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Title: Career Counseling A Sharing from the Narrative Perspective


1
Career CounselingA Sharing from the Narrative
Perspective
  • Yeung Ka Ching
  • Dec. 1, 2005

2
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Tradition vocational guidance
  • Emphasizes objectivity in helping individuals
    select and succeed in occupations. As an applied
    science, guidance uses rational decision making
    to logically match individuals to fitting
    occupations.
  • Guidance personnel make the march by comparing an
    objective picture of the individuals talents,
    interests, and goals to the ability and
    personality requirements of jobs.
  • What has all too often been absent in guidance
    interventions is counseling that focuses on a
    clients private sense.

10
Drawing
  • on an increasingly sophisticated reserve of
    tests, workbooks, computer programs, and
    occupational information, the objective approach
    is direct, sensible, and beneficial.
  • Yet it is quite limited, and inevitably so,
    because it neglects the subjective perspective
    that a person lives.

11
Psychology A briefer courseWilliam James
(1892/1963)
  • Career counseling is concerned with the kind of
    main character to be lived out in a career plot.
    Suitable employment is not only about matching,
    but also about the proper vehicle through which a
    certain character can be enacted in a certain
    kind of drama.
  • From the multitude of possible selves that might
    be actualized in work, a person must settle on
    but one or one small set.
  • Otherwise, living out one character would soon
    conflict with another character

12
A person might want to become a wealthy
entrepreneur, a sports star, a missionary,
  • To make any one of them actual, the rest must
    more or less be suppressed. So the seeker of his
    truest, strongest, deepest self must review the
    list carefully, and pick out one on which to
    stake his salvation. All other selves thereupon
    become unreal.

13
Future
  • The basic subject of career counseling is a
    persons future. Although career counseling might
    involve a variety of immediate adjustments, the
    most fundamental outcome is a persons design for
    his or her future career, a projection of a
    course of life in working to produce ends.
  • Of necessity, the design of a persons future is
    a representation (a vision, an image, an
    orientation, a projection )

14
Self-invested rather than self-divested
  • A future representation is self-invested rather
    than self-divested.
  • We would expect an economist to make economic
    projections based on an objective body of
    knowledge and evidence. We would not expect them
    to be based o preferences, interests, and
    personal values. Personal wants would be regarded
    as bias.

15
However,
  • For a representation of ones own future,
    personal orientation would be dominant, whereas
    objective information would be secondary and
    supportive.
  • What a person wants forms the basis for a
    representation, whereas the objective information
    concerns viability.

16
Narration and Meaning
  • Composing a narrative is our primary way of
    making meaning. A narrative provides a temporal
    organization, integrating a beginning, middle,
    and end into a whole.
  • Meaning is created in at least three major ways
  • Something is meaningful if it has a purpose.
  • Something is meaningful if it has rich
    implications
  • Something is meaningful if it has a sensible point

17
Decisions as narrative constructions
  • The basic function of a representation of the
    future is to create a meaningful narrative of the
    future that a person can live out. A decision
    situation is one in which the future is in doubt.
  • On the basis of memories and current experiences,
    a person implicitly or explicitly composes an
    ideal narrative of the way his or her life should
    be. This is a task that might be done well or
    poorly. A person might not have unified division,
    settled upon a coherent narrative, or developed a
    very rich vision of a more ideal life.

18
Dialectic process
  • One matches narratives of options to the ideal
    narrative in order to identify the option that
    best encompasses ones idealized view of the
    future.
  • The process is more of a dialectic than a series
    of stages. Dialectic involves a mutual fitting of
    ideal to actual and actual to ideal.
  • The idea of matching one static list of features
    with another static list is misleading. More
    accurately, there is a dynamic adjustment of
    constructions.

19
Adopting a Career Narrative
  • Career decision is a movement from being a
    spectator on ones life to entering within a
    drama that is life-defining in whole or in part
    (Cochran, 1992, p.29)
  • Traditionally, matching has been conceived in a
    static way. In a dialectic between the ideal and
    the possible, matching is ongoing. It is because
  • Both an ideal narrative and optional narratives
    changes over time. They are not fully formed, but
    forming as one goes along.
  • The ideal and the possible are interdependent.
    One must adjust the ideal to what is possible and
    the possible to what is ideally desirable.

20
Adopting a Career Narrative
  • Although matching is clearly necessary, it is too
    limited a term for the activity. In a dialectic,
    a person is actively constructing meaning.
  • Meanings are expanded, refined, tested, and
    revised.
  • Tiedeman and OHara (1963) appropriately
    described deciding as an activity of
    differentiation and integration.
  • A decider makes distinctions, yielding an
    increasingly differentiated map of
    self-in-situation. Increasing differentiation
    requires proper integration for closure, and the
    parts are properly integrated in a narrative.

