1
Concise version career development and management summary
LG 1: Major Theories of Career Development & Management and Critical Reflection
Theories explain how individuals choose careers, develop within them, and manage work-life.
• Dominant Traditional Theories (Foundation):
o Super's Life-Span, Life-Space Theory: Views career development as unfolding
through predictable stages (Growth, Exploration, Establishment, Maintenance,
Disengagement). Emphasizes career maturity (readiness for career tasks) and the
importance of various life roles (e.g., worker, parent, citizen) and how they
interact. Critique/Relevance: Classic stage model, useful for understanding early
career tasks and work-life balance, but modern careers are less linear.
o Holland's RIASEC Theory: Proposes that career choice is an expression of personality.
Individuals and work environments can be classified into six types: Realistic,
Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, Conventional (RIASEC). Person-
Environment (P-E) fit (match between person and environment type) leads to
satisfaction and stability. Critique/Relevance: Widely used for interest assessment
(e.g., Self-Directed Search) and vocational guidance; cross-cultural validity has been
questioned.
• Dominant Contemporary Theories (Focus on Individual Agency):
o Protean Career Theory (Hall): Individuals take primary responsibility for managing
their careers (self-directed) based on their personal values (values-driven), aiming
for psychological success (fulfillment, meaning) rather than just external rewards.
Careers are adaptable and flexible. Relevance: Captures modern career self-
management and the importance of intrinsic motivation and subjective success.
o Boundaryless Career Theory (Arthur & Rousseau): Careers are no longer confined to
single organizations. Involves physical mobility (changing jobs/employers)
and psychological mobility (mindset open to change, learning, and working across
boundaries). Relevance: Describes the shift towards more fluid, less predictable
career paths in a globalized economy.
o Career Construction Theory (CCT - Savickas): Individuals actively construct their
careers by making meaning of their experiences and vocational behaviors. Focuses
on career adaptability – the psychosocial resources (Concern, Control, Curiosity,
Confidence – the 4 Cs) needed to cope with career tasks, transitions, and traumas.
Uses narratives and life themes in counseling. Relevance: Emphasizes subjective
meaning-making and the individual's active role in shaping their career story.
o Social Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT - Lent, Brown, Hackett): Explains career
interests, choices, and performance through the interplay of self-efficacy (belief in
one's capabilities), outcome expectations (beliefs about consequences of actions),
personal goals, and contextual factors (supports and barriers). Learning experiences
(shaped by demographics like gender/race) are crucial. The Career Self-Management
(CSM) model is an SCCT extension focusing on adaptive career
behaviors. Relevance: A robust, widely applicable theory that integrates personal
agency with environmental influences; strong basis for interventions.
, 2
• Context-Focused & Emerging Theories (Addressing Nuances & Specific Populations):
o Psychology of Working Theory (PWT - Blustein, Duffy): Focuses on the work
experiences of all individuals, especially those marginalized or with limited access to
opportunities. Highlights the importance of decent work (safe, fair pay, healthcare,
etc.), work volition (perceived freedom of choice despite barriers), and how
economic constraints and marginalization affect career paths. Relevance: Highly
inclusive, directly addresses issues of social justice and barriers to fulfilling work.
o Sustainable Careers (Van der Heijden & De Vos): Emphasizes the dynamic interplay
of individual (agency, meaning), contextual (organizational, family, cultural), and
temporal factors over the lifespan to achieve long-term Happiness, Health, and
Productivity in careers. Relevance: Focuses on long-term career well-being and the fit
between person and career over time.
o Relational Theories (Schultheiss, Blustein, Richardson): Challenge individualistic
views of career development, emphasizing the central role of relationships (family,
mentors, community) in shaping career choices, experiences, and
meaning. Relevance: Important for understanding contextual influences, particularly
for individuals from collectivist cultures or those whose careers are deeply
intertwined with family.
o Life-Span Developmental Theories of Aging (Erikson, SOC, SST, SAVI): Specific to
understanding mid- and late-career.
▪ Erikson: Stage of Generativity vs. Stagnation (mid-life focus on contributing).
▪ SOC (Selection, Optimization, Compensation - Baltes): Strategies individuals
use to manage age-related gains and losses to maintain functioning.
▪ SST (Socioemotional Selectivity Theory - Carstensen): How perceptions of
future time (limited vs. open-ended) influence goals (emotionally meaningful
vs. knowledge-seeking).
▪ SAVI (Strength and Vulnerability Integration - Charles): Older adults are
better at emotion regulation (strength) but may have less physiological
reserve (vulnerability). Relevance: Explains adaptive strategies and
motivational shifts in older workers.
o Calling (Work as a Calling Theory - WCT - Duffy) & Meaningful Work: Explore
eudaimonic (purpose-driven) aspects of work. Calling involves a sense of
purpose/mission. Meaningful work is significant and worthwhile. Relevance: Key to
understanding subjective career success and intrinsic motivation.
