages 1-2 Dualism stages 3-4 Multiplicity,
    stages 5-6 Relativism, stages 7-9 Commitment
    with Relativism.
  • Evaluation
  • Empirical basis of theory is weak (interview
    study - 35 students)
  • Limits to theory
  • how long will each stage last?
  • Does not consider blocks or regression through
    stages

20
Structuralist Perspective Robert (1977)
Theory of Opportunity Structures
  • Central tenet the transition to employment
    needs to be understood in terms of opportunity
    structures helping people to adjust to the
    opportunities available to them, not
    unrealistically raising their expectations
  • Tenet comes from
  • observations on extent to which job choice is
    meaningful
  • growing evidence of the lack of congruence
    between peoples self-concepts and
    job/occupation.
  • Emphasis on career guidance (career is an
    unfolding pattern dictated by opportunity
    structures)

21
Conclusions
  • Freewill vs Determinism
  • Nature vs Nurture
  • Do theories of 20th century theories of career
    choice and career development hold true in 21st
    century?
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