Career Counseling: A Holistic Approach
Theories of Career Development
Part III
Developmental Theories
Primary assumption is that career development is a process that takes place over the life span.
Developmental Theories
The Life-Span, Life-Space Approach to Careers
Donald Super (1972)
Career development was viewed as a continuous process.
Self-concept theory is a vital part of Super’s approach to vocational behavior.
Developmental Theories
Super’s Self-Concept
Research has indicated that the vocational self-concept develops through:
physical and mental growth
observations of work
identification with working adults
general environment
and general experiences.
Developmental Theories
Super’s Self-Concept
Although the vocational self-concept is only part of the total self-concept, it is the driving force that establishes a career pattern one will follow throughout life.
Thus, individuals implement their self-concepts into careers that will provide the most efficient means of self-expression.
Developmental Theories
Super’s Self-Concept
Self-concept developmental process is multidimensional.
Clients have a better chance of making optimal decisions when they are most aware of the work world and themselves.
Super’s Vocational Stages
Another of Super’s important contributions has been his formalization of vocational developmental stages:
Growth (birth to age 14 or 15)
Exploratory (ages 15-24)
Establishment (ages 25-44)
Maintenance (ages 45-64)
Decline (ages 65+)
Five developmental tasks are delineated by typical age ranges, but tasks can occur at other age levels.
Super’s Vocational Developmental Tasks
Vocational Developmental Tasks
Ages
General Characteristics
Crystallization
14-18
A cognitive process period of formulating a general vocational goal through awareness of resources, contingencies, interests, values, and planning for the preferred occupation.
Specification
18-21
A period of moving from tentative vocational preferences toward a specific vocation preference.
Implementation
21-24
A period of completing training for vocational preference and entering employment.
Stabilization
24-35
A period of confirming a preferred career by actual work experience and use of talents to demonstrate career choice as an appropriate one.
Consolidation
35+
A period of establishment in a career by advancement, status, and seniority.
Super’s Developmental Stages
Super (1990) modified the developmental tasks through the life span as shown on next slide and uses the terms cycling and recycling.
The Cycling and Recycling of Developmental Tasks Through the Life Span
Age
Life Stage
Adolescence (14-25)
Early Adulthood (25-45)
Middle Adulthood (45-65)
Late Adulthood (over 65)
Decline
Giving less time to hobbies
Reducing sports participation
Focusing on essential activities
Reducing working hours
Maintenance
Verifying current occupational choice
Making occupational position secure
Holding own against competition
Keeping up what is still enjoyed
Establishment
Getting started in a chosen field
Settling down in a permanent position
Developing new skills
Doing things one has always wanted to do
Exploration
Learning more about more opportunities
Finding opportunity to do desired work
Identifying new problems to work on
Finding a good retirement spot
Growth
Developing a realistic self-concept
Learning to relate to others
Accepting one’s limitations
Developing nonoccupational roles
Super – Career Maturity
One of Super’s best-known studies, launched in 1951, followed the vocational develop