LG 2: Key Factors Contributing to Individuals’ (Objective & Subjective) Career Success
• Defining Career Success:
o Objective Success: Tangible, observable markers like salary, promotions, hierarchical
level, status.
o Subjective Success: An individual's personal evaluation of their career, including
job/career satisfaction, sense of meaning, purpose, work-life balance, well-being, and
person-environment fit.
, 3
o Note: Objective and subjective success are only modestly correlated; one does not
guarantee the other.
• Key Predictors/Contributors:
o Human Capital: Education, skills, knowledge, experience (predicts objective success).
o Organizational Sponsorship/Support: Mentoring, developmental opportunities,
supportive climate (stronger link to subjective success).
o Individual Differences:
▪ Personality: Big Five traits (e.g., Conscientiousness for performance;
Extraversion for networking & leadership emergence).
▪ Cognitive Ability: Strong predictor of educational and early occupational
attainment.
o Individual Agency & Behaviors:
▪ Career Self-Management (CSM) Behaviors: Proactive career planning, skill
development, networking (linked to both types of success).
▪ Career Adaptability (CCT): Resources to cope with career tasks/transitions
(linked to well-being, employability, success).
▪ Career Resources (Hirschi/CRQ): Having and utilizing human, social,
psychological, and identity resources.
▪ Self-Efficacy (SCCT): Belief in one's ability to succeed in specific career
tasks/roles.
▪ Job Search Behaviors (Brown): Effort, intensity, effective strategies (predict
employment success).
o Person-Environment Fit: Congruence between individual values, interests, needs,
and the work environment (linked to satisfaction, tenure).
o Eudaimonic Factors: Experiencing work as a Calling, finding Meaningful Work, and
having Work Volition (strongly linked to subjective success and well-being).
o Decent Work (PWT): Access to safe, fair, and dignifying work conditions (foundational
for well-being and meaningful work).
LG 3: Roles Played by Diversity, Individual Differences, and Contextual Factors in Influencing Career
Development Across the Lifespan
• Gender (Schultheiss):
o Persistent Disparities: Women face pay gaps, underrepresentation in leadership
("glass ceiling," "leaky pipeline"), and are sometimes steered into precarious roles
("glass cliff"). STEM fields show significant underrepresentation.
o Underlying Factors:
Concise version career development and management summary
LG 1: Major Theories of Career Development & Management and Critical Reflection
Theories explain how individuals choose careers, develop within them, and manage work-life.
• Dominant Traditional Theories (Foundation):
o Super's Life-Span, Life-Space Theory: Views career development as unfolding
through predictable stages (Growth, Exploration, Establishment, Maintenance,
Disengagement). Emphasizes career maturity (readiness for career tasks) and the
importance of various life roles (e.g., worker, parent, citizen) and how they
interact. Critique/Relevance: Classic stage model, useful for understanding early
career tasks and work-life balance, but modern careers are less linear.
o Holland's RIASEC Theory: Proposes that career choice is an expression of personality.
Individuals and work environments can be classified into six types: Realistic,
Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, Conventional (RIASEC). Person-
Environment (P-E) fit (match between person and environment type) leads to
satisfaction and stability. Critique/Relevance: Widely used for interest assessment
(e.g., Self-Directed Search) and vocational guidance; cross-cultural validity has been
questioned.
• Dominant Contemporary Theories (Focus on Individual Agency):
o Protean Career Theory (Hall): Individuals take primary responsibility for managing
their careers (self-directed) based on their personal values (values-driven), aiming
for psychological success (fulfillment, meaning) rather than just external rewards.
Careers are adaptable and flexible. Relevance: Captures modern career self-
management and the importance of intrinsic motivation and subjective success.
o Boundaryless Career Theory (Arthur & Rousseau): Careers are no longer confined to
single organizations. Involves physical mobility (changing jobs/employers)
and psychological mobility (mindset open to change, learning, and working across
boundaries). Relevance: Describes the shift towards more fluid, less predictable
career paths in a globalized economy.
o Career Construction Theory (CCT - Savickas): Individuals actively construct their
careers by making meaning of their experiences and vocational behaviors. Focuses
on career adaptability – the psychosocial resources (Concern, Control, Curiosity,
Confidence – the 4 Cs) needed to cope with career tasks, transitions, and traumas.
Uses narratives and life themes in counseling. Relevance: Emphasizes subjective
meaning-making and the individual's active role in shaping their career story.
o Social Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT - Lent, Brown, Hackett): Explains career
interests, choices, and performance through the interplay of self-efficacy (belief in
one's capabilities), outcome expectations (beliefs about consequences of actions),
personal goals, and contextual factors (supports and barriers). Learning experiences
(shaped by demographics like gender/race) are crucial. The Career Self-Management
(CSM) model is an SCCT extension focusing on adaptive career
behaviors. Relevance: A robust, widely applicable theory that integrates personal
agency with environmental influences; strong basis for interventions.
