Career Choice and Development

(avery) #1
preferences for life roles are deeply grounded in the social
practices that engage individuals and locate them in unequal
social positions.


  1. An individual’s career pattern—that is, the occupational level
    attained and the sequence, frequency, and duration of jobs—is
    determined by the parents’ socioeconomic level and the per-
    son’s education, abilities, personality traits, self-concepts, and
    career adaptability in transaction with the opportunities pre-
    sented by society.

  2. People differ in vocational characteristics such as ability, per-
    sonality traits, and self-concepts.

  3. Each occupation requires a different pattern of vocational
    characteristics, with tolerances wide enough to allow some
    variety of individuals in each occupation.

  4. People are qualified for a variety of occupations because of their
    vocational characteristics and occupational requirements.

  5. Occupational success depends on the extent to which individ-
    uals find in their work roles adequate outlets for their promi-
    nent vocational characteristics.

  6. The degree of satisfaction people attain from work is propor-
    tional to the degree to which they are able to implement their
    vocational self-concepts. Job satisfaction depends on estab-
    lishment in a type of occupation, a work situation, and a way
    of life in which one can play the types of roles that growth and
    exploratory experiences have led one to consider congenial
    and appropriate.

  7. The process of career construction is essentially that of de-
    veloping and implementing vocational self-concepts in work
    roles. Self-concepts develop through the interaction of inher-
    ited aptitudes, physical make-up, opportunities to observe and
    play various roles, and evaluations of the extent to which the
    results of role playing meet with the approval of peers and


A DEVELOPMENTAL THEORY OF VOCATIONAL BEHAVIOR 155
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