Career Choice and Development

(avery) #1

Brown, S. D., & Kane, N.E.R. (2000). Four (or five) sessions and a cloud
of dust: Old assumptions and new observations about career counsel-
ing. In S. D. Brown & R. W. Lent (Eds.), Handbook of counseling psy-
chology(3rd. ed., pp. 740–766). New York: Wiley.
Brown, S. D., Lent, R. W., & Larkin, K. C. (1989). Self-efficacy as a mod-
erator of scholastic aptitude-academic performance relationships.
Journal of Vocational Behavior, 35,64–75.
Bussey, K., & Bandura, A. (1999). Social cognitive theory of gender
development and differentiation. Psychological Review, 106,676–713.
Casas, J. M. (1984). Policy, training, and research in counseling psychol-
ogy: The racial/ethnic minority perspective. In S. D. Brown & R. W.
Lent (Eds.), Handbook of counseling psychology(pp. 785–831). New
York: Wiley.
Chartrand, J. (1991). The evolution of trait-and-factor career counseling:
A person ×environment fit approach. Journal of Counseling and Devel-
opment, 69,518–524.
Chartrand, J. M., Martin, W. F., Robbins, S. B., McAuliffe, G. J., Pickering,
J. W., & Calliotte, J. A. (1994). Testing a level versus an interactional
view of career indecision. Journal of Career Assessment, 2,55–69.
Chartrand, J. M., & Nutter, K. J. (1996). The Career Factors Inventory:
Theory and applications. Journal of Career Assessment, 4,205–218.
Chartrand, J. M., & Robbins, S. B. (1989). Career Factors Inventory.Palo
Alto, CA: Consulting Psychologists Press.
Chartrand, J. M., & Rose, M. L. (1996). Career interventions for at-risk
populations: Incorporating social cognitive influences.The Career
Development Quarterly, 44,341–353.
Dawis, R. V. (1996). The theory of work adjustment and person-
environment-correspondence counseling. In D. Brown, L. Brooks, &
Associates,Career choice and development(3rd ed., pp. 75–120). San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Dawis, R. V., & Lofquist, L. H. (1984). A psychological theory of work
adjustment: An individual differences model and its applications.Min-
neapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
de Bruin, G. P. (1999). Social cognitive career theory as an explanatory
model for career counselling in South Africa. In G. B. Stead & M. B.
Watson (Eds.), Career psychology in the South African context.Pretoria,
South Africa: J. L. van Schaik.


304 CAREER CHOICE AND DEVELOPMENT

Free download pdf