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Career/Life
Planning
Series Entitled: "Career Advantage"
This career and life-planning telecourse helps students gain
the self knowledge they need to enter the job force and maintain
successful and rewarding careers. The course is broken into
three major parts, consistent with National Occupational Information
Coordination Committee (NOICC) guidelines for adult competencies
and indicators: self-knowledge, educational and occupational
exploration and career planning.
Throughout the course five "real" people are followed
as they go through the process of discovering and realizing
their career goals. From a young mother struggling through
college to a re-entry students creating a new life, their
stories are poignant and energizing. Each episode also includes
a "Hot Tip" - a short, simple motivation suggestion
of action students can take to help students overcome the
inertia that often accompanies the new territory of career
and life-planning.
The course includes interviews with authors Barbara Sher and
Richard Bolles, author of the best-selling book "What
Color Is Your Parachute?: A Practical Manual for Job Hunters
and Career Changers" as well as career specialists, industry
professionals and scholars, including Jeremy Rifkin, Doug
Henwood, William Bridges, Gene Amdahl and top executives from
Sun Microsystems, Citibank and others.
On camera host and instructor Rebecca Haddock, M.Ed., NCC
is a licensed career counselor at the University of San Diego
and provides employment and educational advising to the military,
high schools, community colleges and social service agencies.
PROGRAM
DESCRIPTIONS
SECTION
I: SELF-KNOWLEDGE AND EXPLORATION: WHAT DO I REALLY WANT?
1) Introduction
Introduces students to the three main components of the career
development process: 1) Self Knowledge and Exploration; 2)
Career Educational Exploration; and 3) Career Planning and
Implementation. Students will meet the "real people"
who will describe their career decision-making experiences
throughout the coming episodes. They will also meet some of
the experts including Richard Bolles, Jeremy Rifkin, Barbara
Sher and Howard Figler.
2) Where Are You Now?
Introduces students to the Donald Super's concept of life
roles and the importance of having support systems. Students
evaluate their satisfaction with their current life roles-work,
home and family, leisure, self-improvement and community,
and begin to identify key people in their personal support
system.
3) Self-Knowledge and Beliefs
Presents simple methods for expanding self-awareness, and
introduced to the connections between their beliefs, their
attitudes and their subsequent behaviors. Students practice
techniques for identifying personal beliefs about their ability
to be successful by listening to their self-talk, and begin
to develop their Personal Career Profile.
4) Values
Discusses the relationship between students' values and the
choices they make each day and the way the values relate to
career decisions. Students begin to identify some of their
key values and consider how their family background may have
shaped their values.
5)
Personality & Interests
Demonstrates the connections between personality, interests
and work preferences such as working with information, ideas,
people and things. Students begin to identify their primary
interest patterns and aspects of their personality through
various exercises.
6) Knowledge, Skills & Abilities
Explores the differences between knowledge, skills and abilities
and presents the basic skills required by today's employers
identified by the U.S. Department of Labor SCANS Report. Students
learn to identify their skills through examining past accomplishments
and to consider how skill development may be influenced by
societal or cultural pressures.
7) Keeping Track of Self-Knowledge and Exploration
Expands students' Personal Career Profiles by identifying
preferred values and interests, and by identifying current
skills as well as skills they want to develop in the future.
SECTION II - CAREER AND EDUCATIONAL EXPLORATION: WHAT'S
OUT THERE FOR ME?
8) Introduction to Career and Educational Exploration
Explores contemporary changes in the economy and the world
of work. The lesson introduces three principal changes-technology,
globalization, and changing workforce demographics. Students
review a variety of strategies for coping with these changes
including considering new work options such as self-employment
and contract work, and the need for lifelong learning.
9) The Changing Workplace: Technology & Globalization
Focuses on how technology has changed the kind of work we
do, how work is done, and where work can be done. Students
are introduced to the concept of global business and the skills
essential to stay employable in a global economy.
10) What Employers Want: Skills and Attitudes
Introduces students to the skills an attitudes essential for
success in today's workplace-competence, communication, adaptability,
group effectiveness, and influence. Students learn to identify
their transferable skills, and evaluate their degree of work
readiness.
