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Outline Career counseling until recently, unnecessary What changed? Measuring vocational interests Issues in measurement Trait factor approach – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outline


1
Outline
  1. Career counseling until recently, unnecessary
  2. What changed?
  3. Measuring vocational interests
  4. Issues in measurement
  5. Trait factor approach
  6. Other approaches

2
Career counseling until recently, unnecessary
  • Until about 100 years ago, this concept (career
    counseling) didnt exist
  • If you were a boy, your job was what your
    fathers job had been which was specified by
    your surname or you could join the army
  • If you were a girl, you would become someones
    wife or servant

3
What changed?
  • Agricultural equipment
  • Fewer workers needed on farms because new
    machines vastly increased productivity
  • So people who would have been farm workers needed
    something else to do

4
What changed?
  • Industrial revolution
  • More workers needed in cities, where they lost
    touch with their ancestral occupations
  • Jobs involving machinery were mentally
    challenging so some people were more suited than
    others to a given task

5
What changed?
  • 19th and early 20th C immigration to North
    America from Europe
  • Immigrants lost touch with ancient lifestyles,
    fathers occupations
  • Immigrants were likely to be people who were not
    afraid of change

6
What changed?
  • Late 1800s roads leading from rural areas into
    cities built throughout USA and Canada
  • Built by large railroads, so people could get
    from farms into cities, thus to train stations
    for inter-city travel
  • Side effect these roads let rural children get
    to city schools to be educated

7
Career counseling why is it necessary?
  • While all this was going on, North Americans were
    becoming more productive and thus wealthier
  • They could afford to educate their children
  • They could also afford to develop a psychological
    testing industry to guide career choices
  • Guidance needed because choice of careers
    ballooned

8
Frank Parsons (1854 1908)
  • Created the profession of vocational counselor
  • First proponent of matching people to occupations
    by comparing persons aptitude and skills
    occupation demands
  • Opened first counseling office, in Boston (1908)

9
Frank Parsons (1854 1908)
  • Three principles we still use today
  • Satisfying careers are most likely to be selected
    if you know your own strengths and weaknesses

10
Frank Parsons (1854 1908)
  • Three principles we still use today
  • Satisfying careers are most likely to be selected
    if you understand the challenges particular
    careers present and the skills they demand.

11
Frank Parsons (1854 1908)
  • Three principles we still use today
  • It is not enough to know your strengths and to
    know an occupations demands you must also
    match the two carefully and honestly.

12
Online resources you might find useful
  • ONet Online
  • Myskillsprofile
  • Jackson Vocational Interest Survey
  • Career Centre at Western

13
Measuring vocational interests
  • The Strong Vocational Interest Blank (SVIB)
  • The Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory (SCII)
  • Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • The Campbell Interest and Skill Survey (CISS)
  • Kuder Occupational Interest Survey (KOIS)
  • Jackson Vocational Interest Survey (JVIS)

14
Cautionary notes
  • Interests vs. abilities
  • Holland interests are determined by personality
  • Clinical vs. actuarial judgment
  • Meehl clinical is better
  • Traits vs. situations

15
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • Edward Strong (1884 1963)
  • B.S. (Biology) 1906 UC
  • Ph.D. 1911 (Columbia)
  • Professor at Stanford from 1923
  • Vocational Interests of Men and Women (1944)

16
"When I began working on interest measurement,"
Dr. Strong once remarked, "no one believed you
could build scales to measure interests, or that
such scales would yield any kind of stable
scores. As a matter of fact, I didn't really
believe it myself until I had been working on my
test for several years. Each time we got a new
occupational group tested, I fully expected to
discover that we couldn't differentiate it on an
interest basis, and that the whole concept of
interest measurement would fall apart "What
really convinced me emotionally that we had
something was a personal experience. My son had
been an indifferent student in college and had no
idea what he wanted to do vocationally. He took
my test and came out with an A on Physician, an
occupation he had never considered entering.
Well, he went to medical school, got straight A's
throughout, and has been a dedicated and
successful physician ever since. I began to think
maybe we had a method that would really help
young people find where they belonged." Strong
(1944) (emphasis added)
17
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • First published in 1927 with 420 items reflecting
    10 Occupational Scales
  • New editions in 1938 and 1946
  • 1960 Basic Interest scales added
  • 1974 Holland Codes added
  • 1994 Strong Interest Inventory (now 317 items)

18
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • Criterion keying begin by identifying
    activities liked or disliked by people in
    different occupations
  • Patterns of interest remain stable over time
  • Do some interests mark an occupation? If so,
    interests can be used to guide career choice

19
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • Basic Interest Scale
  • Identifies groups of occupations that share some
    qualities that you might be interested in
  • Gives a general direction e.g., You should
    work with people
  • Occupational Scale
  • 211 occupations
  • Separate scales for men and women

20
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • Personal Style Scale
  • Prefer to work alone or with people?
  • Practical knowledge or learning for its own sake?
  • Personal Style Scale
  • Careful or quick decision making?
  • Risk-taking?
  • Team orientation (achieve goals by working with
    others)?