, 2
• Context-Focused & Emerging Theories (Addressing Nuances & Specific Populations):
o Psychology of Working Theory (PWT - Blustein, Duffy): Focuses on the work
experiences of all individuals, especially those marginalized or with limited access to
opportunities. Highlights the importance of decent work (safe, fair pay, healthcare,
etc.), work volition (perceived freedom of choice despite barriers), and how
economic constraints and marginalization affect career paths. Relevance: Highly
inclusive, directly addresses issues of social justice and barriers to fulfilling work.
o Sustainable Careers (Van der Heijden & De Vos): Emphasizes the dynamic interplay
of individual (agency, meaning), contextual (organizational, family, cultural), and
temporal factors over the lifespan to achieve long-term Happiness, Health, and
Productivity in careers. Relevance: Focuses on long-term career well-being and the fit
between person and career over time.
o Relational Theories (Schultheiss, Blustein, Richardson): Challenge individualistic
views of career development, emphasizing the central role of relationships (family,
mentors, community) in shaping career choices, experiences, and
meaning. Relevance: Important for understanding contextual influences, particularly
for individuals from collectivist cultures or those whose careers are deeply
intertwined with family.
o Life-Span Developmental Theories of Aging (Erikson, SOC, SST, SAVI): Specific to
understanding mid- and late-career.
▪ Erikson: Stage of Generativity vs. Stagnation (mid-life focus on contributing).
▪ SOC (Selection, Optimization, Compensation - Baltes): Strategies individuals
use to manage age-related gains and losses to maintain functioning.
▪ SST (Socioemotional Selectivity Theory - Carstensen): How perceptions of
future time (limited vs. open-ended) influence goals (emotionally meaningful
vs. knowledge-seeking).
▪ SAVI (Strength and Vulnerability Integration - Charles): Older adults are
better at emotion regulation (strength) but may have less physiological
reserve (vulnerability). Relevance: Explains adaptive strategies and
motivational shifts in older workers.
o Calling (Work as a Calling Theory - WCT - Duffy) & Meaningful Work: Explore
eudaimonic (purpose-driven) aspects of work. Calling involves a sense of
purpose/mission. Meaningful work is significant and worthwhile. Relevance: Key to
understanding subjective career success and intrinsic motivation.
LG 2: Key Factors Contributing to Individuals’ (Objective & Subjective) Career Success
• Defining Career Success:
o Objective Success: Tangible, observable markers like salary, promotions, hierarchical
level, status.
o Subjective Success: An individual's personal evaluation of their career, including
job/career satisfaction, sense of meaning, purpose, work-life balance, well-being, and
person-environment fit.
, 3
o Note: Objective and subjective success are only modestly correlated; one does not
guarantee the other.
• Key Predictors/Contributors:
o Human Capital: Education, skills, knowledge, experience (predicts objective success).
o Organizational Sponsorship/Support: Mentoring, developmental opportunities,
supportive climate (stronger link to subjective success).
o Individual Differences:
▪ Personality: Big Five traits (e.g., Conscientiousness for performance;
Extraversion for networking & leadership emergence).
▪ Cognitive Ability: Strong predictor of educational and early occupational
attainment.
o Individual Agency & Behaviors:
▪ Career Self-Management (CSM) Behaviors: Proactive career planning, skill
development, networking (linked to both types of success).
▪ Career Adaptability (CCT): Resources to cope with career tasks/transitions
(linked to well-being, employability, success).
▪ Career Resources (Hirschi/CRQ): Having and utilizing human, social,
psychological, and identity resources.
▪ Self-Efficacy (SCCT): Belief in one's ability to succeed in specific career
tasks/roles.
▪ Job Search Behaviors (Brown): Effort, intensity, effective strategies (predict
employment success).
o Person-Environment Fit: Congruence between individual values, interests, needs,
and the work environment (linked to satisfaction, tenure).
o Eudaimonic Factors: Experiencing work as a Calling, finding Meaningful Work, and
having Work Volition (strongly linked to subjective success and well-being).
o Decent Work (PWT): Access to safe, fair, and dignifying work conditions (foundational
for well-being and meaningful work).
LG 3: Roles Played by Diversity, Individual Differences, and Contextual Factors in Influencing Career
Development Across the Lifespan
• Gender (Schultheiss):
o Persistent Disparities: Women face pay gaps, underrepresentation in leadership
("glass ceiling," "leaky pipeline"), and are sometimes steered into precarious roles
("glass cliff"). STEM fields show significant underrepresentation.
o Underlying Factors: