10/01/2017
Workforce Counseling: A Conceptual Model to Better Prepare High School Students for the School to Work Transition
By Brian C. Preble
Globalization, intelligent machines, job redesign, economic instability, and ultra-high technology have altered the world of work (Frum, 2012; Gordon, 2010; Savickas, 2005b). Individuals envision a future comprised of changes expected to dwarf those of previous eras (Gardner, 2007). Adolescents lacking skills and training may end up on a path of successive low-wage jobs, without benefits and/or upward mobility (Donahoe & Tineda, 1999).
A need for extensive career education is in order (Ornstein & Hunkins, 2013). Rapidly-changing information may seem confusing and conflicting (Collins, 2010). Career counseling should include adaptability (Brown, 2002; Hartung, Porfeli, & Vondracek, 2008), as current students are expected to average 10 occupations throughout their career (Savickas, 2005a).
Research led to the creation of a conceptual model of workforce counseling to better assist students with the transition from school to work (Preble, 2017). It defines the nature and substance of interactions and activities of counseling and career development, focuses on the development of skills, abilities, and attributes employers’ desire, and incorporates labor market data. Workforce counseling is composed of five elements: workforce foundation development, career awareness, occupational exploration, self-awareness, and work experience. Elements interplay, complimenting each other (Figure 1).
Workforce Foundational Development
Workforce foundational development includes developing an understanding of the world of work. It is comprised of the following topics: why people work, work ethic, work in society, and preparation needed for gainful employment. It also promotes and introduces the development of marketable soft and technical skills, which increase employability. In addition, workforce foundations include knowledge of the attributes needed for obtaining and maintaining work as well as the development of functional documents (e.g., resume, cover letter, recommendations, and references).
Career Awareness
Workforce counseling employs Super’s (1957) seminal definition of career, lifestyle. To add, it depicts career as a journey or Homeric odyssey comprised of multiple unforeseen occupations, instead of a singular “path.” Career awareness links education to career, cultivating an understanding of work, the economy, and the influence work plays on an individual’s life.
Occupational Exploration
Occupational exploration assists with a more thorough understanding of the different varieties and opportunities for work. Exploration allows for the identification of desirable jobs, pay, education, and training needed to enter specific occupational positions. Importantly, data regarding national and local projections for specific jobs is included.
Self Awareness
Self-awareness assists students with the identification of occupations of interest and the creation of future career goals through the development of understanding one’s strengths, deficits, abilities, talents, and interests. Self-awareness also helps develop character and self-efficacy. Heightened self-awareness allows individuals to recognize their motivations, better understand others, and identify the manner in which others may perceive them.
Work Experience
Workforce counseling advocates that all students should participate in gradual exposure and participation in the world of work. Work experience assists in the development of an adolescent’s work history, allows for exposure, and the learning and application of both soft and technical skills. Work experience can take many forms. Workforce counseling promotes observation and brief “try out” periods such as community service and volunteering, and long-term commitments like internships and part-time employment.
Delivery should be systematic and school-wide, and activities vertically aligned (Table 1). Administrative support is needed for full implementation. Counselors take an active participatory and leadership role, yet successful delivery requires the support and participation of the greater school community. School counselors should routinely and casually conduct career conversations that include discussion of skill development, trending occupations, and opportunities for exploration, such as job shadowing, volunteering, and part-time work. Open-ended and ambiguous questions which lead to discussions on the need to develop career adaptability and career resiliency ought to be used (Preble, 2017).
Workforce Counseling at a Glance
Table 1.
|
8th |
9th |
10th |
11th |
12th |
Workforce Foundations
|
Seminar— Introduction to work, and soft and technical skills |
Orientation
Soft skill development
Introduction to ASCA Mindsets and Behaviors
|
Soft skill development
Job search techniques
Resume—Introduction
|
Soft and technical skill development
Interview training and simulation
Portfolio
|
Technical skill application
Individual mock job interviews
Portfolio refining
|
Career Awareness
|
Preregistration--class/ program selection
4-year plan |
Class presentation— Introduction to career clusters and the world of work
Career Cruising assessment
|
Targeted career panels
Seminar— Cost of living
|
Career Day
Career data seminar (BLS OOH)
Career planning resources |
ASVAB
Post-secondary education and vocational training seminar and individual planning
|
Occupational Exploration
|
|
Non-traditional career fair
|
Career Key assessment
Research project
|
Field trip—local employers
ROP/CTE course
|
Field trip— postsecondary education and vocational training
Job shadow
ROP/CTE course |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Self Awareness
|
|
|
Counseling session— self efficacy |
Myers Briggs Typology Indicator
Individual interview— goal setting and self-efficacy
|
Evaluation session—narrative and motivations |
Work Experience |
|
Community service |
Volunteering, assisting, shadowing, & observing |
ROP/CTE course
Internship
|
Part-time work
ROP/CTE course
Internship |
References
Brown, B. L. (2002). Professional development for career educators. ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult Career and Vocational Education. Columbus, OH: ERIC Digest.
Collins, N. C. (2010). A conceptual model of career development to enhance academic motivation (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. (UMI No. 3407392)
Donahoe, D., & Tineda, N. (1999). Human asset development and the transition from school to work: Policy lessons for the 21st century. ResearchGate. Retrieved from http://www.researchgate.net
Frum, D. (2012, August). America the anxious. Newsweek, 160(7/8), 26-42.
Gardner, H. (2007). Five minds for the future. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
Gordon, E. E. (2010, June). The future of jobs, talent creation, and what the “cyber-mental” age will mean to everyone. T+D, 64(6), 42-47. Retrieved from http://www.hrbartender.com/http://ncdacdf.org/aws/NCDA/am/gi/Training.pdf
Hartung, P. J., Porfeli, E. J., & Vondracek, F. W. (2008). Career adaptability in childhood. Career Development Quarterly, 57, 63-74. doi:10.1002/j.2161-0045.2008.tb00166.x
Ornstein, A. C., & Hunkins, F. P. (2013). Curriculum foundations, principles, and issues (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson.
Preble, B. C. (2017). Conceptual model of career counseling for better preparing students for the transition from school to work. (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. (UMI No. 10605582)
Preble, B. C. (2017). Embracing ambiguity in preparing students for the world of work. Techniques: Connecting Education & Careers, 92(1), 24-27.
Savickas, M. L. (2005a). Life design: A paradigm for career interventions in the 21st Century. Journal of Counseling and Development, 90, 13-19.
Savickas, M. L. (2005b). The theory and practice of career construction. In S. D. Brown and R. W. Lent (Eds.), Career development and counseling: Putting theory and research to work (pp. 42-70). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley and Sons.
Super, D. E. (1957). The psychology of careers. New York, NY: Harper & Row.
Brian C. Preble, Ph.D. is a counselor at North Salinas High School in Salinas, California. He recently completed his doctorate in Occupational and Technical Studies at Old Dominion University. Dr. Preble is a professional educator with over twenty years of full-time and part-time counseling and teaching experience at secondary and tertiary levels. His research interests include: workforce development, technology education, CTE, nontraditional post-secondary options, and career counseling and guidance, specifically preparing students for transition from school to the postmodern world of work. Dr. Preble can be reached at bpreb001@odu.edu