Latest Upload :

Career Choice and Development

Career Choice and Development





“In the wise choice of a vocation there are three broad factors:
(1) a clear understanding of yourself, your aptitudes, abilities, in-
terests, ambitions, resources, limitations, and knowledge of their
causes; (2) a knowledge of the requirements, conditions of success,
advantages and disadvantages, compensation, opportunities, and
prospects in different lines of work; (3) true reasoning on the rela-
tions of these two groups of facts” (Parsons, 1909, p. 5).
Historical Perspective
Efforts to help people identify appropriate careers can be traced to
the fifteenth century, and by the nineteenth century at least sixty-
five books had been published on the topic (Zytowski, 1972). The
first vocational guidance program emerged in this country in San
Francisco in 1888—in Cogswell High School—and subsequently in
high schools in Detroit in 1897 (Brewer, 1942). However, the roots
of career development theory did not emerge until Frank Parsons
advanced the three-step “formula” quoted at the beginning of the
chapter. Parsons’s schema for successfully choosing a career cannot
be called a theory in the strict sense, but it was the first conceptual
framework for career decision making and became the first guide for
career counselors.

DOWNLOAD


Share this article :

Enregistrer un commentaire

 
Support :