Understanding and Organizing Client Self-Information

Posted by: John Stewart on April 21, 2011 2:49 pm

By: Jeff Landine and John Stewart

One significant task of career counselling involves understanding and organizing clients’ self-attributes. Clients provide a great deal of self-information about many aspects of themselves, which sometimes leaves counsellors in a quandary as to how to conceptualize and organize this information. For example, counsellors often use the terms self-concept and self-esteem interchangeably when these terms actually mean different things.

We think this issue can be remedied by following a taxonomy developed by Donald Super. Super viewed self-concept as the picture individuals have of themselves as they work and carry out different roles in their lives. Super distinguished between an individual self-concept and a self-concept system. He believed that people have many self-concepts that are evident in the roles they perform in the different settings of their lives. Together these concepts form a self-concept system. For example, a person may be a teacher, a parent, a spouse, a citizen, a friend and so on. In each of these roles, individuals have a self-concept, such as “I am responsible” that may be similar or different when all the self-concepts are considered together as the self-system. They may see themselves as more responsible in their teacher and parent roles than they do in their friend role. Further, Super proposed dimensions of each of these self-concepts, which include esteem, clarity, consistency, realism, complexity and efficacy. For example, the degree of self-esteem about the self-concept as a parent may be different from that experienced in the role of being a friend. Self-concept refers to the factual information individuals have about their abilities to implement a role while self-esteem is an assessment of these facts.

Super was mostly concerned about the vocational self-concepts that impact individuals in their vocational decision-making. He defined vocational self-concepts as the concepts individuals have about their perceived characteristics, which they considered important in their vocational decision-making. As counsellors, we think it is important to distinguish between the multiple self-concepts individuals have and the impact these can have on vocational decision-making. For example, distinguishing between the different self-concepts that are evident in their different roles helps clients develop clarity around each of these different self-concepts. Assessing clients’ feelings about their ability to perform the roles helps them to understand that esteem is likely to vary as well. Realism of self-concepts is also an important characteristic because individuals choose an occupation based on the information they have about themselves. Bringing inaccurate information to bear on this process is likely to lead to inappropriate choices. By helping clients develop appropriate clarity, self-esteem, and realism about their self-concepts for example (see list of dimensions above), we help them develop a clear picture of their system of self-concepts, and we help them make occupational choices that support a good fit between their self-system and the needs of the occupational role itself.

 

Super, D. (1963). Towards making self-concept operational. In D.E. Super, R. Starishevsky, N.

Matlin, and P. Jordan. Career development: Self-concept theory. New York: College

Entrance Examination Board.

 

Super, D. (1982). Self-concepts in career development: Theory and findings after thirty years.

Paper presented as the 20th International Congress of Applied Psychology, Edinburgh,

Scotland.

 




*The views expressed by our authors are personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views of the CCPA

Life Tasks Critical to Identity Formation

Posted by: Jeffrey Landine on April 7, 2011 4:09 pm

By: Jeff Landine and John Stewart

It is generally accepted that a stable identity is an important precursor to effective career decision-making.  The importance of self-knowledge to the career decision-making process has been recognized since Frank Parson’s 1909 statement, and forms a key foundational element in just about every model of career development and/or choice being used today. In the next few weeks we will address the role of identity and how it impacts career development and/or decision-making for young Canadian adults.

Identity can be viewed as developing and existing in different domains within the self-system.  Current notions suggest that the different dimensions of human development including physical, cognitive, social/emotional, moral, spiritual and vocational, all play some part in identity formation.  Skorikov and Vondracek (1998) expanded on the distinct role that vocational identity plays in the overall development of self-system.  Despite the possibility that different domains of identity exist, there are commonalities in the dynamics by which identity forms.  Grotevant, Thorbecke and Meyer (1982) point to the importance of exploration, making commitments, crises in interpersonal relationships, and interactions in social and work-related realms as key factors in identity formation.

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*The views expressed by our authors are personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views of the CCPA

Living with Uncertainty and Using Clients’ Career Stories to Empower Career & Life Choices

Posted by: Mark Franklin on March 31, 2011 4:36 pm

“After graduating university and spending only six months in a boring engineering job, Bruce Kirkby ditched the nine-to-five life, packed his rusty pickup, and headed west in search of adventure. He’s been going full tilt ever since. The journeys that followed have taken him to every corner of the planet, from Everest to Arabia, Ethiopia’s Blue Nile Gorge to the rivers of the Arctic. Bruce has ridden horses across Mongolia and camels across Arabia’s legendary Empty Quarter. His account of that journey, ‘Sand Dance, By Camel Across Arabia’s Great Southern Desert’ was published in 2000.” Now with a family and two children, and based in Kimberley, BC, Bruce travels less and writes more, including his weekly Globe and Mail column.

Hi, I’m Mark Franklin, practice leader of CareerCycles, a career management social enterprise in Toronto, producer/host of weekly Career Buzz radio show, and new blogger here at CCPA. Bruce Kirkby was a recent guest on Career Buzz – listen here. When asked about a personal strength aligned with his career, Bruce said “my ability to live with uncertainty.”

Bruce is proof you can formulate a career around one glowing strength!

Here at CareerCycles, our team of eight Associates has been using a holistic, narrative and strengths-based method of practice to empower over 3500 clients. In future blog posts I look forward to sharing more insightful career stories, and helpful tips and techniques to empower your clients through their career stories, and in so doing, enrich your own careers and lives! Meanwhile, please LEAVE A COMMENT and share your experiences with clients’ career stories… do you use a narrative approach? If so, what do you do? What do you think of Bruce’s story? What’s an important turning point in your own career story?

 




*The views expressed by our authors are personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views of the CCPA