21
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • Criticisms
  • Sex bias?
  • No theory
  • Strengths
  • High reliability Internal consistency
    reliability in high .80s
  • Test-retest reliability (up to 6 months between
    tests) in .80s

22
Strong Vocational Interest Blank
  • Strengths
  • High validity
  • Assesses interests among a wide variety of
    hobbies, academic subjects, work activities,
    occupations
  • Sample for comparisons includes impressive
    variety of ethnic, social, and educational
    backgrounds

23
Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory
  • Campbell continued development of Strongs SVIB
  • Most widely used interest test
  • No sex bias
  • Includes J. L. Hollands theory of vocational
    choice.

24
Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory
  • Test taker responds to each item Like, Dislike,
    or Indifferent
  • Yields 4 different scores
  • Hollands Personality Types
  • Administration
  • Basic Interests
  • Occupational

25
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Holland Occupational interests reflect
    interaction between personality and environment.
  • "People search for environments that will let
    them exercise their skills and abilities, express
    their attitudes and values, and take on agreeable
    problems and roles." (Holland, 1997)

26
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Holland 6 personality types
  • Realistic
  • Investigative
  • Artistic
  • Social
  • Enterprising
  • Conventional

27
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Holland another set of labels that may help you
    remember the different types
  • Doer (R)
  • Thinker (I)
  • Creator (A)
  • Helper (S)
  • Persuader (E)
  • Organizer (C)

28
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Realistic
  • Less social
  • Like the outdoors
  • Like manual activities
  • Physically robust
  • Practical
  • Non-intellectual

29
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Investigative
  • Interested in ideas more than people
  • Not very social
  • Dislikes emotional situations
  • Appears aloof

30
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Artistic
  • Creative
  • Enjoys developing ideas
  • Enjoys expression
  • Dislikes conformity
  • Comfortable with ambiguity
  • Not especially skilled socially

31
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Social
  • Likes to work with other people
  • Helping orientation
  • Nurturing

32
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Enterprising
  • People oriented
  • Goal oriented
  • Good at coordinating work of others

33
Hollands RIASEC Codes
  • Conventional
  • Does best in highly structured situations and
    jobs
  • Good with details
  • Likes clerical tasks, working with numbers
  • Doesnt like working with ideas or people

34
The Campbell Interest and Skill Survey
  • 1992
  • Also uses Hollands theoretical structure
  • Extroversion and academic focus scales
  • Assesses skill as well as interest

35
The Campbell Interest and Skill Survey
  • Depending on combination of degree of interest
    and skill, the test-taker is advised to
  • Pursue (high interest, high skill)
  • Develop (HI,LS)
  • Explore (LI,HS)
  • Avoid (LI,LS)

36
Kuder Occupational Interest Survey
  • Second most widely used interest test
  • Criterion keying method
  • Measure 100 triads of alternative activities
  • For each triad, test-taker selects most/least
    preferred

37
Kuder Occupational Interest Survey
  • Dependability
  • Interest Scores
  • Relation of interest patterns to norms of men and
    women

38
Kuder Occupational Interest Survey
  • Occupation Scores
  • Relation to scores of men and women employed and
    satisfied in certain occupations

39
Kuder Occupational Interest Survey
  • College major scores
  • Relation to scores of students in different
    college majors

40
Jackson Vocational Interest Survey
  • Douglas Jackson (-) was for many years a
    professor in the Department of Psychology at UWO

41
Jackson Vocational Interest Survey
  • Matches people to academic or career fields based
    on their interests
  • 289 pairs of statements describe job activities
  • Forced choice for each pair
  • Does not compare scores to those of people happy
    in their occupation
  • Yields 34 basic interest scores
  • Predicts university majors more accurately than
    most inventories

42
Jackson Vocational Interest Survey
  • Basic Interest Scales some examples (not a
    complete list)
  • Creative Arts
  • Physical Science
  • Engineering
  • Life Science
  • Social Science
  • Adventure
  • Nature-Agriculture
  • Skilled Trades

43
Jackson Vocational Interest Survey
  • General occupational themes (G.O.T.)
  • Assertive
  • Communicative
  • Conventional
  • Enterprising
  • Expressive
  • Helping
  • Inquiring
  • Logical
  • Practical
  • Socialized

44
JVIS Basic Interest Scales Reliability
  • Internal consistency reliability (alpha) ? .54 to
    .88.
  • Test-retest reliability (4 to 6 weeks) ? .69 to
    .92.

45
JVIS G.O.T. Reliability
  • Internal consistency reliability (alpha) ? .70 to
    92.
  • Test-retest reliability (4 to 6 weeks) ? .83 to
    .93

46
Minnesota Vocational Interest Inventory
  • Criterion keying, no theoretical base
  • Aimed at men not oriented towards college
  • Emphasizes skilled/semi-skilled trades
  • Yields basic interest and occupational scores

47
The Career Assessment Inventory
  • Intended purpose similar to that of MVII
  • 6th grade reading level
  • Sex- and culture-bias free
  • Includes Hollands theoretical base
  • Scores on scales similar to SCII and CISS

48
The Career Assessment Inventory
  • Vocational version
  • 305 items, 91 occupations that require little
    post-secondary education
  • Enhanced version
  • 370 items, 111 occupations including some that
    require significant post-secondary education

49
The Self Directed Approach
  • Self administered, scored, interpreted
  • Rate skill and interest in occupational areas
  • Linked to an occupation finder
  • Accurate scoring
  • Lets user develop a personal career theory

50
Issues in Interest Measurement
  • Sex bias
  • Leads people to sex-typed careers
  • But elimination might mean lower validity
  • Most scales today have reduced bias
  • We should examine tests for sex bias and try to
    remove it if found, but
  • Women and men are different in a variety of
    psychological and physiological ways
  • Differences in which careers are suggested may
    not result from bias

51
Issues in Interest Measurement
  • Note the difference between data and
    interpretation
  • Data some tests suggest different occupations
    for men and women
  • Interpretation 1 men and women genuinely differ
    in interests and thus in preferred occupations
  • Interpretation 2 the test is biased
  • Either or both might be true

52
Issues in Interest Measurement
  • Interests vs. aptitudes
  • E.g., in Strong inventories, how successful in
    their occupations are the norm groups expressing
    particular interests?

53
Issues in Interest Measurement
  • Development
  • Does it matter for testing that people change in
    ways relevant to occupational success?
  • Personality is stable over the lifetime
  • But other things motivation, education,
    environment will surely change and interests
    may change with them

54
Osipows trait-factor approach
  • Goal is to learn about persons overall traits,
    not just their interests
  • Battery of tests covering
  • Personality
  • Ability / Aptitudes
  • Interests
  • Values

55
Supers Developmental Theory
  • Suitability for a career is not static
  • Developmental stages define what vocational
    behavior is expected of us
  • Vocational maturity is defined as the correlation
    between actual and expected vocational behavior
  • Actual comes from developmental stage youre in

56
Supers Developmental Theory
  • Super (1954) Theory of vocational choice
    lifespan developmental process
  1. Crystallization
  2. Specification
  3. Implementation
  4. Stabilization
  5. Consolidation
  6. Ready to retire

57
Ginzberg et al. (1951)
  • Ginzberg et al. (1951) career choice is the
    outcome of a developmental path from childhood to
    young adulthood stages
  • Fantasy
  • Tentative
  • Realistic
  • Exploration
  • Crystallization
  • Specification

58
Roes Career Choice Theory
  • Roe career choice a result of type of
    relationship you had with your family while
    growing up
  • Relationship success leaves you with a
    person-orientation
  • Relationship failure, leaves you with a
    non-person orientation

59
Roes Career Choice Theory
  • As a result of rearing, some people are oriented
    towards other people
  • they were reared in a warm, accepting environment

60
Roes Career Choice Theory
  • As a result of rearing, some people are oriented
    towards things
  • they were reared in a cold, aloof environment.
  • Characteristics measured by California
    Occupational Preference Survey (COPS)

61
Caution
  • Text, p. 472
  • Despite the availability of many interest
    inventories, old-fashioned clinical skill remains
    an important asset in career-counseling.
  • There is lots of evidence that this claim is not
    true in the work of Paul Meehl and others on
    clinical vs. actuarial judgment
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