Publication Date
| In 2015 | 11 |
| Since 2014 | 34 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 150 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 338 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 627 |
Descriptor
| Career Development | 387 |
| Foreign Countries | 257 |
| Career Counseling | 252 |
| Career Choice | 199 |
| Decision Making | 92 |
| Higher Education | 87 |
| Career Guidance | 86 |
| Self Efficacy | 81 |
| Career Education | 75 |
| Females | 72 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
| Journal of Career Development | 742 |
| Australian Journal of Career… | 197 |
| Australian journal of Career… | 7 |
Author
| Patton, Wendy | 19 |
| McMahon, Mary | 16 |
| McIlveen, Peter | 14 |
| Creed, Peter A. | 11 |
| Reardon, Robert C. | 10 |
| Sampson, James P., Jr. | 10 |
| Creed, Peter | 9 |
| Athanasou, James A. | 8 |
| Heppner, Mary J. | 8 |
| Watson, Mark | 8 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Showing 76 to 90 of 946 results
Raghuram, Aditi; Luksyte, Aleksandra; Avery, Derek R.; Macoukji, Fred – Journal of Career Development, 2012
Despite the influx of immigrants in the American workplace, little is known about their well-being. The authors built on literature pertaining to gender-specific stressors and organizational support theory to examine a model of stress for immigrants. Analysis of a national, archival data set (N = 150) demonstrated that, consistent with research…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Supervisors, Stress Management, Stress Variables
Ali, Saba Rasheed; Yang, Ling-Yan; Button, Christopher J.; McCoy, Thomasin T. H. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
From a critical psychology perspective, Prilleltensky and Nelson advocate for research that has explicit focus on social change and can allow for full participation and empowerment of those under study. The current article describes the collaborative development, implementation, and evaluation of a career education program within three ethnically…
Descriptors: High Schools, Test Results, Student Evaluation, Self Efficacy
Blustein, David L.; Medvide, Mary Beth; Wan, Carol M. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
This article explores the challenges of unemployment via the lens of critical psychology. The conventional discourse on unemployment is critiqued, revealing ways in which conventional policies and practices serve to further marginalize the lives of the unemployed and impede the development of ethical, effective, and empathic individual…
Descriptors: Unemployment, Criticism, Children, Public Policy
McWhirter, Ellen Hawley; McWhirter, Benedict T. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
In this article, the lens of critical psychology is applied to adolescent career development and vocational guidance in Chile. The authors describe and critique the status of adolescent vocational guidance in Chile, the reproduction of extant social inequities in Chilean education, and offer recommendations for enhancing vocational guidance…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Career Guidance, Career Development, Adolescents
Prilleltensky, Isaac; Stead, Graham B. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
Adjusting to the world of work or challenging it is a dilemma that career counselors and helpers encounter daily. Counselors and clients may opt for one of the following choices: (a) adjust to, and challenge the system, at the same time, (b) adjust to the system but do not challenge it, (c) challenge the system but do not adjust to it, and (d)…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Psychology, Counselors, Career Counseling
Di Fabio, Annamaria; Kenny, Maureen E. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
Emotional intelligence (EI) has emerged in recent research as a teachable skill that is distinct from personality and is relevant to scholastic and work success and progress in career development. This study adds to that research by examining the relationship of performance and self-report measures of EI and personality traits with perceived…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Emotional Intelligence, Personality, Measures (Individuals)
Okurame, David E. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
Little research attention has been given to the linkage between work-family conflict and career commitment. Likewise, although, theoretical arguments about the moderator effects of mentoring on the relationship between work-family conflict and career attitudes have been made in the literature, no research has investigated this assumption. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Work Relationship, Conflict, Government Employees
Hayes, DeMarquis; Huey, Erron L.; Hull, Darrell M.; Saxon, Terrill F. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
The present study expands the career decision self-efficacy (CDSE) literature by focusing on a sample of unattached Jamaican youth to determine if youth assets (protective factors like family communication and peer role models) were predictive of increased CDSE. Unattached youth are defined as those that do not have a job or are not currently…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Role Models, Self Efficacy, Family Relationship
Choi, Bo Young; Park, Heerak; Yang, Eunjoo; Lee, Seul Ki; Lee, Yedana; Lee, Sang Min – Journal of Career Development, 2012
This study used meta-analysis to investigate the relationships between career decision self-efficacy (CDSE) and its relevant variables. The authors aimed to integrate the mixed results reported by previous empirical studies and obtain a clearer understanding of CDSE's role within the framework of social cognitive career theory (SCCT). For purposes…
Descriptors: Expectation, Self Efficacy, Career Choice, Decision Making
Gagnon, Janelle L.; Packard, Becky Wai-Ling – Journal of Career Development, 2012
This paper examines the complex experiences of full-time employed adults trying to climb the career ladder in their company by making use of company tuition assistance to earn their first college degree. Guided by Savickas' (2005) career construction theory, emphasizing the personal agency and meaning-making within career development, we conducted…
Descriptors: Career Development, Tuition, Employee Assistance Programs, Interviews
Chronister, Krista M.; Harley, Eliza; Aranda, Christina L.; Barr, Leah; Luginbuhl, Paula – Journal of Career Development, 2012
Intimate partner violence (IPV) costs women nearly 8 million days of paid work annually. Greater attention to violence survivors' employment and career development can facilitate women escaping abusive relationships and promotes their overall rehabilitation and healing. A first step to increasing attention to survivors' career development includes…
Descriptors: Females, Family Violence, Career Development, Career Counseling
Nauta, Margaret M. – Journal of Career Development, 2012
A confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) tested the fit of Kelly and Lee's six-factor model of career decision problems among 188 college students. The six-factor model did not fit the data well, but a five-factor (Lack of Information, Need for Information, Trait Indecision, Disagreement with Others, and Choice Anxiety) model did provide a good fit.…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Self Efficacy, Career Choice, Performance Factors
Solberg, V. Scott; Phelps, L. Allen; Haakenson, Kristin A.; Durham, Julie F.; Timmons, Joe – Journal of Career Development, 2012
Individualized learning plans (ILPs) are being implemented in high schools throughout the United States as strategic planning tools that help students align course plans with career aspirations and often include the development of postsecondary plans. Initial indications are that ILPs may be an important method for helping students achieve both…
Descriptors: Intervention, Teaching Methods, Career Counseling, Strategic Planning
Jung, Jae Yup; McCormick, John – Journal of Career Development, 2011
This study developed and (statistically) confirmed a new model of the occupational decision-related processes of adolescents, in terms of the extent to which they may be amotivated about choosing a future occupation. A theoretical framework guided the study. A questionnaire that had previously been administered to an Australian adolescent sample…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Career Choice, High School Students, Questionnaires
Grant-Vallone, Elisa J.; Ensher, Ellen A. – Journal of Career Development, 2011
Professional women with children are inundated with conflicting messages about how to manage their careers and personal lives and whether they should "opt in" or "opt out" of the workforce. Using in-depth interviews with 23 professional women, this study focused on the career choices that women make after having children. The authors found that…
Descriptors: Mothers, Child Care, Career Choice, Coping

Peer reviewed
Direct link