11) What's Out There: How the World of Work is Organized?
Probes the distinctions and similarities between industries
and functions. Several primary industries and job functions
are described giving students insight into how their interests
can offer clues to industries or types of work that they might
enjoy.
12) Generating Career Options
Presents a variety of strategies for generating a list of
career possibilities. Students are encouraged to brainstorm
ideas and emphasize quantity over quality of ideas at this
stage of the process.
13) Researching Career Options: New Technologies and Current
Techniques
Explores career options using both print and electronic sources
of occupational information. Students learn the components
of a research strategy and are presented with the categories
of key information to help them focus their research efforts.
14) Informational Interviewing and Networking
Demonstrates how using networking and informational interviewing
can help them to learn more about careers which interest them.
Students learn how to identify networking opportunities and
potential networking contacts, and develop a strategy for
conducting informational interviews.
15)
Evaluating Career Options
Presents to students the "Three C's", a framework
for evaluating career options using content, conditions and
compensation. Students use information from their Personal
Career Profiles to identify their own preferred content, conditions
and compensation and begin to compare their preferences to
information gathered from their occupational research.
16) Overcoming Barriers to Employment
Introduces students to some of the legal issues related to
discrimination in hiring and in the workplace, as well as
some techniques for confronting, challenging and coping with
discrimination. In addition, students are presented with questions
they can ask to gauge a company's corporate culture and commitment
to diversity.
17) Lifelong Learning
Looks at the range of educational options students may consider
using to reach their occupational goals, including vocational
training, community college, undergraduate and graduate degrees.
In addition, students are presented with the benefits of experiential
education such as coops and internships, and the need for
lifelong learning to keep skills current.
SECTION III: CAREER PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION: HOW DO
I GET WHAT I WANT?
18) Introduction to Career Planning and Implementation
Introduces the implementation phase of the course and provides
an overview of the next steps, including making a career decision,
deciding on an action plan and launching the search for work
opportunities. It also presents and debunks common myths or
misperceptions about the job search process.
19) Decision Making Strategies
Examines both rational-linear and intuitive decision-making
strategies. Students begin to asses their personal decision
making style and gain insight into how their values, willingness
to take risks, and ability to be objective may influence their
decision making process. Finally, it introduces students to
a strategy for using their personal priorities to guide their
decision making.
20) Goal Setting & Action Planning
Gives students criteria for attainable goals and objectives-specific,
measurable, realistic, and meaningful-and practice evaluating
goals on the basis of these criteria. Students begin to draft
their own goals and action plans for implementing their search.
21) Finding Work Opportunities: New Technologies and Current
Techniques
Focuses on finding work opportunities by accessing the hidden
job market through networking. It guides students in the developing
a networking statement and presents the advantages of several
methods of finding work, including cold calls, employment
agencies, temporary assignments, internships and volunteer
positions.
22) Staying on Track In Your Work Search
Covers a variety of stress management and time management
techniques that can help students who may be experiencing
stress and having difficulty staying motivated . The program
offers suggestions on how to stay focused and on track.
23) Resume Preparation
Covers the development and use of both chronological and functional
resumes. Students draft accomplishment statements using action
verbs and emphasizing the result they produced.
24)
Interviewing Strategies
Introduces the three essential steps to interview preparation-know
yourself, know the position, and know the company. Students
consider their responses to some typical interview questions
and learn the STAR (Situation-Task-Action-Result) framework
for describing their accomplishments to employers.
25) Interview Follow-up
Outlines the specific steps students should follow immediately
after an interview, such as writing a thank you letter, and
later, such as maintaining their network and keeping momentum
in their work search. The program also suggests strategies
for turning a rejection into a positive and useful experience.
26) Series Conclusion
Reviews several methods for getting unstuck and staying on
track while looking for work opportunities, and presents strategies
such as ongoing self-assessments, for building and managing
a successful career. Students draft one-year, ten-year and
lifetime goals to help them build a vision for the future.
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