21
Optimal Standards for Adoption
  • A decision is optimal to the extent that the
    adopted course of action promises to acutalize
    ideals for a career better than the other options
    do.
  • First order evaluation is concerned with what
    will most satisfy a desire. Priority instead of
    efficacy. Will a persons desire for power be
    most satisfied by political office or corporate
    management?
  • Second order evaluation is concerned with the
    qualitative worth of the desires one has and, to
    some extent, the desires one lacks. Is it better
    to have a higher salary or to have more autonomy?
  • Wholeness, harmony, agency and fruitfulness.

22
Agent or victim?
  • The most basic division of future representations
    is that some involve an agent, and others involve
    a patient or victim of circumstance.
  • An agent is one who makes things happens a
    patient is one to whom things happen.

23
Agency
  • The plot of an agent is one in which the main
    character strives to overcome obstacles to
    fulfill a purpose.
  • The plot of a patient is one in which the main
    character is overcome by force of circumstance.
  • The plot of an agent rests largely on personal
    causation, an individual try to bring something
    about.
  • The plot of a patient rests largely on causal
    forces from other people. Policies, and so on.

24
The striking difference is
  • That if an agent stops trying, the plot ends or
    fades. However, if a patient stops trying or
    keeps trying, the plot still moves forward, since
    the causality of the plot is indifferent to the
    main characters actions.
  • Thus, a person should adopt a plot that offers
    the strongest role of an agent, the fullest
    opportunity to shape a course of life in
    accordance with ones abilities, values, and
    interests.

25
Margaret Mead, 1975 (p. 147)
  • My decision to become an anthropologist was based
    in part on my belief that a scientist, even one
    who had no great and special gift such as a great
    artist must have, could make a useful
    contribution to knowledge. I had responded also
    to the sense of urgency that had been conveyed to
    me by Professor Boas and Ruth Benedict. Even in
    remote parts of the world ways of life about
    which nothing was known were vanishing before the
    onslaught of modern civilization. The work of
    recording these unknown ways of life had to be
    done now now or they would be lost forever.
    Other things could wait but not this most urgent
    task.

26
Some approaches
  • Stress an understanding of the way the world
    works. For example, there are excellent guides
    for how to find a job.
  • Whether the focus is personal or situational,
    both approaches are concerned with means to an
    end, with how to do something they inform
    planning. For instance, to write a resume, a
    person needs to have an understanding of his or
    her strengths and weaknesses. To use a resume, a
    person needs to have an understanding of how a
    resume works in getting a job.
  • A functional understanding of oneself and the
    situation helps a person to negotiate reality
    toward an end. It is clearly an essential part of
    practical wisdom, but a secondary or support part.

27
Practical Wisdom
  • In Aristotles original explication of practical
    wisdom, the dominant part was concerned with
    searching for a specification of ideals in
    concrete circumstances, answering the question of
    what one should do.
  • What should one do to have a good course of life
    in work? Or what should one do to have
    interesting recreation, a pleasant weekend, a
    fulfilling family life, or worthwhile friendships?

28
Practical Wisdom
  • These sorts of questions are not primary about
    means, but about a specification of what would
    count as a good course of life in work (or
    whatever) within the limitations and
    opportunities of ones situation.
  • Of necessity, practical wisdom is concerned with
    a persons vision of a good life and the
    particulars that make up his or her
    circumstances, for one is attempting to specify
    the ideal in practical situation.

29
The first step
  • Of career counseling is a formulation of the
    problem. The problem is the starting place,
    providing a grounding orientation for what to do
    in order to resolve the problem.
  • Sometimes clients begin with statements of a
    solution, such as I want to take an interest
    test. To begin understanding the problem, a
    counselor would have to elicit relevant
    information For what problem is an interest test
    a solution?

30
Formulation of the problem
  • Sometimes clients begin with vague statements,
    such as I want to get a job I like. Such a
    statement names the general topic, but the
    problem must still be specified.
  • Because an understanding of a clients problem is
    fundamental for initiating a relevant course of
    counseling, clarity is needed on what exactly
    constitutes a career problem.

31
Nature of a Career Problem
  • A problem is a gap between what is and what ought
    to be. There is an actual state of affairs, a
    desired state of affairs, and a gap between the
    two (Cochran, 1985)
  • Three basic requirements
  • Given an actual state of affairs, a person must
    be able to imagine possibilities
  • The gap between the ideal and actual must matter
    to the person
  • A gap is problematic because a person is
    uncertain of how to bridge it.

32
To formulate a problem is to compose a story
  • Because a career problem is embedded and
    interpreted, it is open and expansive, capable of
    extensive elaboration.
  • A counselor would actively increase
    configuration
  • If you continue on as you are, the future is apt
    to be
  • Does the present situation remind you of any past
    situations?
  • In contrast to the current situation, it would be
    better if
  • So what?
  • What would a better future be like?
  • How does that matter?

33
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  • Enjoy your work
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